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The Becker-Posner Blog

  • The President's Forthcoming "Jobs Summit"--Posner

    On December 3 the President will convene a "jobs summit" to consider what if anything to do about the dismal employment picture. And dismal it is. The figure of 10.2 percent unemployment in October understates the problem because people who have given up on seeking a job, or who are [...]

    Posted: November 29, 2009, 8:07pm EST
  • How to Increase Employment- Becker

    During this "Great Recession", unemployment has risen from under 5% at the beginning of the recession in December of 2007 to more than double that rate to reach its highest level so far in October of 10.2%. This is the second highest unemployment rate in the postwar period, surpassed only [...]

    Posted: November 29, 2009, 5:08pm EST
  • Should China Allow its Currency to Appreciate? Becker


    By all accounts, President Obama's visit to China last week was pretty much a failure on all the major issues, which include China's contributions to climate change, nuclear weapons, and various aspects of the world economy. I will concentrate my discussion on two of the most important and closely [...]

    Posted: November 23, 2009, 11:06am EST
  • China's Currency and Reserves--Posner

    Becker's analysis is impressive, but I hesitate to state with confidence that China would be better off to revalue its currency. As Becker points out, China has pegged its currency to the dollar at a rate of exchange that greatly undervalues its currency relative to ours. As a result China [...]

    Posted: November 23, 2009, 10:45am EST
  • Will We Go the Way of Japan?--Posner

    Japan spent the 1990s unsuccessfully trying to recover from a collapse of the Japanese banking industry caused by the bursting of a housing bubble, despite aggressive monetary and fiscal policies. As a result of those policies, Japanese national debt soared, but was financed mainly internally because of the very high [...]

    Posted: November 15, 2009, 6:41pm EST
  • Will We Go the Way of Japan? No, Unless US Government Policies Discourage Growth-Becker


    Japan has had a very slow rate of growth in its GDP since 1991, averaging just a little over 1 percent. Given this slow growth, and the government's continued failed efforts to prop up their economy by running large fiscal deficits, the ratio of government debt to its GDP [...]

    Posted: November 15, 2009, 5:32pm EST
  • Productivity and Jobs-Becker

    Last week two pieces of news about the American economy were disclosed, with important implications for where the economy is going. On Thursday, the Labor Department reported that during the third quarter of 2009, productivity jumped at the remarkable annual rate of 9½%. On Friday, the Labor Department also reported [...]

    Posted: November 08, 2009, 9:03pm EST
  • Productivity and Unemployment--Posner

    Becker is certainly right that growth in productivity is an important driver of economic growth. But we must consider the source of the growth in productivity in order to understand the conjunction in the last two quarters of rapidly rising productivity with rapidly rising unemployment.

    If productivity growth is the result [...]

    Posted: November 08, 2009, 8:03pm EST
  • Fiscal Imprudence, Distributive Injustice: the $250 per Social Security Annuitant Plan--Posner

    In October, the President announced that $13 billion (some commentators believe a more accurate estimate is $14 billion) of the $787 billion stimulus package enacted this past February would be used to pay every social security annuitant $250 in 2010, ostensibly to "compensate" for the fact that there will no [...]

    Posted: November 01, 2009, 6:53pm EST
  • Fiscal Imprudence and Fiscal Stimulus-Becker

    The government's preliminary estimate of the growth in American GDP during the third quarter of 2009 is an impressive annual rate of 3.5%. This figure may be revised downward (or upward) as more data on the third quarter become available, but it surely definitely signals that the US recession is [...]

    Posted: November 01, 2009, 6:05pm EST
  • Notice

    Longtime readers of this blog will be pleased to learn that this month sees its migration into book form. Uncommon Sense: Economic Insights, from Marriage to Terrorism, which collects what we believe are the best, most interesting, and most lasting posts from this blog. The posts selected for the book [...]

    Posted: October 28, 2009, 12:55pm EDT
  • Pay Controls Once Again-Becker


    I sympathize with all the people who are upset by the very large bonuses, stock options, and other compensation received by heads of some financial institutions that ran their companies into the ground through bad investments. However, I also believe it is a big mistake to have a pay [...]

    Posted: October 25, 2009, 6:36pm EDT
  • Pay Caps for Financial Executives--Posner

    Limiting the compensation of a handful of employees at a handful of firms can't have any effect except to benefit the firms' competitors by making them more attractive places to work. The limitations are a form of scapegoating designed to appease public anger over the high incomes of financiers who [...]

    Posted: October 25, 2009, 4:14pm EDT
  • The Economics of Organizations--Posner

    Oliver Williamson, an economist who won half a Nobel prize last week, has made important contributions to a field of economics that is not as well known as it should be: "organization economics." This is a field, closely related to a branch of sociology called organization theory, to which pioneering [...]

    Posted: October 19, 2009, 5:42pm EDT
  • Competition and Organizational Efficiency-Becker

    Oliver Williamson's influential contributions to the theory of firms were the stimulus for our discussion topic this week of the analysis of organizations. Posner gives an excellent discussion of various factors that determine organizational structure and efficiency, such as conflicts between principles, like stockholders, and agents, like employees and managers, [...]

    Posted: October 19, 2009, 3:38pm EDT
  • Notice

    We regret to say that because of a technical glitch, our site is not accepting comments. We hope to correct the problem shortly.

    [...]
    Posted: October 15, 2009, 11:20am EDT
  • Will World Food Prices Resume their Sharp Increase? Becker

    The worldwide recession has slowed the growth in the demand for cereals and other foods as many countries have experienced stagnation or contraction in their GDPs. Now that the recession appears to be over, world GDP will start growing again. Many are forecasting that this growth in world output, especially [...]

    Posted: October 11, 2009, 11:57pm EDT
  • Will Food Prices Begin Increasing Again? Posner's Comment

    Becker is right to point out the difference in supply conditions between oil (and other minerals, but I will limit my discussion to oil) and agricultural products: it is cheaper to expand output of the latter than of the former. Hence as demand for oil and for food rise as [...]

    Posted: October 11, 2009, 10:51pm EDT
  • Should the Swiss Health Care System Be Our Model?--Posner

    The New York Times published an article last Thursday on the Swiss health care system, which can be viewed here: www.nytimes.com/2009/10/01/health/policy/01swiss.html?_r=1&em. The system is simple. There is no "public option," that is, there is no government health insurance program, such as Medicare or Medicaid. There is very little employer-provided health [...]

    Posted: October 04, 2009, 9:13pm EDT
  • Is the Swiss Health Care System a Good Model for US? Becker

    The Swiss health care system has several important properties that I (and many others) have been advocating should be incorporated into any reform of the US health care system. One major advantage of the Swiss system is that employer-provided health care does not receive any special tax breaks, whereas the [...]

    Posted: October 04, 2009, 6:55pm EDT
  • Union Power in the Obama Administration-Becker

    The major American trade unions, including the United Automobile Workers, the United Steelworkers, and the Service Employees International Union, went all out in their support of Barack Obama during the past presidential election. They supplied money-said to exceed $400 million- and hundreds of thousands of volunteers working for Obama. It [...]

    Posted: September 27, 2009, 4:22pm EDT
  • The Tariff on Chinese Tires--Posner's Comment

    Becker is correct that the tariff appears to be a pay back to the unions for their strong support of Obama in the 2008 election. The significance of that support was amplified by a questionable feature of our political system. All but two states award all their electoral votes to [...]

    Posted: September 27, 2009, 1:53pm EDT
  • Notice

    We will not be blogging this week. We will next blog next Sunday, September 27.

    [...]
    Posted: September 20, 2009, 5:37pm EDT
  • Do Deficits Matter? Posner

    Vice President Cheney is reported (I don't know whether accurately or not) to have said that "deficits don't matter." Certainly the Bush Administration ran big ones, as a result of which the public debt (which is the national debt less federal liabilities to Americans created by the social security and [...]

    Posted: September 15, 2009, 9:10pm EDT
  • How Much Should We Care About Government Deficits? Becker


    Deficits arise when government spending exceeds the revenues raised from various taxes. Deficits add to the stock of government debt. In evaluating the consequences of deficits for an economy, it is first of all crucial to know whether the source of a larger deficit is greater government spending or [...]

    Posted: September 15, 2009, 6:00pm EDT
  • Productivity, Unemployment, and the End of the Recession-Becker


    On October 7, 2008 I wrote an op-ed piece for the Wall Street Journal ("We're Not Headed for a Depression") in which I said there would not be a depression, certainly nothing at all resembling the Great Depression of the 1930s. As the economy continued to decline after that' [...]

    Posted: September 09, 2009, 4:05pm EDT
  • Unemployment and Depression--Posner

    I am not bold enough to make forecasts about economic recovery, given the unusual economic situation that the country is in. The recovery may be fast or slow, shallow or steep, continuous or interrupted--and if fast and steep may set the stage for inflation and other economic troubles. So I [...]

    Posted: September 09, 2009, 3:58pm EDT
  • Notice

    We will blog on Tuesday or Wednesday of this week, rather than today.

    [...]
    Posted: September 06, 2009, 2:17pm EDT
  • Do We Need More Regulation of Mortgages to Protect Consumers?--Posner

    The Treasury Department in its "white paper" of June 17 recommended the creation of a "Consumer Financial Protection Agency," and later followed up with a detailed legislative proposal for a "Consumer Financial Protection Agency Act of 2009." The proposal is pending in Congress.

    Although the Commission's remit would not be limited [...]

    Posted: August 30, 2009, 7:04pm EDT
  • More Regulation of Mortgages would Likely Hurt Consumers-Becker


    No doubt many consumers made mistakes in their credit decisions during the past few years, perhaps especially in the mortgages they chose. It is equally clear that many lenders wish they had never given the mortgages they gave since they lost their shirts by doing so. Does any of [...]

    Posted: August 30, 2009, 6:46pm EDT
  • The Cash for Clunkers Program: A Bad Idea at the Wrong Time-Becker


    The cash-for-clunkers program of the federal government began in late July, and will end this evening. It provides a credit of from $3500-$4500 for anyone who trades in an older car to buy a new fuel-efficient car. When measured by its popularity, this has been a highly successful program, [...]

    Posted: August 24, 2009, 7:23pm EDT
  • Cash for Clunkers--Posner's Comment

    I agree with Becker that it's a silly program.

    Like the bailout of the auto companies, the program had dual environmental and economic-recovery goals. The environmental goal, to reduce carbon emissions, was trivial; the aggregate improvement in gas mileage from the program is certain to be minuscule. The contribution to economic [...]

    Posted: August 24, 2009, 6:07pm EDT
  • Health Care, Cost, and Insurance Theory--Posner

    The focus of the Administration's health-care plan, and of its campaign to enlist public support for the plan, is dissatisfaction with health insurance. To see the problem--or whether there is a problem--compare health insurance to fire insurance. Almost everyone has fire insurance (even if he doesn't want it, invariably it [...]

    Posted: August 17, 2009, 11:40am EDT
  • American Health Care Once Again-Becker

    In a recent post (see my discussion on July 28) I explained why the American health delivery system is superior in some important dimensions to health care in most other advanced countries. Americans have considerably longer life expectancies when they contract serious diseases, like cancers and heart conditions, than do [...]

    Posted: August 17, 2009, 11:10am EDT
  • Notice

    We will be posting tomorrow (Monday).

    [...]
    Posted: August 17, 2009, 12:41am EDT
  • The World Recession is Ending: What Next? Becker

    The latest output and unemployment figures for the United States indicate that the recession in this country is very probably finally over, given the usual definitions of the turning points of recessions. Aggregate output fell for the fourth quarter in a row during the second quarter of 2009, but the [...]

    Posted: August 09, 2009, 11:47pm EDT
  • It

    I see the economic situation somewhat differently from Becker. The least significant of our differences concerns nomenclature. Many economists describe any economic downturn less severe than the Great Depression of the 1930s as a mere "recession." The consequence is to lump together economic downturns of greatly varying severity. The current [...]

    Posted: August 09, 2009, 9:30pm EDT
  • Health Reform and Obesity--Posner

    The biggest problem besetting the Administration's program of health reform is how to pay for it. The heart of the program is extending insurance coverage to tens of millions of people who at present are not insured. This will cost more than $100 billion a year just in subsidies, but [...]

    Posted: August 02, 2009, 10:00pm EDT
  • The Growth in Obesity-Becker The weight ...

    The Growth in Obesity-Becker
    The weight of the average male and female began to grow sharply around 1980 not only in the United States but also in all other developed countries. When average weight grows, the rate of obesity-usually defined by a biomass index (BMI) of over 30- grows at [...]

    Posted: August 02, 2009, 9:32pm EDT
  • Mortality from Disease and the American Health Care System-Becker

    Many Democratic Congressmen, member of the Obama administration, and others writing about American health care envy the 'European" health deliver system since they attribute Europe's lower mortality rates, despite much lower per capita spending on health care than by the US, partly to the European model of health care delivery.'" [...]

    Posted: July 26, 2009, 11:13pm EDT
  • American Health Care--Posner's Comment

    Last December, the McKinsey consulting firm published a report which states that despite the much higher per capita spending on health care in the U.S. compared with peer countries, the longevity of Americans (even if only that of white Americans is considered) is lower than the average of the comparison [...]

    Posted: July 26, 2009, 10:15pm EDT
  • The Drop in University Endowments and What to Do about It--Posner

    College and university endowments have taken a big hit from the drop in the stock market and other asset markets. A drop of 20 to 30 percent is common, and there is suspicion that endowments that contain a significant proportion of assets that are not traded on organized markets, such [...]

    Posted: July 19, 2009, 5:04pm EDT
  • How Should Universities React to the Decline in Their Endowments? Becker

    The values of most university endowments have taken large hits during this financial crisis. The average decline since the real estate and stock market crashes began is probably over 20%, while the value of some endowments dropped by much more than that. Universities reacted to this severe shock with [...]

    Posted: July 19, 2009, 4:53pm EDT
  • Legislation on Clean Energy-Becker

    In late June the House of Representatives approved The American Clean Energy and Security Act. If the Senate approves a similar version, this would constitute the most important American legislation on overall control of carbon-emitting gases. The main provision of the bill is a cap and trade system, to begin [...]

    Posted: July 12, 2009, 10:07pm EDT
  • The Cap and Trade Carbon-Emissions Bill--Posner

    The energy bill just passed by the House of Representatives and awaiting action in the Senate is extremely long and complex, and cap and trade is only one part of it; but like Becker I will confine my remarks to that part, and thus treat the cap and trade component [...]

    Posted: July 12, 2009, 9:27pm EDT
  • The Senate and the Filibuster--Posner

    The U.S. Senate is a very peculiar institution. It was not when it started. It was created to be a check on the popularly elected House of Representatives, but also on the President, through its "advise and consent" power--the President's nominees for officials had to be confirmed by the Senate.' [...]

    Posted: July 05, 2009, 2:00pm EDT
  • The Senate Filibuster -Becker

    The United States, as the name indicates, was formed as a confederation of independent states-initially only 13, but since expanded to 50. The first Federal government was based on The Articles of Confederation, but that was abandoned because it gave too little power to the Federal government. It was replaced [...]

    Posted: July 05, 2009, 1:54pm EDT
  • President Obama's Financial Reform Package-Becker

    Since the document laying out the President's financial reform package is 88 pages, I will concentrate my evaluation on a few basic issues. 1) Do the reforms rely mainly on regulatory discretion or on new rules? 2) Is there adequate attention to the issues raised by financial institutions being "too" [...]

    Posted: June 28, 2009, 11:44pm EDT
  • Financial Regulatory Reform--Posner's Comment

    I have blogged at considerable length about the July 17 report, see http://correspondents.theatlantic.com/richard_posner/, and also written a short op-ed on the subject, published in the New York Times on July 25 ("Our Crisis of Regulation," p. 21). I have emphasized both what seem to me fundamental failings in the report [...]

    Posted: June 28, 2009, 6:27pm EDT
  • The Future of Newspapers--Posner

    Warren Buffett, who is a wit as well as a multibillionaire, said with reference to the fact that Bernard Madoff's long-running Ponzi scheme came to light during the financial collapse of last fall that until the tide goes out, you don't know who's swimming naked. A year ago Becker and' [...]

    Posted: June 23, 2009, 9:37pm EDT
  • The Social Cost of the Decline of Newspapers?Becker

    According to data compiled by my colleagues Matt Gentzkow and Jesse Shapiro, the number of daily newspapers in the United States has been declining for more than 90 years, from a peak of about 2200 to its present level of about 1400. The decline started with the advent of radio, [...]

    Posted: June 23, 2009, 9:19pm EDT
  • Notice

    We will post on Tuesday of this week, rather than today.

    [...]
    Posted: June 21, 2009, 12:09pm EDT
  • The Fatal Conceit: A Pay "Czar"-Becker

    This week the Obama administration, acting through Secretary of the Treasury Geithner, appointed a pay czar to review, reject, and possibly set the pay of companies that received large amounts of federal assistance during the financial crisis. No appeals will be allowed from his decisions. The Czar, Kenneth Feinberg, will [...]

    Posted: June 14, 2009, 1:14pm EDT
  • The Pay Czar and Compensation Issues--Posner's Comment

    I agree with Professor Bebchuk of Harvard, and others, that there is a problem with the compensation of top executives at publicly held corporations (that is, corporations in which ownership is widely dispersed), so that control resides in the board of directors. The problem is that the individual directors do [...]

    Posted: June 14, 2009, 12:42pm EDT
  • The Administration's Health Care Plan--Posner

    It is understandable why there is widespread concern with the American system of health care. The nation spends about 15 percent of its very large Gross Domestic Product on health care, which is almost twice as much per capita as the nations that we consider our peers spend, yet outcomes, [...]

    Posted: June 07, 2009, 6:27pm EDT
  • Health Care-Becker

    The best way to evaluate America's expensive health care system would be to estimate the effects of different kinds of healthcare on the quality and quantity of health for individuals of various ages, incomes, races, and other categories. To my knowledge, no researchers have come close to doing this. Instead, [...]

    Posted: June 07, 2009, 6:06pm EDT
  • Is the World Economic Center of Gravity Moving to Asia? Becker

    The short answer is "yes", although not immediately, and not inevitably. My reasons for an affirmative answer are partly demographic and partly economic. Asia has a large fraction of the world's population, and their biggest economies are generally experiencing rapid growth as they narrow the gap in living standards with' [...]

    Posted: May 31, 2009, 11:59pm EDT
  • Is Asia Becoming the Center of the World Economy? Posner's Comment

    I am less bold than Becker, and so I will make no predictions about the future of the wo rld economy. I do have some reservations about treating Asia as a unit, however. Even if one stops at the eastern border of Pakistan, the Asian countries are far from uniform [...]

    Posted: May 31, 2009, 11:33pm EDT
  • A Soda or Calorie Tax to Reduce Obesity--Posner

    Articles in the New England Journal of Medicine on April 30, and in the New York Times on May 19, discuss a proposal now before Congress to impose a tax on sugar-sweetened sodas in order to reduce obesity. Taxes are ordinarily intended to raise revenue, but some taxes, such as [...]

    Posted: May 24, 2009, 6:06pm EDT
  • A Tax on Sodas? Becker

    The number of overweight children and adults has grown sharply since 1980. The explanation is usually partly based on the increased availability of sodas and fast foods that have many calories. Also emphasized is the growing number of leisure hours spent at sedentary activities, such as watching television and using [...]

    Posted: May 24, 2009, 5:39pm EDT
  • The Conflict in Modern Conservatism Once Again-Becker

    Posner and I decided to post again this week on the conservative movement because of the great interest in our discussion last week. I will try to respond to some of the thoughtful comments and criticisms, and clarify some of my claims.

    I claimed in that post that the current Republican [...]

    Posted: May 17, 2009, 9:59pm EDT
  • Conservatism II--Posner's Comment

    My post last week on the decline of the conservative movement in the United States received more than 200 comments. Many of them were very thoughtful, and many others were very shrill.

    It is apparent that global warming, abortion, and guns, in approximately that order, arouse particular emotions among many passionate [...]

    Posted: May 17, 2009, 7:43pm EDT
  • Is the Conservative Movement Losing Steam? Posner

    I sense intellectual deterioration of the once-vital conservative movement in the United States. As I shall explain, this may be a testament to its success.

    Until the late 1960s (when I was in my late twenties), I was barely conscious of the existence of a conservative movement. It was obscure and [...]

    Posted: May 10, 2009, 4:32pm EDT
  • The Serious Conflict in the Modern Conservative Movement-Becker

    The roots of conservatism go back to philosophers of the 17 and 18th centuries, such as John Locke, David Hume, and Adam Smith. They opposed big government, and favored private decision-making, primarily because they argued that individuals were generally better able to protect their interests than could government officials tied [...]

    Posted: May 10, 2009, 12:11pm EDT
  • Announcement-Posner

    My book A Failure of Capitalism: The Crisis of '08 and the Descent into Depression was published a couple of weeks ago, but it had been completed on February 2. In order to bring the book up to date, reflecting events since then and also some fresh thinking and reading' [...]

    Posted: May 06, 2009, 12:09am EDT
  • Some Economics of Flu Pandemics-Becker

    Every century or so, a major flu pandemic (an epidemic with a global impact) occurs. The last one, the Great Pandemic of 1918-19, infected many hundreds of millions of people, and killed about 50-100 million men and women worldwide. The Asian flu of 1957 is estimated to have killed 2 [...]

    Posted: May 03, 2009, 6:50pm EDT
  • The Economics of the Flu Epidemic--Posner

    As Becker points out, the potential costs of a lethal pandemic are astronomical. The Spanish flu epidemic of 1918-1919 killed tens of millions of people, and because of the extreme mutability of the flu virus it is entirely possible that an equally lethal strain may re-emerge. True, the death rate [...]

    Posted: May 03, 2009, 5:01pm EDT
  • Is the Federal Reserve Losing Its Independence? Posner

    Even in a democracy, it is believed that certain government functions should be placed beyond the control of democratic politics. The usual example is the judiciary (though most state judges in the United States are elected, this is a considerable anomaly). But another example is the central bank, which in [...]

    Posted: April 26, 2009, 10:53pm EDT
  • Central Banks Cannot Easily Maintain their Independence- Becker

    Most richer nations nowadays, and many developing nations, have "independent" central banks, such as the European Central Bank and the Federal Reserve Bank. "Independence" cannot be precisely defined, but it is supposed to indicate that the central bank of a country has the freedom to make decisions which the government, [...]

    Posted: April 26, 2009, 5:55pm EDT
  • Repayment of Tarp Bank Loans-Becker Six ...

    Repayment of Tarp Bank Loans-Becker
    Six months ago essentially all large American banks and many smaller ones received loans from the federal government to help shore up their capital base as they tried to weather the financial storm. Some banks would likely have failed during the severe strains in the [...]

    Posted: April 19, 2009, 8:19pm EDT
  • Repaying the Government's Loans to the Banks--Posner's Comment

    Last fall the federal government lent hundreds of billions of dollars to major banks and other financial intermediaries pursuant to a program called the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). Some of the recipients, notably Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase, want to repay the money. Essentially that means buying back the [...]

    Posted: April 19, 2009, 7:02pm EDT
  • Is the Stock Market an "Efficient" Market?--Posner

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average peaked at 14,200 on October 9, 2007, fell to 9,600 on November 4, 2008 (election day), kept falling, to 6,400 on March 6, 2009, and since then has risen sharply, to 8,100. (I have rounded to the nearest hundred. I use movements in the DJIA [...]

    Posted: April 13, 2009, 9:59pm EDT
  • Comments on the Efficiency of Stock Markets-Becker

    It is very difficult for either amateur investors or even professional money managers to do better picking their own stocks than the performance of the major stock indexes, such as the US Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) or the Japanese Nikkei Index. In fact, most investors in active funds do [...]

    Posted: April 13, 2009, 9:39pm EDT
  • Reply to Comment on Housing--Posner

    I reply to a comment on the following passage in my posting last week on housing: "The reallocation of income from consumption expenditures to very safe forms of savings reduces current consumption without increasing productive investment significantly, and so contributes to the depression." The commenter states: "surely much of the" [...]

    Posted: April 12, 2009, 5:18pm EDT
  • Housing Prices and Consumption-Becker

    The widespread and sharp rise in housing prices during the early part of this decade in the United States and many other countries is said to have contributed to the worldwide economic boom through wealth effects that induced greater consumption. Similarly, the still steeper fall in these prices during the [...]

    Posted: April 05, 2009, 9:21pm EDT
  • Housing Prices, Wealth, and the Current Depression--Posner's Comment

    The Federal Reserve's unsound monetary policy in the early 2000s pushed down interest rates excessively, resulting in asset-price inflation, particularly in houses because they are bought primarily with debt. Eventually the bubble burst and house prices fell precipitately; they are still falling.

    Becker's interesting post argues that the boom and bust [...]

    Posted: April 05, 2009, 8:01pm EDT
  • An Addendum on the Treasury's Plan to Buy Bank Assets-Becker

    In my post on Sunday I gave an example to illustrate the Treasury's plan to buy the "toxic" assets of banks. Since I left a few quite important implications of the example unclear, this addendum will consider the same example in more detail.
    Recall that the Plan would encourage hedge [...]

    Posted: March 31, 2009, 10:41pm EDT
  • The Government's Plan to Subsidize the Purchase of So-Called "Toxic" Bank Assets--Posner


    The Federal Reserve's unsound monetary policy in the early 2000s pushed down interest rates excessively, resulting in asset-price inflation, particularly in houses because they are bought primarily with debt. Eventually the bubble burst and house prices fell precipitately; they are still falling.

    Becker's interesting post argues that the boom and [...]

    Posted: March 29, 2009, 8:24pm EDT
  • The Treasury's Plan to Buy Bank Assets-Becker

    One good aspect of the Treasury's plan to enlist the private sector in buying mortgage-backed and other bank assets is that it reduces the uncertainty-if it is implemented! - about what the government plans to do further in aiding banks. Starting with the vacillations of Henry Paulson, the former Treasury [...]

    Posted: March 29, 2009, 7:36pm EDT
  • Match Making through the Internet-Becker

    The Internet has produced revolutions in many kinds of behavior, such as greatly reducing the advantages from reading newspapers, but one of the most important is in providing easy access to various kinds of social interactions. The remarkable growth of social networking sites, such as Facebook and Twitter, reflect the [...]

    Posted: March 23, 2009, 1:14am EDT
  • Internet Matching--Posner's Comment

    Matching is a form of search in which the object is to create a relationship, such as marriage or employment (marriage could be regarded as a form of employment). Matching is more complex and often more protracted than most searching for goods or services because the stakes tend to be [...]

    Posted: March 22, 2009, 11:48pm EDT
  • Tax Deductions for American Charitable Donations Abroad--Posner

    Of some $300 billion in annual American charitable giving, about 5 percent is spent abroad; almost 40 percent of that 5 percent is donated by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, mainly for trying to alleviate Third World health problems (such as malaria and AIDS) and provide assistance to Third [...]

    Posted: March 15, 2009, 7:29pm EDT
  • American Charitable Deductions Abroad-Becker

    Pressures for both increased government and private assistance to poorer nations may well result from this recession because some nations that can least afford a setback may suffer the most due to reduced demand for their exports of commodities and other goods. In considering the topic of private charitable giving [...]

    Posted: March 15, 2009, 7:18pm EDT
  • Financial Regulations-Becker

    The severity of this recession has stimulated calls for greatly increased regulation of the financial sector, and for changes in some of the present regulations. Some new regulations are desirable, but the type of new regulations must be in response to a recognition that regulators failed in this crisis because [...]

    Posted: March 09, 2009, 11:44pm EDT
  • Re-Regulating the Banking Industry--Posner

    Beginning in the 1970s, the banking industry was extensively deregulated. Other financial intermediaries, such as broker-dealers, hedge funds, and money-market funds, were permitted to offer close substitutes for services provided by commercial banks, and restrictions on banking were loosened so that the banks could fight back against their new competitors. [...]

    Posted: March 09, 2009, 10:41pm EDT
  • Notice

    Because of travel delays, we are unable to post today (Sunday). We will post tomorrow.

    [...]
    Posted: March 09, 2009, 1:12am EDT
  • The President's Plan for Mortgage Relief--Posner

    The President on February 18 announced a $75 billion plan with the following elements:

    1. Refinance. The government will allow Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac--the large, now governmentally controlled buyers and underwriters of residential mortgages--to refinance mortgages when the unpaid balance of a mortgage is between 80 and 105 percent of [...]

    Posted: March 01, 2009, 8:02pm EST
  • On the Obama Mortgage Plan-Becker

    The housing market is in shambles as home prices continue to fall-so far the average house has fallen over 25 percent in value from its peak. New home construction has virtually stopped. Two causes of the bubble in both housing prices and construction are low interest rates that made durable [...]

    Posted: March 01, 2009, 6:37pm EST
  • China Bashing Once Again-Becker

    During his confirmation hearing before the United States Senate toward the end of January, Secretary of the Treasury Timothy Geithner accused China of "manipulating" its currency. This is not a statement that helps to further China-US cooperation on trying to stimulate the depressed world economy and on other issues- Secretary [...]

    Posted: February 22, 2009, 6:21pm EST
  • China and the U.S. Depression--Posner

    I agree with Becker that China is not responsible for our current depression. It is true that China's trade imbalance with the United States--it exports much more to us than we to them, and so has built up huge dollar balances that it has invested in the United States, mainly [...]

    Posted: February 22, 2009, 5:31pm EST
  • Notice

    We will not be blogging this week.

    [...]
    Posted: February 13, 2009, 12:42am EST
  • Against the Pay Caps--Posner

    The government has decided to impose a $500,000 ceiling on the senior executives of banks and other financial institutions that accept bailout money. This is a bad idea, though politically inevitable because of public indignation at financiers, thus illustrating a point I make in my forthcoming book about the depression--for [...]

    Posted: February 08, 2009, 5:40pm EST
  • Pay Controls Do Not Work at Any Level-Becker

    Several big banks and other companies have badly fumbled their public relations during these difficult times, such as the big three auto makers who took their private jets to Washington to beg Congress for a bailout, or the board and CEO of Merrill Lynch that granted generous bonuses to their [...]

    Posted: February 08, 2009, 4:34pm EST
  • Buy American Once Again-Becker


    Every recession, including those milder than the current recession, leads to pressure to reduce spending on foreign goods by raising tariffs and other import restrictions. The avowed goal is to help domestic workers and businesses that are going through difficult times. Hostility to imports when unemployment is high and [...]

    Posted: February 01, 2009, 9:52pm EST
  • Protectionism in a Depression--Posner

    I have little to add to Becker's post, with which I agree. One does understand the support in Congress for adding "Buy American" provisions to the stimulus package now moving through Congress (the "American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009," as it is called). Apart from the usual interest-group pressures, [...]

    Posted: February 01, 2009, 9:33pm EST
  • Protectionism in a Depression--Posner

    I have little to add to Becker's post, with which I agree. One does understand the support in Congress for adding "Buy American" provisions to the stimulus package now moving through Congress (the "American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009," as it is called). Apart from the usual interest-group pressures, [...]

    Posted: February 01, 2009, 9:33pm EST
  • The Employee Free Choice Act--Posner


    In 2007, the House of Representatives passed the Employee Free Choice Act, a law to promote unionism. The bill failed in the Senate because of Republican opposition. Obama in his presidential campaign urged passage of the bill, and with greater Democratic control of the Senate as a result of [...]

    Posted: January 25, 2009, 10:49pm EST
  • Will the Decline in Union Membership be Reversed? Becker


    Unions strongly supported President Obama during the presidential race, and naturally they expect some pay back. A first step would be passage of the so-called Employee Free Choice Act that was supported by both President Obama and Vice-President Biden when they were in the Senate. This act would provide, [...]

    Posted: January 25, 2009, 7:17pm EST
  • Infrastructure in a Stimulus Package-Becker


    Last week we blogged on how much stimulus to GDP and employment might be expected from a version of the Obama fiscal stimulus plan. I concluded that the amount of stimulus from the spending package would be far less than estimated in a study by the incoming Chairperson of [...]

    Posted: January 18, 2009, 9:23pm EST
  • Infrastructure in a Stimulus Package-Becker


    Last week we blogged on how much stimulus to GDP and employment might be expected from a version of the Obama fiscal stimulus plan. I concluded that the amount of stimulus from the spending package would be far less than estimated in a study by the incoming Chairperson of [...]

    Posted: January 18, 2009, 9:23pm EST

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