Tag Archives: economics

Urge New York State Legislators to Pass Solar Jobs Act

photo: © Big Sue LLC NYC and New York State may not be the first places that come to mind when you think of states leading in solar energy but pending landmark legislation in Albany hopes to change that. The New York Solar Industry Development and Jobs Act of 2010 (S.7093a/A.11004) “aka the Solar Jobs Act”, provides a policy roadmap for jumpstarting solar industry and the economy in New York. The legislation requires each New York retail electric supplier, the New York Power Authority (NYPA), and the Long Island Power Auth… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Urge New York State Legislators to Pass Solar Jobs Act

Scotland Considers Shipping Water to Drought-Stricken England

Photo via AndyRob Despite the overall impression that England is a rainy place, there are areas in with drought is taking its toll. The country already imports around two-thirds of its water in the form of products , but it may one day start importing water more directly from its neighbor to the north – at least, that’s the possibility according to Mike Cantlay, the convenor of Loch Lomond national park and chairman of the tourism ag… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Scotland Considers Shipping Water to Drought-Stricken England

Axe Brick Tamland, and 9 Other Ways to Close the $30 Million Budget Gap on Anchorman 2

I’ve never been much of a believer that Anchorman 2 would happen. It had its window around 2006 or so; now the economics don’t work and the global box office prospects are underwhelming. Nevertheless, where there’s a will, there’s a way to overcome a reported $30 million budget gap between Paramount and the film’s high-wattage producers and stars. Some tough, serious cuts and considerations will be required, though. Read on for a a few recommendations that spring immediately to mind; as always, your own are welcome in the comments.

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Axe Brick Tamland, and 9 Other Ways to Close the $30 Million Budget Gap on Anchorman 2

How to Create 18 million Jobs

The job-creation proposals coming from the Obama administration, in the president's January 27 State of the Union address and elsewhere, generally point in the right direction, with more spending for clean energy, infrastructure and support for small businesses. These proposals follow from Obama's February 2009 economic recovery program, which injected $787 billion in new spending or tax relief into the economy over two years. However, just as last February's stimulus program was too small to counteract the evaporation of $16 trillion in household wealth resulting from the financial collapse, the scope of Obama's current proposals is nowhere near large enough for the situation today. For example, Obama has proposed $33 billion in new tax credits for small businesses. By contrast, private borrowing by businesses over the previous six months was down by $1.5 trillion relative to 2007, with the largest proportional cutbacks coming from small businesses. What's more, Obama's call to freeze discretionary federal spending in nonmilitary areas is dangerously misguided. The fiscal deficits of 2009 and 2010–at between $1.4 trillion and $1.6 trillion, or around 10 percent of GDP–are indeed very large. But the freeze obscures what Obama and his advisers clearly know–that deficit spending is part of the solution to our economic predicament and will remain so until we see millions of people getting hired into decent jobs. Here is what we need: a commitment from the Obama administration to create 18 million new jobs over the remaining three years of the presidential term. That would mean an average increase of about 500,000 jobs per month, or a bit more than 4 percent growth in job creation over the next three years. This can be done by combining two broad types of initiatives: measures to buttress the economy's floor and thereby prevent another 2008-type collapse, and measures to inject job-generating investments into the economy. If such initiatives are successful, the official unemployment rate will stand at around 4 percent when Obama runs for re-election in November 2012. Is This Realistic? The central features of this plan can remain within the framework of proposals already established by the administration. The key is getting the scale large enough. The only way this can happen is by combining the positive energies of the public and private sectors. This public-private approach is not only practically necessary; it will also counteract right-wing claims that the government is seizing control of the economy in the name of job creation. Most of the financial heft will have to come from banks and other private financial institutions. The banks alone are hoarding cash reserves totaling about $850 billion in their accounts at the Federal Reserve. Most of that money needs to be channeled into job-generating investments. For this to happen, interest rates and the risks for lending to small businesses need to fall substantially. But it will be necessary for the government to keep injecting spending into the economy, which will add to the deficit. Scare stories aside, the fiscal deficit is not dangerously large. The interest rates the government is paying on its borrowing–as opposed to the rates that businesses have to pay on much riskier loans–remain historically low, in the range of 2 to 3 percent. This is because the world's financial magicians of just a few years ago have chosen to protect their remaining wealth by buying up the safest possible assets they can find, which are US Treasury bonds. When Ronald Reagan was running up record-breaking deficits in the early 1980s, the interest rates on the bonds were around 13 percent. This huge gap in interest rates between now and the Reagan era will save the Treasury about $175 billion per year going forward. Also remember that falling unemployment rates reduce the deficit on their own, with each 1 percent drop generating about $90 billion in government revenues or reduced spending obligations. This is because when people are newly employed, they can support themselves and pay more taxes. We also need workers earning decent wages. Even if we didn't care about the ever-widening inequalities of wages, incomes and wealth, we would still need working people to have enough money in their pockets to boost sagging consumer markets. Conversely, when unemployment rises, the government is faced with huge extra spending burdens through unemployment insurance, food stamps, Medicaid and related social safety net commitments. The fiscal deficit could probably be eliminated altogether if unemployment could be driven down to around 4 percent, even without spending cuts or increases in tax rates. Finally, we can extract about $300 billion in savings and new revenues by ending the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and by establishing a modest tax on speculative Wall Street trading. One argument against taking bold measures now is that, mass unemployment aside, the official indicators tell us that the recession is over. The economy did grow at a robust 5.7 percent over the past quarter, though that may be only a short-term blip, driven by businesses restocking their depleted inventories. But let's assume that a recovery is indeed under way at more or less the normal rate of progress relative to recent recessions. In fact, under such a “normal” scenario, unemployment would not likely fall to around 5 percent until early 2017. We would not likely hit 4 percent unemployment until mid- 2018, assuming the recovery could be kept going for another eight years. Even with a successful coordination of large-scale expansions of private and public spending, is it realistic to expect that the economy, which has been so trampled down for the past three years, could possibly create 18 million jobs over the next three years? It is an ambitious but realistic goal. This is basically the rate at which employment grew under Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter coming out of the 1974-75 recession. The Carter years are widely derided through the lens of his 1979 “malaise” speech. Yet the first three years under Carter generated the fastest expansion of job opportunities of any comparable period since, including any three-year stretch under Reagan or Clinton. The Carter presidency, of course, ended disastrously with the severe 1980 recession. But this was because OPEC and the oil companies doubled oil prices between 1979 and 1980. Even more important, Wall Street insisted at the time that Carter appoint Paul Volcker as chair of the Federal Reserve to stop the inflation that resulted from the oil price shock. Volcker immediately raised short-term interest rates, pushing them as high as 17 percent by April 1980. This brought unemployment up to 7.5 percent in time for Reagan's landslide victory over Carter in November 1980. (It is ironic that among Obama's top tier of economic advisers, the same Paul Volcker is taking the hardest line against Wall Street excesses.) … (please read the rest of the article at the nation: http://www.thenation.com/doc/20100308 ) Robert Pollin is Professor of Economics at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. He is the founding co-director of the Political Economy Research Institute (PERI). His research centers on macroeconomics, conditions for low-wage workers in the US and globally, the analysis of financial markets, and the economics of building a clean-energy economy in the US. His books include A Measure of Fairness: The Economics of Living Wages and Minimum Wages in the US and Contours of Descent: US Economic Fractures and the Landscape of Global Austerity video from http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&a… added by: peterzylstramoore

John Park: Nice Lips, Tone, Odds on American Idol

Like Mark McGwire in front of Congress, The Hollywood Gossip is not here to talk about the past. Sure, American Idol aired auditions from Orlando last night and a couple contestants stood out (most notably Matt Lawrence and Jermaine Purifory).

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John Park: Nice Lips, Tone, Odds on American Idol

Economists Discover Source of New Yorkers’ Misery

Research Question: Why are New Yorkers miserable? Hypothesis: Because New York is not a pleasant place to live

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Economists Discover Source of New Yorkers’ Misery

Nouriel Roubini Still Predicting the End of the World, Partying with Hot Chicks

Some genius once dubbed New York University economist Nouriel Roubini ” the Joe Francis of Pessimism Porn ,” and yesterday’s one-two punch of a Eurotrashy post-Halloween loft party with Oliver Stone and a doomsaying op-ed in the Financial Times proves the point.

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Nouriel Roubini Still Predicting the End of the World, Partying with Hot Chicks

Scoring Sunday’s Nuptials: When Your Wedding Makes the ‘Off’ Weekend

You’ll have to excuse Weddings Expert Phyllis Nefler for feeling a little ghoulish today. Like war, the NYT’s Weddings & Celebrations breaks for no holiday, including the Tet Offensive of hangovers, but The Vows must go on

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Scoring Sunday’s Nuptials: When Your Wedding Makes the ‘Off’ Weekend

Freakonomics Has Always Been Dumb

Everyone is all mad at Seven Levitt and Stephen Dubner for including a hilariously wrong chapter on climate change in the sequel to their famous book Freakonomics , but some of us have been on the hating-those-dudes train forever. Steven Levitt is probably a Very Good Economist, but he has proven again and again and again that this Using Economics To Explain The World thing is utter bullshit. And he and Dubner invented this pop-econ trend that is the most annoying application of make-believe science since pop-psychology.

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Freakonomics Has Always Been Dumb

Antidepressants, not sleep drugs, often prescribed for insomnia

Insomnia, the inability to fall or stay asleep, can make the days feel fuzzy and the nights never-ending. The disorder can increase the risk for depression and suicidal thoughts, lower work productivity and even raise blood pressure, studies have shown. About 40 million Americans have chronic sleep disorders that prevent them from getting good rest.

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Antidepressants, not sleep drugs, often prescribed for insomnia