Relevant and even prescient commentary on news, politics and the economy.

Financial Arsonist Found ?

Robert Waldmann Jesse Eisinger and Jake Bernstein come very close to accusing Alec Litowitz of the Magnetar hedge fund of being a financial arsonist. I have been speculating about financial arson for a year and a half now. The hypothesis is that Magnetar deliberately set up especially low quality CDOs and bought CDS insurance on […]

Actual List of Social Security Trust Fund Assets

by Bruce Webb Well this is a response to a question in the Rivlin thread. There are widespread misunderstandings about what if anything makes up the “IOUs” in the Trust Funds, with many people thinking they just have artificially low rates (and so obviously underperforming theoretical private accounts) or just are open-ended loosey-goosy commitments to […]

So what is ‘fiscal responsibility’?

There has been some arguing about the dangers of federal deficit spending (little said about the huge private sector debt levels except on econoblogs), but Kevin Drum on Mother Jones notes in a post how the argument appears to be framed in the public’s mind no matter which party or movement is involved: Ah, the […]

Squeezing Doctors vs Squeezing Hospitals II

Robert Waldmann Some time ago, I noted the difference between the provision of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) which reduces the scheduled generosity of payments to hospitals, nursing homes and home health care agencies and the formula in a 1997 bill which was supposed to reduce the generosity of payments to doctors and which is […]

Alice Rivlin on Financial Reform and Deficits

by Linda Beale Alice Rivlin spoke at Wayne State University’s FOCIS forum today on the economic crisis. Rivlin is an economist who served as the first director of the Congressional Budget Office (1975-83, when she was a critic of “reaganomics”), director under Clinton of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) (deputy 1993-94, director 1994-96) […]

Paul and the Austrians (again)

Robert Waldmann is still trying to get Paul Krugman to read my answer to his question. Krugman explaines the neo-Austrian view of the business cycle and unemployment during recessions and asks “why isn’t there similar unemployment during the boom, as workers are transferred into investment goods production?” I answer (in comments and here) I think […]

Detroit’s spring, anti-government rhetoric, and the importance of paying taxes

by Linda Beale Detroit’s spring, anti-government rhetoric, and the importance of paying taxes Dear Readers: As you know, I’ve been offline for a few days. Spent a very nice holiday enjoying the outdoors. Spring has sprung in Michigan. Daffodils are blooming, bobbing their gay yellow heads in various corners of the yard where I tucked […]

Topical thread: ACORN and reporting April 6, 2010

Unedited videos released by the California Attorney General’s Office this weekend. Finally. ACORN is not around, but the news people are. Will there be any notice? Update: Based on the comments it looks like no one watched the unedited tapes. Others have been released in other states. Rachel Maddow has parsed the California tapes. Now […]

Reducing household financial leverage: the easy way and the hard way

In case you haven’t noticed, I have become slightly less “optimistic” about the prospects of a sustainable U.S. recovery. I used to think that the household deleveraging story was more of a decade-long project, and the economy would cycle throughout. But recent deficit hysteria has me worried; income growth might lapse. What differentiates this recovery […]