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

The proper term is Effective Demand

I have written before that Paul Krugman is in a process of illumination about inequality. Today I see that he wrote about how inequality reduces growth. Jared Bernstein wrote about it too. Paul Krugman wrote… “There is, at this point, no reason to believe that comforting the comfortable and afflicting the afflicted is good for […]

Remember the tobacco settlement?

Kenneth Thomas has covered how many state level deals to entice private companies are bad deals, including sports stadiums, as ‘job creators’ extol their own virtues. Run has covered the defunding of state unviversities and also the rise in tuition and student debt. Robert Waldmann writes about the constant ballance of reporting. Yves Smith has […]

Hearing echoes of effective demand

I see two articles this morning about how increasing inequality will lead to slower growth. How Increasing Income Inequality Is Dampening U.S. Economic Growth, And Possible Ways To Change The Tide, by S&P Capital IQ. Comment on first article by ABC news, Wealth Gap is slowing US economic growth. The articles are basically describing how […]

Heiner Flassbeck… a great economist speaks on wage share

At the 9:40 minute point of this video, Heiner Flassbeck says… “… But even people who are asking for more expansionary fiscal policies like Larry Summers or Paul Krugman, they are not talking about intervention in the labor market, but this is what is absolutely needed because there is the imbalance. It has nothing to […]

Is 6.2% the NAIRU?

News was released today that unemployment was 6.2% in July. How close are we to the natural rate of unemployment, or as some might say the NAIRU. In my research into effective demand, I track the natural rate of unemployment. How do I determine the natural rate of unemployment? … By comparing unemployment to the […]

How We Reduce Poverty, and How “The Market” Doesn’t

Matt Bruenig gives us a great breakdown of what poverty would look like if we relied on the market to solve it (as we did almost exclusively for thousands of years before the emergence of enlightened modern welfare states over the last two centuries). The poverty rate among the elderly would be > 45%. (Old […]

Shortage of labor by rejecting wage offers

This posts refers to an article written by Gary Burtless, Unemployment and the “Skills Mismatch” Story: Overblown and Unpersuasive. Mr. Burtless says that businesses are complaining about a skills shortage in an environment of lots of job openings. What kind of model might describe this situation? I have one… (link to model) Labor share represents […]

Yes, there is trouble in Japan

Just yesterday I posted about how weak real wages in Japan spells trouble for Abenomics. (link) Today we see by way of Stanley White and Leika Kihara at Reuters that output in Japan might be showing recession. “Output is clearly weakening, enough to make you even wonder if the economy is OK,” said Yoshiki Shinke, […]