‘Headline’ Surplus/Deficit and ‘Headline’ Debt
…that are unlikely to affect real income I would agree with Boskin that when people hear the word ‘surplus’ unqualified they will understand it in the ‘traditional’ ‘headline’ sense, which…
…that are unlikely to affect real income I would agree with Boskin that when people hear the word ‘surplus’ unqualified they will understand it in the ‘traditional’ ‘headline’ sense, which…
The latest in free lunch supply-side spin from William Kucewicz actually provides some useful information. For example, his chart of Germany’s unemployment rate distinguishing between the high unemployment rate for…
Everybody and their brother has an opinion about the direction of long bond yields so it should be OK for me to stick my two cents worth in. This chart…
…user with a smaller co-pay. In the end, someone is still paying an out-of-control price. The costs reflected in the attached chart come from Heather Bresch’s testimony to Congress. $334…
…wages. It is not divided by households or per capita, so this measure doesn’t try to convey how much improved individuals’ lots might be. It conveys how much more income…
…and why they are not covered detailed on his site. If you click on the Pice Chart, you will get a readable version of this pie chart. If you doubt…
…that we pay a lot more per capita than other developing nations. This chart may not be the “chart of the century” but it is “excellent” as it traces total…
…between top marginal income tax rates and real GDP growth using a scatter plot. I am inordinately fond of scatter plots. The nice thing about a scatter plot is that…
…labor’s share of national income in relation to the utilization of labor and capital on the x-axis… Not by labor’s total income, but by labor’s % share. You can actually…
…chart will show. Finally, going back to Warren’s work, she argues that the rapid rise of home prices swallowed up the nominal income increase due to women entering the workforce,…