Monetary Policy. I’m not only not feeling it, I’m dehydrating because of it.
…than the economy. In chart form it looks like this: First 43 years doubling: GDP 8.6 yrs, 99%’ers 10.75 yrs, 1%’ers 14.3 yrs. Next 32 years doubling: GDP 10.6 yrs,…
…than the economy. In chart form it looks like this: First 43 years doubling: GDP 8.6 yrs, 99%’ers 10.75 yrs, 1%’ers 14.3 yrs. Next 32 years doubling: GDP 10.6 yrs,…
…much like a lot of farm and ranch graineries, feed makers, dryers, gins, and suppliers. Cooperatives work by not taking excess profits. The members pay for the facilities and workers…
…worth thinking about in relation to government policy, and also to examine physician expertise and competence in such matters either ‘on label’ or ‘off label’ in the aggregate, as well…
…information about products’ energy use. Label is voluntary, and Congress ordered it The Energy Star label is voluntary for products that meet certain efficiency levels, and differs from Department of…
…points to Tyler Cowen in the Globe and Mail: [Q:]Can advances in AI create great numbers of jobs? [Cowen:]No. A lot of people will be hurt by it. Owners of…
…the medical sector into “institutional providers” and “individual providers,” and authorizes budgets for the former and uniform fee schedules for the latter. “Institutional providers” typically refers to hospitals and nursing…
…the main theme of his book. Off-label drug promotion by industry has been responsible for some of the worst medical disasters of the past three decades. For instance, throughout the…
…teachers. 1,000 teachers could reduce the average class size for 50,000 students from 25 to 17. It is a perfectly fair question to ask which is more important: giving an…
…paid as a percentage of income is rising for the bottom 99% while it is descending for the top 1%. The actual percentages for the 99%’ers start in 1992 at…
…by some RW’ers and LW’ers that the vaccines are not very effective. I’m here to tell you to beware of these headlines and reports. For example, here is a report…