Labeling Food Products for Profits
Labeling for Increased Profits, Farmer and Economist, Michael Smith It is a well-known marketing ploy to label, relabel, and even mislabel a product again and again to increase sales. We…
Labeling for Increased Profits, Farmer and Economist, Michael Smith It is a well-known marketing ploy to label, relabel, and even mislabel a product again and again to increase sales. We…
…which people can Google that wants us to pay $350 to be able to put their label on our packaging. But nobody knows who the hell they are, and this…
…models of this sort by the late Richard Goodwin, who had a Marx-influenced predatory model of class struggle cyclical fluctuations. Their early models were labeled as Kynes-Wicksell-Goodwin (KWG) models. But…
…funny and so true. The state of Ohio supreme court . . . And regarding the food item’s being called a “boneless wing,” it is common sense that that label…
…Plan proposes a combined 5.2% fix to a problem then scored at 1.92% (75 year) or 3.5% (infinite future). With a little slight of hand the LMS authors were able…
…and Liebman-MacGuineas-Samwick (LMS). So we are faced this year with our own Clash of the Titans. And it matters because the data sets are incongruent, where CBO in August projected…
…5.2% worker paid fix to a problem scored 1.92% (as has been done before with LMS). And along with posts dealing with the Report release and the Commission expect some…
…anyone on his team, including Jeffrey Liebman (co-author of LMS-a Transforming plan), is committed to Transformation for its own sake. While your true Transformer will never be convinced by arguments…
…along the lines of LMS. And the tables present a nice picture of how that actuarial position has changed over time not only in dollars but as a percentage of…
…slipped to 84%. Indeed the LMS plan’s payroll cap increase explicitly targets that 90%. Which raises the question of why 90% and not 95% or 85%? Why in the face…