When Does Boneless Not Mean Without Bones?
…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…
…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…
…of the General Theory: Stripped down, the conclusions of The General Theory might be expressed as four bullet points: • Economies can and often do suffer from an overall lack…
…in economic theory which is modest but not zero. However, I didn’t find economic theory useful in a way which is flattering to economic theory. My reasoning is that an…
Kash has motivated me to do a little Google searching on something called “starve the beast” theory. How Tax Cuts Feed the Beast by Daniel Shaviro is a neat title…
…depends entirely on the hidden assumption that the economy would be just as strong with higher tax rates as with lower tax rates. I am aware of no economic theory…
David Callaway, editor-in-chief of CBSMarketwatch.com, puts it well: Move over Keynes. The era of girlie-men economic theory has begun. Not since the 1936 publication of “The General Theory of Employment,…
…of course, that the contract was not negotiated but instead compelled by law. Voila! The antidisestablishmentarianism theory is disestablished. The tax credits/subsidies clause in the ACA applies even to you,…
Dan here…Via Sandwichman at Econospeak comes William Rees’s response to Paul Krugman’s post on “the prophets of climate despair”: “In theory GDP growth could continue indefinitely – if it weren’t…
…noted, is race. More precisely, the fuss is about the ideological legacy of slavery as it has been articulated through race. The persistence and prominence of a “crack-brained” conspiracy theory…
…in David Schloss’s canonical explanation of “the Theory of the Lump of Labour”: In accordance with this theory it is held that there is a certain fixed amount of work…