Monthly Archives: 2019-12

9 published posts from 2019-12.

The poverty of intellectual correctness – Part One: Neo-Darwinism

I wrote this essay a few years ago as part one of a two-part article that would illustrate some parallels between intellectual authoritarianism in neo-Darwinism and in neoclassical economics. In some ways my response to Paul Krugman’s response to me was Part Two. But, wanting...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Science, Cultural Critique

Corporate Social Policy Responsibility

[caption id="attachment_33337" align="alignright" width="344"] I was after one of the sillier charts to illustrate CSR. It was a tough choice, but this one hit all its KPIs. Originally worked up from the map which guided the bombing of Hamburg, all Troppodillians will join wit...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Churchill’s children: the rise of the privileged Marketeers in Anglo-Land

For almost a century the royal road to becoming a top politician in Anglo-Land was to study law and/or a bit of economics. In Australia that was the ticket for Keating, Hawke, Gillard, Howard, and Turnbull. In the US, that mold fit Obama (law), Clinton (law), and both GHW and...

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Posted in Politics - international, Life, History, Society, Journalism, Geeky Musings, Political theory, Law, Social Policy

The framing wars: Have the elites gone off on frolics of their own unsupported by the community?

Are you pro-choice or pro-life? Language like this shows us how fundamental framing has become to political combat. Political debate isn’t just ‘dumbed down’ or simplified. There’s a geography to the ground on which it’s fought and those with an eye to victory head for the hig...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

Job of last resort: the job guarantee’s modest cousin

Hello, my name's David Sligar. Nicholas Gruen has kindly encouraged me to do some blogging here. I started reading this blog over a decade ago, so I'm excited to contribute. First up is a slightly modified cross post from my blog proposing a " job of last resort ". The policy...

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Posted in Uncategorized

Oysters and institutions

I have extracted below a section that took my fancy from an academic article about the economist Neild, whom I'd not heard of previously. It is an interesting story on its own terms and a nice illustration of how unhelpful the instinct to locate regimes or their functionality...

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Posted in Economics and public policy

#BoySplaining: How not to argue

[caption id="attachment_33290" align="aligncenter" width="1400"] I made up the term #Bossplaining. Or thought I did. Turns out it's already a thing.[/caption] The one thing I learned in my university education, the one thing that excited me, was the need for people to exercise...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Cultural Critique

A recent presentation on 'Making an impact'

https://youtu.be/IX0dt2X5d64 Here's a presentation I gave to a recent Government Economists' Conference in Canberra. Like some other reflections of my book launching years (only some of which have been preserved for posterity),[1. I know you'll be looking for book launches at...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Information, Cultural Critique

We’ve already had Our Very Own Brexit

[caption id="attachment_33274" align="alignright" width="278"] In good bookstores everywhere – at a very reasonable price[/caption] Cross-posted from the Lowy Institute Blog . Instead of munching popcorn at the political theatre, citizens’ assemblies would give the community a...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Climate Change, Cultural Critique, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries