-
About
Economic, legal, political and social commentary.
-
Categories
- Economics and public policy (1866)
- Uncategorized (1445)
- Uncategorised (1118)
- Politics - national (1000)
- Politics - international (624)
- History (397)
- Law (383)
- Life (383)
- Philosophy (383)
- Political theory (375)
Show all categories
- Society (300)
- Missing Link (269)
- Cultural Critique (262)
- IT and Internet (258)
- Media (232)
- Education (219)
- Humour (206)
- Films and TV (193)
- Democracy (167)
- Science (153)
- Literature (139)
- Print media (139)
- Innovation (131)
- Art and Architecture (125)
- Politics - Northern Territory (120)
- Health (117)
- Journalism (110)
- Religion (110)
- Environment (103)
- Web and Government 2.0 (98)
- regulation (94)
- Blegs (90)
- Climate Change (88)
- Geeky Musings (86)
- Ned the Bear (77)
- Sport-general (77)
- Chess (73)
- Ethics (73)
- Music (71)
- Bargains (66)
- Social Policy (66)
- Miscellaneous (62)
- Gender (59)
- Coronavirus crisis (56)
- Business (54)
- Death and taxes (53)
- Information (53)
- Social (52)
- Metablogging (50)
- Sortition and citizens’ juries (50)
- Libertarian Musings (44)
- Best From Elsewhere (42)
- Immigration and refugees (41)
- Theatre (40)
- Sport - rugby (37)
- Employment (35)
- Public and Private Goods (32)
- Race and indigenous (26)
- Terror (25)
- Bullshit (23)
- Inequality (23)
- WOW! - Amazing (23)
- Intellectual Property (22)
- Medical (21)
- Dance (20)
- Interesting Graphs (20)
- Ask Troppo's Love Gods (19)
- Parenting (19)
- bubble (16)
- Competitions (16)
- Food (16)
- Indigenous (15)
- Methodology (14)
- Sport - Rugby League (14)
- Space (12)
- Isegoria (10)
- Personal (10)
- Blogs TNG (9)
- Travel (9)
- Intellectual Monopoly Privileges (8)
- Review (8)
- Site News (7)
- Firms (4)
- Criminal law (3)
- Products (2)
- recovery of old post (2)
- repost for the record (2)
- War and military (2)
- Startup (1)
-
Archives by Year
-
Posts by Author
- Nicholas Gruen (3063)
- Ken Parish (1440)
- Don Arthur (505)
- Paul Frijters (347)
- Mark Bahnisch (272)
- James Farrell (159)
- Tony Harris (152)
- Geoff Honnor (136)
- David Walker (124)
- Richard Tsukamasa Green (121)
- Fred Argy (113)
- Wicking (110)
- Wayne Wood (105)
- Rex Ringschott (95)
- Sophie Masson (67)
- Cam (63)
- Ingolf Eide (52)
- Scott Wickstein (43)
- Unknown (34)
- Chris Lloyd (33)
- Paul Bamford (aka Gummo T) (33)
- Stephen Hill (24)
- john r walker (20)
- Patrick (20)
- Rafe Champion (18)
- Saul Eslake (16)
- Shaun Cronin (16)
- Roop Sandhu (13)
- Dr Troppo (12)
- Peter Whiteford (12)
- Antonios Sarhanis (10)
- Bruce Bradbury (10)
- Backroom Girl (7)
- john Walker (7)
- Danielle McCredden (6)
- B Model Baby (5)
- Damian Jeffree (5)
- Gaby (5)
- Julia (5)
- Seamus C (5)
- JC (4)
- Luke Slawomirski (4)
- Paul Watson (4)
- James Wheeldon (3)
- Jen (3)
- Paul Martin (3)
- Darlene (2)
- davidsligar (2)
- ellenbroad (2)
- Mike Waller (2)
- David Coles (1)
- Joshua Gans (1)
- meika loofs samorzewski (1)
- Sam Roggeveen (1)
Rising inequality in good and bad times?
The respected Institute of Fiscal Studies has raised the spectre of a two-nation Britain, after finding that some of the poorest households are facing much higher inflation rates than average. You may catch a preview of the publication in http://www.ifs.org.uk:80/publications/...
Posted in Economics and public policy
Is Australian social protection ready for the great recession?
Australia doesnt really do social insurance. For many years income protection policy has focussed on poverty alleviation rather than protection against negative income shocks. The forthcoming recession might be a time when we begin to regret this model. As the graph below show...
Posted in Economics and public policy
Two new posters at Troppo
Bruce Bradbury and frequent commenter - though mostly a while ago - Peter Whiteford, both distinguished academics at the Uni of NSW emailed me asking if we'd be interested in having them as contributors. The answer was 'yes' and so you should expect a post from one of these fi...
Posted in Economics and public policy
Moving to a multi-polar world
One of the things that has surprised me in this first of all blogged financial crises is that there's been relatively little talk of the move from a uni-polar to a multi-polar world. Long periods of global progress have tended to be accompanied by a hegemonic world power able...
Posted in Economics and public policy
Conventional and market morality plays itself out in the greenhouse debate
[caption id="attachment_34331" align="alignleft" width="347"] The earth: it's all about YOU![/caption] Hayek argued that were were naturally selfish. In fact he proposed the opposite - that human beings are naturally solidaristic, by the 'natural morality' that evolved in preh...
Conservation strategies: a review
I was looking for something else and came upon this review I wrote for the CIS magazine Policy in its pre-Andrew Norton days. I'm always surprised when I read old stuff. It's never as I recall it. Always a bit better or worse than I thought. Anyway, I remember being a bit unha...
Posted in Economics and public policy
Gerard Henderson: welcome to the blogosphere!
There is an interesting new boy on the block! Gerard Henderson's Media Watch Dog is sure to be stimulating read because he has a good memory and he knows where a lot of bodies are buried. He has a long and honourable history as a media watcher, starting in 1988 with a print ve...
Posted in Print media, Journalism
Evidence hierarchies and street-level policy making
Andrew Leigh links argues that social policy makers should use an evidence hierarchy to sift through policy relevant research. The idea of a hierarchy of evidence (or ' levels of evidence ') comes from the evidence based medicine movement. As Andrew explains, there are thousan...
Posted in Uncategorised
Favourite podcasts and vodcasts anyone?
In a little over a week I'll be heading for Europe and back via Bejing. So I need around 40 hours of really good iPodian entertainment. Suggestions are gratefully received. In the spirit of reciprocity, I can tell you that " Not without you " on life matters is a wonderful thi...
Brad the brawler
I've been enjoying Brad Delong's agro for a while. Luigi Zingale is a very smart guy with some interesting proposals. I'm reading an excellent article of his right now on " The Future of Securities Regulation ". But Delong is not impressed with his line that 'we have a banking...
Posted in Economics and public policy
An effective reply to Malcolm Turnbull
The following is taken from http://economistsview.typepad.com/economistsview/2009/03/ken-rogoff.html---. It is a comment by Paul Krugman to the many people, such as Ken Rogoff, who are anxious to pin our economic problems on the deficit. He says: The stimulus package wont prol...
Posted in Economics and public policy
Against bailouts - well the wrong kind anyway
The Daily Show With Jon Stewart M - Th 11p / 10c CNBC Gives Financial Advice Daily Show Full Episodes Important Things With Demetri Martin Political Humor Economic Crisis
Posted in Humour, Economics and public policy
Banking gets even more concentrated - well sort of . . .
Well, I guess, given their inability to access funding it doesn't really matter. But remember those days when Aussie Home Loans and Wizard were slugging it out as the two mortgage securitisers taking it to the big banks - together they shaved around two percentage points off t...
Posted in Economics and public policy
Some objects move in the kaleidoscope
IIRC Keynesian economist AGL Shackle coined the expression "the world is kaleidic" which is a nice way of saying that one can go from the heights of optimism to the depths of despair by just changing a few things. Economics and other things with positive feedback loops in them...
Posted in Economics and public policy
More on the handouts
I was asked to do this column at short notice today. I had in mind incorporating a bunch of things I didn't manage to do. In any event, for the record, here it is. If I get the time, more on this shortly. Will the cash splashes lift the economy? When they were first announced,...
Posted in Economics and public policy
More anti-Keynes humbug
In the February issue of Quadrant , Steven Kates laments the resurrection of Keynes , and warns his readers not to fall for the doctrines of a man who denied one of the key laws of economics. According to Kates, Say's Law is a proposition that since 1936 every economist has be...
Hayek gets Inflation by the balls
An amusing post by Greg Ransom on Taking Hayek Seriously. Based on the story of Hayek's visit to Australia in 1976 as told by Ron Kitching with some more background on Catallaxy . In brief, Ron Kitching and the late Roger Randerson organised financial backing for a month-long...
Posted in Uncategorised, Humour
