Is Wal-Mart a Welfare State?

The Washington Post's George Will calls it "Something not easily distinguished from theft" . Maryland legislators passed a law this month which requires employers with 10,000 or more workers to spend at least 8% of payroll on employee health benefits. How many employers are af...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy

ACT Govt deficit

Tony Harris's ID on Troppo is not yet set up, but I reproduce his latest column for the Fin below the fold. Some aphorisms have no place in government. Thus, honesty is not the best policy: it is better to hide the unpalatable. This desire to camouflage nasty truths explains w...

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Posted in Economics and public policy

America's competitive, deregulated economy needs a safety net to match

America spends more on social benefits that Denmark, says Jacob Hacker . The difference is that the retirement pensions and healthcare benefits many Americans rely on are funded through tax breaks and employer contributions rather than the welfare state -- welfare comes as an...

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Posted in Society, Economics and public policy

Joshua Smith at the Manly Art Gallery

Joshua Smith (1905-1995) achieved fame as the subject of the painting by William Dobell that won the Archibald Prize in 1943. Smith and another party jointly challenged the award in court on the ground that the painting was a caricature. Correction , 7 Oct 06, Smith was not a...

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Posted in Art and Architecture

Nietzsche in a Nutshell: A blast of a passage

I mentioned to someone over a drink tonight that 'favourite passages' would be a good blog topic. Here's one of my favourite pieces of philosophical writing. Feel free to quote one of yours in the comments sections. It's the beginning of an early fragment - On Truth and Lie in...

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Posted in Philosophy

The Inaugural Meeting of the Asia Pacific Partnership for doing almost nothing - the column

The Asia-Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and Climate comprises the US, Australia, China, India, Japan and South Korea. As they met in Sydney last week, I kept thinking of the planet Venus. Over 95 per cent of Venus' atmosphere is carbon-dioxide or CO2. That's the prin...

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Posted in Politics - national, Environment

A kiss is just a kiss?

When two men kiss, is it ideologically offensive? News Limited columnist Paul Gray thinks so : My young family were among the viewers. At Christmas, they all sat down to watch the Spicks and Specks yuletide special, A Very Specky Christmas. Despite my often caustic anti-ABC co...

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Posted in Print media, Films and TV

Kieran Healy on economics

In the researches set off by Don Arthur's critique of my article on 'acting tough' I came upon Keiran Healy's excellent review on Crooked Timber of Steven Levitt's Freakonomics . I'd actually raved about the symposium they'd held at the time, but reserved Healy's review for su...

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Posted in Economics and public policy

Open Source Software: Massachusetts leads the way - and falls flat on its face

I reported the triumph of Massachusetts mandating open standards for the computer files its government would generate here . Well, for the unititiated, along with various other setbacks for open source software, things seem to be unravelling with various resignations . Microso...

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Posted in IT and Internet

If only they'd stop being so black, says Gruen

I don't often violently disagree with Nicholas Gruen. But in a recent Troppo post he argues that disadvantaged groups like America's black population are held back by their culture not just by a lack of opportunity. As evidence of this Nicholas points to a recent NBER paper by...

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Posted in Education, Economics and public policy

Acting tough, acting white: the culture of the disadvantaged and the perpetuation of disadvantage?

David Gruen (distantly related by fraternity) 1 sent me the following abstract from a recent NBER working paper. In it some econometrics is done on a phenomenon that (I believe) was first discussed seriously in American sociology in the mid to late 50s (you'd expect economics...

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Posted in Education, Society, Economics and public policy

Gender division of labour in the home - the column

Well Troppodillians, subject to the usual caveats - I take all responsibility for errors of fact, judgement, taste and ideology, I still thank you all for helping me out on this column which has now been published. Whether you think it's any good or not, this was the most succ...

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Posted in Economics and public policy

Disadvantage

I heard this program on PM the other day about the collapse into petrol sniffing of the aboriginal community at Uluru. In some ways a war zone would be better than this. Call it 'disadvantage' if you like, but I think that rather misses what is going on.

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - Northern Territory, Society

Why don't they? . . . .

Compared with a few hundred years ago the world works incredibly, almost miraculously well. But do you think of something really simple that you wonder why it isn't being done? I planned to compile a list of ten really simple things that should be done which were obvious (at l...

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Posted in Uncategorised, Miscellaneous, IT and Internet, Geeky Musings

Faith

I enjoyed this post by Mark B as well as Paul Gray's op ed to which he linked and many of the comments on Mark's post. A few days ago I picked up a book of essays by G Lowes Dickinson and here is an extract of the last lecture in a set of lectures he delivered in 1905 entitled...

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Posted in Religion

Children of the lucky country

This week's column is on the subject of the book "Children of the lucky country" the state of children. It speaks for itself I guess, though of course in a column format one doesn't have sufficient space to spell everything out. Suffice it to say that as I read the book it see...

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Posted in Politics - national, Society, Economics and public policy

Gender relations in the home

A little post to get the year off to an uncontroversial start! I mentioned a book I've read - "Children of the Lucky Country" below . Here is a quote from it relating to the division of labour at home between the genders (p. 83). In the past, the way society arranged for the...

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Posted in History, Economics and public policy, Gender

Welcome to Club Troppo!

Well, here you are at the capacious new premises of Club Troppo (formerly Troppo Armadillo ). Just about all the grunt, grind and skill involved in creating this shiny revamped WordPress blog has been contributed by the amazing (and amazingly patient) Stephen Bounds. We are de...

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Posted in Uncategorised

A Christmas Column

This week's column - with the answer to the question about the picture below. And I hope Troppodillians had an enjoyable Christmas. Some Christmas reflections ________________________________________________________________ I'm afraid (but not ashamed) to say that I'm an abste...

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Posted in Uncategorised, Life

Who is this man, and who painted his picture?

All will be revealed on Tuesday night.

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Posted in Uncategorized