Wednesday, August 21, 2024

Crossing to Safety

I rarely read books for a second time, mainly because I am a slow reader and there are so many good books I haven't yet read. But recently I decided to reread Crossing to Safety by Wallace Stegner. 

It had been about 30 years since I first read it. I did not remember it well, but I did remember liking it very much. After the second read this summer, I can report that I liked it just as much, maybe more.

Crossing to Safety is not a book of high drama. It is a book about friendship, marriage, aging, and life's other challenges, focusing on two couples as they traverse their lives from their youth as struggling academics to their later years of greater wisdom and inevitable loss. 

I read somewhere that, though fiction, the book is autobiographical. That makes sense. It reads like a thoughtful and honest memoir, which is a genre I love.

Sunday, August 18, 2024

Maybe Ms. Harris needs some economists

The response to the rollout of Kamala Harris's economic plan, especially the price gouging regulation, has not been good. 

When you lose the ever-reasonable Catherine Rampell, you should doubt whether you are positioning yourself to attract swing voters. Rampell writes, "It’s hard to exaggerate how bad this policy is. It is, in all but name, a sweeping set of government-enforced price controls across every industry, not only food. Supply and demand would no longer determine prices or profit levels. Some far-off Washington bureaucrats would....At best, this would lead to shortagesblack markets and hoarding, among other distortions seen previous times countries tried to limit price growth by fiat.

The centrist editorial page of the Washington Post titles their piece "The times demand serious economic ideas. Harris supplies gimmicks." 

What is happening here? I have two hypotheses.

One is that the Harris campaign believes that the remaining persuadable swing voters are economically ignorant, so the campaign is offering them economically ignorant economic policies. Bryan Caplan's wonderful book The Myth of the Rational Voter documents a lot of mistaken beliefs among the general public, including an anti-market bias. Ms. Harris's political advisers may be steering her to pander to these mistaken beliefs,

A second hypothesis involves campaign personnel. The people I see mentioned as Harris economic advisers are Brian Deese, Gene Sperling, Mike Pyle, Deanne Millison, and Brian Nelson. All smart people, no doubt. But as far as I know, none of these people is trained as a PhD economist. They all seem to be lawyers. Maybe lawyers are more inclined to see a problem and think, "I know what new law will fix that." True economists are more respectful of the invisible hand and more worried about the unintended consequences of heavy-handed regulation.

Where is Jason Furman when you need him?

Friday, August 16, 2024

I talk with Jon Hartley

Thursday, August 15, 2024

Kamala Harris...sigh

I plan to vote for Kamala Harris. Why? Simply because she is not Donald Trump. In my judgment, Trump is (1) an authoritarian narcissist whose rhetoric is mean-spirited and untethered from reality and (2) an isolationist with wrong-headed views on trade and immigration and downright scary views on national security issues like NATO, Ukraine, and Taiwan.

But every time Harris says something specific about economic policy, she makes my voting for her more painful. For example: No taxes on tips, stricter rules against price gouging, expanded price controls on pharmaceuticals. 

My take on these issues:

1. The janitor who cleans the restaurant after it closes should not face a higher tax rate than the waiter who earns much of his income in tips.

2. Inflation is about supply and demand, not price gouging. Ask Janet Yellen or any of the other excellent economists in the Biden-Harris administration.

3. Greater pharmaceutical price controls mean less research and fewer cures in the future, as the Wall Street Journal points out today.

I read that, in the coming days, Harris plans to be vague about her policy plans. I hope that is true because by advocating specific ill-advised (if politically attractive) policies during the campaign, she might feel compelled to follow through on them after she is elected. After the election, good policy is more likely to win out against good politics. At least I hope so.

Ms. Harris, you have my vote, but please, don't make it any more painful for me.

Tuesday, August 13, 2024

I am on Wall Street Week

 You can watch here.