Partly to better familiarize myself with the Current Population Survey and partly because I have a hard time finding certain important information, I have started a Datasets Project. I will track certain social statistics on an ongoing basis and update the datasets as the new numbers come in. For now, all of the datasets will… Continue reading Introducing Datasets Project — First Up, Disability
John Quiggin criticizes socializing finance
John Quiggin of Crooked Timber fame has a post on the Jacobin website today critiquing a recent article on socializing finance by Seth Ackerman. After Ackerman’s piece was published, I wrote two sympathetic posts (I, II) about the idea of socializing finance. Quiggin is skeptical. In his response, Quiggin does not appear to take exception… Continue reading John Quiggin criticizes socializing finance
Kant’s great dodge
At one point in Theory and Practice, Kant sets out to establish who should have voting rights. In one very fascinating paragraph, he concludes thusly: Anyone who has the right to vote on this legislation is a citizen (citoyen, i.e. citizen of a state, not bourgeois or citizen of a town). The only qualification required… Continue reading Kant’s great dodge
Virtue ethics and sovereign debt
Analysts tend to write about policy and political institutions in very consequentialist ways. That is, they describe the immediate consequences of some institution or policy, and then use those expected consequences to argue that the institution or policy is good or bad. Discussions around fiscal deficits and the federal debt almost uniformly utilize such a… Continue reading Virtue ethics and sovereign debt
Matt Yglesias on transfers versus teacher salaries
Matt Yglesias has a piece today on the importance of teachers that he openly described as trollish. The basic idea of the piece is that if you accept the viewpoint that socioeconomic conditions are more important for educational achievement than teacher performance, then you must also think that it makes sense to cut teacher salaries… Continue reading Matt Yglesias on transfers versus teacher salaries