vrijdag 7 augustus 2009

Compostion of US Federal Spending and Taxes for 2007


Werk en gezondheidszorg!!


Financial liberalisation and democracy: The role of reform reversals

Will the current crisis reverse the past two decades of democratisation and financial liberalisation? This column documents the complex, non-linear relationship between political and financial reform. Financial liberalisation often reverses as countries move from autocracy to democracy, as “partial democracies” are less liberalised, and there are big differences between de jure and de facto liberalisation.
Read the full article here.

Antwerpen in crisis

Lees deze column op Econoshock, hier.

Global imbalances have grown further


The necessary “global rebalancing” has not even begun. This is a prerequisite to prevent a new global crisis in the future. ...
Lees het volledige artikel hier.

De Belgische economie herleeft! (of toch niet?)


De discussie vandaag gaat vooral over het feit of de Belgische economie al dan niet aan het heropleven is. Het korte antwoord daarop is dat de verslechtering van de afgelopen maanden gestopt is. En dat er hoop is dat de situatie de volgende maanden zal verbeteren. ....
Lees het volledige artikel hier.


China: bogus boom?

To read this Economic Outlook from the American Entreprise Institute for Public Policy Research, click here.

Hospitalisation à domicile : l'étude de la Drees

Poussée par les pouvoirs publics, appréciée des patients, l'hospitalisation à domicile se développe à un rythme soutenu. Le nombre de places disponibles a été multiplié par 1,7 entre 2000 et 2006, selon une étude de la Drees.

Pour consulter l'étude, cliquez ici.

dinsdag 4 augustus 2009

Foreign direct investment and the dark side of decentralization

Read the full report here.

Werk en vakantie.....


Health Reform: Simple or Not?

Read this column on Mankiw's blog, here.

The German fiscal stimulus in perspective

The German authorities faced a chorus of criticism for responding slowly to the crisis. This column says that their delayed stimulus package could and should have been bigger and better. Nonetheless, the Germans deserve commendation for putting the package on solid footing by a new rule regarding fiscal sustainability.
Read the article here.

Labour market institutions and income inequality

The recent debate on trends in inequality in industrial countries has been marred by the lack of consensus about the relevant concept of inequality. Labour economists are concerned with inequality in earnings, macroeconomists with movements in the wage share, while policy-makers tend to focus on household income inequality. We provide a unifying framework to study the relationship between these three concepts of inequality and the way in which labour market institutions affect them. Institutions emerge as a key determinant of inequality, yet they play different roles depending on the extent to which they complement or substitute each other. As a result, we are able to propose a set of inequality minimizing institutions. Institutions that decrease inequality are, however, associated with higher unemployment, and our analysis allows us to quantify the magnitude of this trade-off.
Read the report here.

La grande braderie fiscale est un leurre

Lisez l'article d'opinion du journal Le Monde ici.

Ah, que le capitalisme se vend bien !

Lisez cet article d'opinion ici.

maandag 3 augustus 2009

How a Little Inflation Could Help a Lot

BECAUSE fiscal stimulus has not yet been a striking success, perhaps it’s time to consider new monetary remedies for the economy.
Read the article here.

Could an early warning system have predicted the crisis?

The 2008 global financial crisis has led to renewed calls for “early warning models” to reduce the risks of future crises. But this column says that few of the characteristics suggested as potential causes of the crisis actually help predict the intensity and severity of the crisis across countries. That bodes poorly for the performance of future early warning models.
Read the article here.

How Latin American banks are performing in the crisis

Although the economic slowdown has indirectly affected the region’s banks, they will probably remain profitable and well capitalized.
Read the article here.

De anatomie van de crisis

Lees het volledige artikel op Econoshock, hier.

vrijdag 31 juli 2009

Maybe Medicare Was a Tactical Error

For progressives who now want universal health insurance, Medicare may have been a mistake — tactically, anyway.Read the complete Economix blogpost here.

Migratie en integratie in België.......


Eco-santé: OCDE 2009: comment la Belgique se positionne

Les dépenses de santé totales représentaient en Belgique 10.2% du PIB en 2007, soit 1 point de pourcentage de plus que la moyenne des pays de l’OCDE (8.9%).
Lisez la note de l'OCDE ici.

The Blue Dogs’ Final Dilemma

Read Daniel Henninger's column on healthcare reform in the US here.

Are We What We Search?

Read the complete article in the NYTimes here.

Employers and health reform summary

As the largest source of health insurance for non-elderly Americans, U.S. employers have an extremely large stake in health reform. In 2007, employers provided insurance coverage to 62.9% of Americans under the age of 65. Further, the $532 billion employers contributed to health insurance premiums for their workers accounts for roughly a quarter of total national health spending...
Read the complete article here.

donderdag 30 juli 2009

Policy options to reduce Ireland's greenhouse gas emissions

A side effect of the economic downturn since 2008 is that Ireland may meet its Kyoto Protocol commitment for 2008-2012 to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions, but that its longer term targets for 2020 and beyond are still stringent. This paper addresses both the political challenge and the economic implications of moving to a low-carbon state. The cost of reducing carbon emissions varies widely and heavy costs could be incurred. A soundly based policy framework that keeps costs down is thus essential, while being mindful of effects on the economy and the vulnerable; the pause in economic growth provides an opportunity for long-term planning. The criteria for policy are primarily threefold: regulatory certainty, including protection from short-term political interference; clearly defined incentives that ensure a credible, long-term price of carbon; and a transparent, dynamic and fair process with which the public can engage. The roles of various policy instruments are discussed, including regulatory and market-based instruments, subsidies and taxation.
Read the complete report here.

Headline Support for the Financial Sector and Upfront Financing Need

Find the IMF's summary table here (including Belgium).

Check out the IMF Update on Fiscal Stimulus and Financial Sector Measures here.

Fiscal stimulus in the G-20 countries

Find the IMF's summary table here.

De Belgische overheid, meer bepaald de afdeling justitie


Kris Peeters is niet gek

OVERHEIDSINTERVENTIES IN DE AUTO-INDUSTRIE — Doet Vlaanderen gekke dingen door Volvo Gent te steunen? Niet als je vergelijkt met wat er in het buitenland allemaal gebeurt om noodlijdende autofabrieken kunstmatig in leven te houden, vindt JO VAN BIESEBROECK.Lees het volledige artikel in De Standaard hier.

The ten principles of economics, translated by the stand up economist

Watch it on youtube here.

Illuminating outline

The Nordic model Economies that are open to the world and offer greater worker involvement are attracting attention - but benefits are hard to replicate elsewhere, write Richard Milne and Andrew Ward in the FT. Read the complete article here.

The crushing responsibility of economists

By Paul De Grauwe in the FT

A few economists warned about the risk of a financial crisis, but the least one can say is that they were not taken seriously by most of the economics profession. Why is that? Why did so many, especially the best and the brightest in the profession, not see the warning signals that were there?

Economic theories affect the way we see and interpret economic data. If we believe that financial markets are efficient and capable of self-regulation, we are likely to interpret a bubble-like movement in real estate and equity prices as evidence of the marvels of free markets.

If we believe, as macroeconomists do, that consumers and producers are rational and fully informed agents, we do not worry that large debt build-ups will be harmful because this build-up must be the result of rational and fully informed decisions that will lead to a new equilibrium.

Thus an economic theory can work as a framing device conditioning us to interpret the facts in a way that is consistent with the theory. Psychologists call this a “confirmation bias”.

It should not be like that. After all, economics is a science (or should be one). And in science, theories should be formulated in such a way that they can be refuted. The main preoccupation of scientists should then be to try to refute these theories.

But that is not the way macroeconomics has evolved during the last two decades. Instead it has become a system of beliefs, some will say a religion, about rational and fully informed agents operating in efficient markets. This belief has become so strongly held that it has fallen victim to the confirmation bias. As a result, it has stopped being science.

The present crisis creates opportunities. The accumulation of facts that refute the mainstream macroeconomic models has become so strong that only the most fundamentalist believers will want to cling to these theories.

The crisis also creates the opportunity to develop better models. This will be the hard part because the world the macroeconomists will have to model is one crowded by agents who have trouble understanding the way the economy functions.

It is also a world in which the interaction between these imperfectly informed individuals regularly creates collective movements of euphoria and panics. These phenomena are hard to model. Yet this is what macroeconomists will have to do if they want to regain respectability as scientists.

Clearly the financial crisis is not only due to the delusions of macroeconomists. The delusions were quite widespread among bankers, supervisors, media and policymakers. Yet society expects the community of scientists to be less prone to delusions than the rest. In that sense the responsibility of the economics profession is crushing.

Is Europe lagging behind the US in university technology licensing?

European universities produce high-quality scientific research, but they licence it to industry far less than US universities. This column introduces new survey evidence on university licensing and assesses the gap between the US and Europe. It highlights European universities’ shortcomings in generating technology transfer revenue, despite their desire to do so.
Read the article here.

Stresstest wijst op zwakte Belgische banken

Lees meer op Econoshock, hier.

De 20 beste ideeën om de klimaatcrisis te bestrijden

De krant The Guardian en het Manchester International Festival stelden een internationaal expertpanel samen over klimaatverandering. Het panel moest meer bepaald op zoek naar ideeën om de klimaatcrisis te bestrijden.
Lees die ideeën op Econoshock hier.

woensdag 29 juli 2009

De Belgische politiek .......

Fundamental paper for health care

The other day I claimed that most published economic papers are imitations with slight adjustments and that in all there are maybe not more than 50 seminal papers which will stay relevant for ever.

For health economics there is probably no paper more important than
For those who still need to read it, they have now some background info as well:

Why is supply and demand so confusing?

For those who teach principles of economics, this post by Scott Sumner is worth contemplating.Scott does a good job explaining why the model of supply and demand is not always as straightforward as it seems. Why? I would put the answer as follows: Supply and demand curves are always drawn "holding other things constant." The key question when considering any possible shift in these curves is which other things are being held constant in the situation at hand.

Greg Mankiw's Blog (July 28, 2009)