Marc Comtois

Closing the Achievment Gap the Wrong Way

By Marc Comtois | September 21, 2011 |

Frederick Hess: Today, the notion of “closing achievement gaps” has become synonymous with education reform. The Education Trust, perhaps the nation’s most influential K-12 advocacy group, explains: “Our goal is to close the gaps in opportunity and achievement.”…Such sentiments are admirable, and helping the lowest-achieving students do better is of course a worthy and important…

Netflix Shows Flaws in Marginal Pricing

By Marc Comtois | September 21, 2011 |

Megan McCardle looked at Netflix/Qwikster and explains how the problem is a business model over reliant on marginal cost pricing. It’s an object lesson that can be extended to, for example, health care costs. [P]eople were confusing the marginal cost with the average cost. Content providers were willing to license their movies and television shows…

Who Pays for Past Mistakes

By Marc Comtois | September 7, 2011 |

Generational warfare: It’s bound to happen here in Rhode Island with the pension crisis. It’s also happening nationally on the budget deficit debate with the new Super Congressional panel set to convene. Education Policy wonk Rick Hess offers his perspective: You’re either with the kids or with those rushing to the ramparts to defend retiree…

Green Fave of Obama’s Goes Under, Taxpayers Foot the Bill

By Marc Comtois | September 2, 2011 |

Solyndra is a manufacturer of solar panels–a green technology!–and was given half a billion dollars in loan guarantees by the Federal Government. Oh, and a major Obama donor, George Kaiser, was also a financial backer of the the company. Now it looks like they’re going under: A company that served as a showcase for the…

Powerless and It’s OK

By Marc Comtois | August 31, 2011 |

We lost power. We still don’t have power. It’s ok. We didn’t have flooding. We have gas/hot water and septic (good thing we’re holding off on hooking up to city sewer–no grinder pump problems for us). No tree damage, no house damage. I was lucky enough to obtain a power inverter prior to the storm,…

A “Meddling” Government Directed by “A Few Players”

By Marc Comtois | August 24, 2011 |

Justin’s post brought the word “meddling” to mind. And that made me remember this from Tocqueville: The nature of despotic power in democratic ages is not to be fierce or cruel, but minute and meddling. Despotism of this kind though it does not trample on humanity, is directly opposed to the genius of commerce and…

One Sector of the Economy Booms: Government Regulation

By Marc Comtois | August 22, 2011 |

First, a chart and explanation from Investors Business Daily (h/t): Under President Obama, while the economy is struggling to grow and create jobs, the federal regulatory business is booming. Regulatory agencies have seen their combined budgets grow a healthy 16% since 2008, topping $54 billion, according to the annual “Regulator’s Budget,” compiled by George Washington…

Charting a New Course

By Marc Comtois | August 18, 2011 |

So we tried to see if we could make a fiscal go of it, as Justin has explained, but now we’re scaling back a bit at Anchor Rising. (Some of us–me–got an early start with a particularly busy summah). Over the last few months, we’ve all have found it harder to do our duty and…

Splintering the Splintered

By Marc Comtois | August 12, 2011 |

The RI GOP has been criticized for years (including by me) for not getting its act together and for in-fighting that has undermined its already small base in this blue, blue state. Yes, there are legitimate ideological and political differences amongst the ranks and leadership of any political party. Chafee v. Laffey is perhaps the…

Rising College Costs due to Administrative Bloat

By Marc Comtois | August 10, 2011 |

From Investors Business Daily: An IBD analysis of data from the National Center for Education Statistics shows that from 1989-2009 the number of administrative personnel at four- and two-year institutions grew 84%, from about 543,000 to over 1 million. By contrast, the number of faculty increased 75%, from 824,000 to 1.4 million, while student enrollment…