Economy

The Risk of Investment Promises May Be Unhedgeable

By Justin Katz | August 29, 2012 |

Early in the summer, Rhode Island General Treasurer Gina Raimondo announced that the state had invested $900 million of its pension assets in hedge funds.  The decision was actually made in the middle of last year, in response to an asset liability study, treasury spokeswoman Joy Fox tells the Current.  At that point, the treasurer began…

Umm… Who (and What Policies) Got Us into This Mess?

By Justin Katz | August 23, 2012 |

I’ve had the extreme good fortune to shift careers to one that allows me time to create and stare at charts. (Sadly, yes, that’s a literal description of some of my afternoons, as well as my feelings about those afternoons.)  So it’s with an especially strong “What!?” that I watched this video, via Ann Althouse, via Glenn…

What Happens In A Good Economy

By Patrick Laverty | August 18, 2012 |

It’s not that often where I can find an article on CNN.com that has much relevance to Rhode Island, but this one caught my eye. It just shows what a little ingenuity and work can do when you actually have a thriving economy. Out in North Dakota where the unemployment rate currently sits at 3%…

Other States Need Much More Misery Before RI Has Company

By Justin Katz | August 17, 2012 |

The unemployment rate for Rhode Island fell by one tenth of a percent to 10.8%, but total employment dropped by 80 people.  That’s not even a “mixed picture,” though.  The only reason the unemployment rate moved in a seemingly positive direction is that 471 more Rhode Islanders just gave up looking for work. So if…

Barro’s Welfare Error

By Justin Katz | August 11, 2012 |

Via Ted Nesi comes a Bloomberg column by Josh Barro.  It’s one of those commentaries in which it isn’t quite clear whether the author is offering pure political advice or expressing his opinion, so I’ll assume the latter.  In that context, here are Barro’s thoughts on the balance of the economy and government: If you…

Recoveries: The Difference the Debt Makes (Not to Mention the Government’s Focus)

By Justin Katz | August 6, 2012 |

Earlier today, Glenn Reynolds linked to an American Enterprise Institute post by James Pethokoukis, drawing on charts from economist John Taylor showing that the United States economy hasn’t been returning toward where it would have been without the crash, and that this is unusual for prior downturns.   The reasons, I think, can be inferred…

One Graph Says it All

By Marc Comtois | August 3, 2012 |

Hm. So what this says is we’d have been better off without the stimulus? Well, at least we’re in our 3rd “recovery summer“, ’cause one just wasn’t enough! ADDENDUM: Woops, almost forgot. It’s Bush’s fault.

Hopkins Center Milton Party (and Thoughts on the Fuel of Capitalism)

By Justin Katz | August 1, 2012 |

The Stephen Hopkins Center for Civil Rights’ panel discussion on the event of Milton Friedman’s hundredth birthday offset “liberaltarian” Brown professor John Tomasi with June Speakman, a Roger Williams professor more inclined to agree with the prefix of the coinage. The panel would have benefited from the inclusion of an unabridged conservative who agreed with…

The Context of the President’s Context

By Justin Katz | July 27, 2012 |

It’s intriguing to observe the telescoping nature of the “context” to which folks are referring when discussing President Obama’s infamous Friday the 13th Roanoake speech. The damning two sentences continue to be: If you’ve got a business — you didn’t build that. Somebody else made that happen. The inferred meaning is that somebody else should…

Talking Teen Unemployment and the Minimum Wage on the Dan Yorke Show

By Justin Katz | July 26, 2012 |

630AM/99.7FM WPRO has posted my appearance on the Dan Yorke show, Tuesday, in two segments. The first is the initial half hour introducing the research from the RI Center for Freedom & Prosperity and touching on some conclusions. For the second hour, Economic Development Corp. board member and VIBCO President Karl Wadensten joined us in…