Author Archives: wciecon

Forecasting Deficits Ontario Style

One of my most piercing electoral memories is the 1993 federal election debate that featured then Prime Minister Kim Campbell, Jean Chretien, Audrey McLaughlin, Preston Manning and Lucien Bouchard.  The part that always sticks in my mind is Lucien Bouchard’s persistent questioning of Campbell with respect to the size of the deficit in the 1993 […]

My trip to see the oil sands

Last month, the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers organised a field trip for a group of economics professors to see a couple of the oil sands installations. I once wrote somewhere that the oil sands are the most important Canadian economic fact of our time, and I jumped at the offer to join the tour. […]

Some notes on horizontal supply curves

This post is mostly for my students.

A case for ZLB denial

This post is in response to two posts by Simon Wren-Lewis on "Zero Lower Bound Denial". First post here and second post here. I'm just collecting my thoughts from my comments on Simon's posts and from my previous posts. This is what I think: 1. The ZLB is a real wall. Bad stuff happens if […]

The orthodox recovery of faith?

In May 2010 I wrote a post with the title "the orthodox loss of faith". Please read it (or re-read it). It's a short post, and it would take me as long to repeat what I said there. And I can't recapture today how pessimistic I felt just over two years ago. If "orthodox" means […]

Who will be first against the wall when the revolution comes?

In other universities the teacher is prohibited from receiving any honorary or fee from his pupils, and his salary constitutes the whole of the revenue which he derives from his office. His interest is, in this case, set as directly in opposition to his duty as it is possible to set it. It is the interest of […]

Why indifference curves are so hard to understand

  Look at these curves. I see boobs like this all the time Every year, come exam time, students make mistakes that reveal a fundamental lack of understanding of indifference curves. They write "price" and "quantity" on the axes of their indifference curve diagrams, instead of "apples" and "oranges." They shade in the area below […]

Is Ontario Breaking the “Golden Rule”?

Ontario’s government is now engaged in public sector restraint and reform tackling its doctors and teachers in an effort to wrestle down its 15 billion dollar deficit.  Soon it will be turning its attention to universities.  Indeed, work is already underway on an ambitious plan to reform the university sector which according to reports on […]

The unbearable richness of biscuits

Last summer I picked up an old, well-thumbed, Magic Baking Powder Cookbook. Judging by the cover, and the inclusion of recipes that "won first prize at the 1931 Canadian National Exhibition", I would guess that the recipes in the book date from the 1930s or 40s.

Goodbye carbon taxes, hello atmospheric user fees

Economists (at least those who believe in global warming) frequently argue that the best way to discourage overuse of fossil fuels is with a carbon tax. A carbon tax reflects unpriced, external or social costs; the environmental damage created by fuel consumption. With a carbon tax in place, people will only consume fuel if the benefits […]