Author Archives: wciecon

Lithium in the Water Supply and Our Preferences

Big Think on one of my favourite topics – changes in behaviour caused by mineral levels in the body: Communities with higher than average amounts of lithium in their drinking water had significantly lower suicide rates than communities with lower levels. Regions of Texas with lower lithium concentrations had an average suicide rate of 14.2 […]

What standard monetary theory says about the relation between nominal interest rates and inflation

This is what I understand "standard" monetary theory to say about the relation between inflation and nominal interest rates.

Why “everyone” should be forced to take Intro Economics

The reason is not what you are expecting. It's because maybe if he had been forced to take Intro Economics, the 12th President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, who holds a PhD in Economics from the University of Chicago, who is a specialist in money and macro, who has a CV that creams […]

Monetary policy as asset prices

As every economist knows, interest rates don't really exist. They are a mathematical construct derived from observed bond prices. Take a really simple example: suppose a bond (OK, a bill, if you want to be picky) promises to pay $100 one year from today. We observe that bond to be trading at a price of […]

The census, evidence-based policy analysis and a reversal of roles

One of the least edifying aspects of the census debacle is the government's spin to the effect that that the only people who oppose its decision to make the long form voluntary are 'left-wingers', so their concerns can therefore be dismissed out of hand. One version of this meme takes the form of the argument […]

Free Policy Research Journals for Laypeople (and Economists)

Given our conversations this weekend, this could not have come at a better time.  I just received this from Facebook friend and all around good guy Bruce Bartlett – Free Economic Journals.   Contains journal articles and policy papers from U.S. government departments such as the BLS, academic journals such as the Journal of Economic Perspectives […]

Liquidity and the housing market Phillips Curve

I think it is a stylised fact of the housing market that, on average, houses sell quickly when house prices are rising, and sell slowly when house prices are falling. (I am talking about house prices rising or falling relative to trend). There is a negative correlation between the rate of change of house prices […]

Why Does the General Public Have Such a Flawed View of What Economists Do?

The comments on the post Neo-classical economics is dead. Sort of. and Why economics textbooks are (sometimes) ideological show there is a fundamental disconnect between what economists do and what the general public thinks we do.  There's also a fundamental disconnect on what economists believe and what the general public thinks we believe.  And it's […]

The Bank of Canada’s balance sheet reverts to its pre-crisis state

Last Friday's Weekly Financial Statistics release marks the end of the Bank of Canada's policy of providing liquidity to financial markets by means of securities purchased under resale agreements (SPRA). In the first three months following the introduction of these measures in September 2008, the Bank's balance sheet increased by 56%, and almost half of […]

Why economics textbooks are (sometimes) ideological

In a recent comment on Worthwhile Canadian Initiative Tom Slee shared this experience: …{W]hen my son comes back from an Economics 101 course at an Ontario university and shows me bald statements like these from his textbook (Parkin and Bade) then I have no problem with using a broad brush to criticize the profession:… "Arguments […]