Author Archives: wciecon
Alberta Juggernaut Continues…For Now
Friday’s Labor Force Survey release showed total employment and the unemployment rate were little changed and that there has been little overall employment growth in Canada since August. Indeed, total employment shrank slightly in Canada with Quebec and British Columbia faring the worst in terms of the total number of jobs lost. Of course, Alberta […]
Coordination and the demand for money
Why do financial (and other) crises (sometimes) cause a recession? Because they increase the demand for money and so cause an excess demand for the medium of exchange. But why do financial crises increase the demand for money? Because the demand for money depends on the synchronisation of payments and receipts of money, and synchronisation […]
Where has all the spam gone?
Dumb question. The most recent genuine spam comment in the WCI spam filter is dated 17th February. The second most recent is dated 4th February, and the third is dated 28th January. There are 30 spam comments dated 28th January, and 62 dated 27th January. And roughly the same number each and every day before […]
US Budget 2015: Some Quick Thoughts
The Budget of the U.S. Government for the 2015 fiscal year was presented at the White House today and unlike Canada, we are not looking at a balanced budget by 2015. Indeed, the forecast is for a small decline in the deficit but the rest of the decade looks like deficits all the way down. […]
Should Municipalities in Canada Get More Money?
In the tradition of the fur traders of the Northwest Company, the Federation of Canadian Municipalities is holding their board meeting “Rendezvous” at the head of the Great Lakes in Thunder Bay from March 5th to 8th. It was difficult task trying to find an agenda on their website but no doubt they will be […]
Russia or China – Who Should the US Worry More About?
Developments in Crimea have shifted international attention to Russia in a manner we have not seen since the end of the Cold War. Recent years have seen an American preoccupation with the rise of China rather than Russia as a world economic and military power but the question remains – which one might be the […]
Keynes, New Keynesians, and the Keynesian Cross
Simplify massively. Ignore investment, government spending and taxes, and exports and imports. All output is consumed. Assume a Keynesian consumption function: Cd = a + bY. Draw Samuelson's "Keynesian Cross" diagram. Real consumption demand Cd on the vertical axis, and real output (real income) Y on the horizontal axis. Demand for consumption this current period […]
Keynes’ GT Chapter 3
Keynes' "aggregate supply function" in chapter 3 of the General Theory is just the "classical" labour demand function plus the "classical" production function. Except for the weird presentation, there is nothing new there. It is old and boring. It is Keynes' "aggregate demand function" that is new and exciting. [Update: See Roger Farmer's response.]
Missing the Target in Canada
Target’s retail invasion of Canada seems to have developed parallels to Napoleon’s invasion of Russia – it is fighting a losing battle in a cold winter. Target’s northern front lost 941 million dollars in 2013. A CBC news story reports that: “That expansion has been hammered by supply issues, as there are frequent reports of […]
Within versus Between Sample Variation, or Why an Equal Marriage Means More Sex
It's clickbait, New York Times style: "Does a More Equal Marriage Mean Less Sex?" Spurred by findings of a paper by Sabrino Kornrich, Julie Brines and Katarina Leupp published in the American Sociological Review, the article argues that, "too much similarity in egalitarian marriages leads to boredom and decreased sexual frequency". In general, "the less gender differentiation, the […]
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