Green math
Adam Bandt on Channel 10 this morning: What we do know is that, on the results we’ve seen so far,
macro, politics, markets, ambivalence
Adam Bandt on Channel 10 this morning: What we do know is that, on the results we’ve seen so far,
I think that the reporting of Fed Chairman Bernanke’s testimony to congress has been a little naive. While it’s certainly
The Q2 CPI number for NZ printed at 0.3%q/q, taking the annual inflation pace down to 1% (the RBNZ has
My friend Chris Joye has already blogged about the house price bounce that appears in his data, but I thought
Jim Hamilton knows a few of the key decision makers, and he thinks the Fed does QE3 (which i take
With not much interesting on the data front, I have been spending some time with R. I still find the
No surprise that the RBA is a snooze today. Everyone expects the RBA to hold policy steady at 3.5% –
Consistent with their daily series, the RPData house price series for June showed a decent bounce of ~1%m/m. The headline
McCloskey makes the case against well intentioned liberalism. Unions raised wages for plumbers and auto workers but reduced wages for
LabourChartDude makes some appropriate points about bias in the private business and consumer surveys. I am not quite as skeptical.
Of the high profile blogging economists, John Cochrane is closest to my own views. His review of Taylor’s first principles
The Dutch Central Bank recently published a working paper that uses event studies to measure the impact of news about