Thursday, March 30, 2023

NYC Subway Ridership At 2/3 Pre-Pandemic Levels: Chart

From Manhattan Institute, E21, "A Slow Recovery for the Subways" by Allison Schrager, March 28, 2023:
If you go into bars or restaurants it seems like New York is back. Even midtown and downtown office districts are crowded during the day. But public transportation has still not recovered. Subway, bus, and train ridership is still only about 65% of its pre-pandemic levels.
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Manhattan Institute, E21


Friday, March 24, 2023

The Economy and the Budget: Congressional Budget Office Presentation

From CBO, "The Economy and the Budget," March 23, 2023, Presentation by Phillip Swagel, CBO’s Director, to the Prosperity Caucus:
Summary
The deficit is projected to average 3.0 percent of GDP from 2024 to 2033. CBO expects economic growth to stagnate and inflation to slow in 2023 in response to the sharp rise in interest rates during 2022. After that, in CBO’s projections, output grows at a more robust pace as inflation continues to decline toward the Federal Reserve’s long-run goal of 2 percent.

Thursday, March 23, 2023

Simplification Of Banking Regulations Would Lead To Better Financial Crisis Prevention Than Current Complex Regulations: Reprint Of My 2012 Blog Post

Reprint of my Monday, September 3, 2012, blog post, "Simplification Of Banking Regulations Would Lead To Better Financial Crisis Prevention Than Current Complex Regulations:"

Monday, September 3, 2012

Simplification Of Banking Regulations Would Lead To Better Financial Crisis Prevention Than Current Complex Regulations: The Opposite Of Dodd-Frank: Bank Of England Paper: The Dog And The Frisbee

From the paper of the speech given at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City’s 36th economic policy symposium, "The Changing Policy Landscape", Jackson Hole, Wyoming, 31 August 2012, "The Dog and the Frisbee" paper [25 pages of text and 12 pages of footnotes and charts] by Andrew G Haldane, Executive Director, Financial Stability and member of the Financial Policy Committee and Vasileios Madouros, Economist, Bank of England.
Take decision-making in a complex environment. ...Under risk, policy should respond to every raindrop; it is fine-tuned. Under uncertainty, that logic is reversed. Complex environments often instead call for simple decision rules. That is because these rules are more robust to ignorance. Under uncertainty, policy may only respond to every thunderstorm; it is coarse-tuned.
***
The answer, as in many other areas of complex decisionmaking, is simple. Or rather, it is to keep it simple. For studies have shown that the frisbee-catching dog follows the simplest of rules of thumb: run at a speed so that the angle of gaze to the frisbee remains roughly constant. Humans follow an identical rule of thumb.

Catching a crisis, like catching a frisbee, is difficult. Doing so requires the regulator to weigh a complex array of financial and psychological factors, among them innovation and risk appetite. Were an economist to write down crisis-catching as an optimal control problem, they would probably have to ask a physicist for help.

Yet despite this complexity, efforts to catch the crisis frisbee have continued to escalate. Casual empiricism reveals an ever-growing number of regulators, some with a Doctorate in physics. Ever-larger litters have not, however, obviously improved watchdogs’ frisbee-catching abilities. No regulator had the foresight to predict the financial crisis, although some have since exhibited supernatural powers of hindsight.

So what is the secret of the watchdogs’ failure? The answer is simple. Or rather, it is complexity. For what this paper explores is why the type of complex regulation developed over recent decades might not just be costly and cumbersome but sub-optimal for crisis control. In financial regulation, less may be more.
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(8) Conclusion

Modern finance is complex, perhaps too complex. Regulation of modern finance is complex, almost certainly too complex. That configuration spells trouble. As you do not fight fire with fire, you do not fight complexity with complexity. Because complexity generates uncertainty, not risk, it requires a regulatory response grounded in simplicity, not complexity.

Delivering that would require an about-turn from the regulatory community from the path followed for the better part of the past 50 years. If a once-in-a-lifetime crisis is not able to deliver that change, it is not clear what will. To ask today’s regulators to save us from tomorrow’s crisis using yesterday’s toolbox is to ask a border collie to catch a frisbee by first applying Newton’s Law of Gravity. [Emphasis added]

Wednesday, March 22, 2023

Are US Sup Ct Justices Acting As An Oligopsony, Concentrating The Hiring Of Law Clerks From The Same Few Schools: My Comment To The WSJ Article, "The Unraveling of the U.S. News College Rankings"

My comment to the Wall Street Journal article, "The Unraveling of the U.S. News College Rankings: The revolt against the survey, started by Yale Law School, was decades in the making" by Melissa Korn:
There is another approach to law school ranking. Broaden the base of law schools that US Sup Ct clerks attended, through public and news media pressure or legislation. An expanded law school pool would put pressure on ranking methodology. Law clerks are often chosen for employment by top law firms and future judgeship. The education credentials expansion of law clerks, judges and top firm lawyers would force US News and others to rank schools on a broader base of post schooling outcome. A flattening of the percentage of the SCOTUS law clerks similar education, would weaken group think, potential political biases, and bring in a wider range of legal ideas to the Justices.

A NY Times [The Road to a Supreme Court Clerkship Starts at Three Ivy League Colleges by Adam Liptak] Feb 6, 2023 article says, "Each justice typically hires four law clerks per term. The study, which collected data on the 1,426 former clerks in the 40-year period ending in 2020, found that more than two-thirds of them attended just five law schools: Harvard, Yale, Stanford, Columbia and the University of Chicago. Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., for instance, chose 58 clerks in the period covered by the study, 37 [2/3] of them from Harvard or Yale."

From 2017-21, four law schools (Yale, Harvard, Univ of Chicago, Stanford) were the source of 72 percent of SCOTUS law clerks. [Brian Leiter's Law School Reports]

Aren’t the top graduates of the top 10 percent (20) of the 200 accredited US law schools, or even the top 20 percent (40), qualified with the ability, legal education, and training to be excellent SCOTUS law clerks.

Tuesday, March 7, 2023

Benefits Of Income Inequality: Wealth Inequality Acts As A Driving Force For Innovation: Richard Epstein Video

I originally posted the following embedded video on this blog on October 28, 2011. It is a rebuttal to the current tax the rich mantra of many polticians.

From PBS Newshour, Oct 26, 2011, video clip, "Does U.S. Economic Inequality Have a Good Side?"