Swapping holidays for cash

I think this is an excellent policy.

Employees will be able to trade their fourth week of annual holidays for cash by next year, Prime Minister John Key said today.

This way, if there is some level of compensation that the employer is willing to make, and the employee is willing to accept, they can trade away the additional week of leave.  I would be very keen to trade-in a week of leave for cash most of the time – as I enjoy doing economics so much anyway 😉

Generally, I am a big fan of giving people flexibility in the labour market (both employers and employees) and this policy increases flexibility for both parties.  Excellent 🙂

Aligning tax rates

I just read an article on stuff where Peter Dunne has said the government is committed to aligning personal, company and tax rates in the medium term. I think this is great news, this quote sums it up for me:

The differences “provides scope for people to use various entities to structure their tax affairs so as to reduce their tax liabilities”

Having differences in the top tax rates gives people the incentive and ability to restructure their affairs to avoid paying taxes. This is just a waste of resources.

Now the article says that all rates are going to 30%, I’m not particularily concerned with what that number is. I’m not arguing we should have lower tax rates, I’m arguing that we shouldn’t have a large differential in the top rates.

Why a 50bp cut in April is looking increasingly likely

nzdtwi_2_3weekgif1Source NBNZ

The RBNZ felt that the dollar would fall toward a TWI of 47 – not lift to 55. As the Bank is currently focused on short-term economic activity, rather than inflation, the sudden lift in the TWI will actually give them more reason to cut harder in April.

Given this increasing risk of a larger cut I think iPredict has a good set of prices at the moment. 25 is still the most likely, but 50 has a good chance – although to be fair I did buy a small number of 50’s when I saw the relative price 🙂 .

On the no change side I think the market is highly over-pricing it – given that the Bank said it would only stop cutting when it is positive that they have hit the bottom of the cycle – as a result having a 22% chance of no change is not consistent with the 96% chance the market currently has on an OCR under 3% 😛 (as a result, I shorted a slightly larger bundle of these).

Confusing price discrimination

Wholly Bagels in Wellington has this great student special which I often take advantage of: in the last hour before closing they charge 30% less to students. Much as I love the special, I can’t figure out why they run it that way. I can think of three reasons they might price discriminate in this fashion: Read more

Quote 20: Nigel Pinkerton on the derivation of economic models

I heard the following gem round the water cooler at work:

Beer makes economics happen

I felt that given it is a Friday, and given that there is a lot of economics going on, this quote was felt especially poignant.

Personally I think Jagermeister is a better economic stimulant – but I understand that I’m in the minority.

People have decided to stop going to Aussie – go the collapsing labour market

Fewer people are departing to Aussie this February than in Feb 08 (down 22%). The economics tea leaves never leave me wanting – maybe I need to incorporate them into my forecasting routine.

This is a drastic slowdown – and is consistent with the sharp increase in unemployment over in Aussie. Now I’m just waiting for someone to say:

1) Aussie departures near record high or,

2) John Key stems tide to Aussie.

Both will give me a little giggle 🙂

UpdateGo here, read the comments 😀