Football: The injury vs pandering margin

During the World Cup, I keep seeing images like the following.

It is interesting, there is a lot of play acting in the masterful sport that is Football.  It is a pity, as if players just got on with the game we would see longer periods of amazing skill and tactical insights.

However Read more

Discussion Tuesday

Let’s mix it up with some videos:

There are few songs that illustrate the fact that labour-leisure trade-offs differ between individuals than “Me and Bobby McGee”

QOTD: Andrew Dickson and Bill Kaye-Blake

While the blog was out of action I noticed a lot of people linking the following article by Andrew Dickson and Bill Kaye-Blake (from Groping to Bethlehem).

All the links focused on how the article made the case for a tax on sugar.  That is fine and all, it was an externality case that we can discuss, appeal to evidence and value judgments on, and then decide whether we agree or not.  In fact, I get the impression that is the exact point that the authors are raising after setting up the pro-argument.

However, I didn’t get the impression that many people made it to the second half of the article (given the way it was used) – and the second half was absolutely glorious.

The second half starts with this: Read more

Sorry about the outage!!

Hi everyone.  I’m really sorry about the fact the site has been down over the past couple of weeks, we had issues with our old host disappearing!

NZAE 2014 is taking place at the moment, with the details here and the hashtag rolling here.  I suggest using the hashtag for everything remotely economics related for the next couple of days 😉

Next week we will be properly back in action.  If you have any suggestions about things that we haven’t covered, due to being unable to post and generally away, leave them in the comments.  I have a few ideas of my own, but always want more 🙂

Discussion Tuesday

More inequality – I’m trying to flip between the extreme assumptions from both sides:

Focusing on inequality is a substitute for thinking about poverty, opportunity, and capabilities.  As a result, the demand for dealing with inequality is no more than a push to ignore the actual drivers of social injustice.

Why join the Civilian Party?

I am going to take a brief break from my intense political neutrality, and current unbearably heavy workload, to make the case for people to join (and not necessarily vote for) the Civilian Party.

On Facebook I noticed that the Civilian Party is 55 members short of the 500 it requires to get media funding/time for the 2014 New Zealand general elections.  Without this time, it would be difficult to individuals to make a considered choice about voting for a satire party this election.

At first brush this may seem like no small concern.  We will all sit down and choose the party we are the most comfortable with, or deliver a protest vote to some party that will “never get in”, or even just not vote if we feel disenfranchised.

However, this choice is not sufficient – a satirical party can fill an important role in the political spectrum.  Specifically, a satire party allows us to deliver a true protest vote about the direction ALL political parties are taking.  This thereby promoting entry and competition in the political space, and can help point out that a given governments mandate is weaker than meets the eye.

Think of it this way – without a satire party we have two ways to deliver a “protest vote”, not voting or voting for a party we don’t think will get in (eg Legalise Cannabis).  However, how do people read those two vote types:

  1. If we don’t vote, people just assume we were “too lazy”, so it doesn’t matter.
  2. If we vote for an irrelevant party with actual policies, people assume that we actually supported those policies.

The only way we can show that we are willing to incur the cost of voting (and so are not lazy) and that our views about politics are not being represented by the parties currently wrestling for our vote is through a vote to a satirical party.  There is no “vote of no confidence”, instead within the current system this is as close as we can get.

In that way, I hope you will consider spending the $1 to become a member of the party in order to ensure that this choice is available to people when they are thinking about who they may vote for.  Even if you are happy with the space the political parties hold, and you have a clear preference for one party, the existence of a satire party has value overall.  This isn’t just about entertainment value, it is about having a true protest vote – one that doesn’t involve rubbing the egos of people like Bob Jones, by letting them confuse the idea that people are voting for them out of frustration rather than agreeing with a single thing they have to say.

For way of transparency, I paid to be a member early on, but at present I’m not sure whether I’d vote for them – I need to look at party platforms more closely near the election, and figure out if I’m disenfranchised enough to protest.  I’d say my voting preference currently is (out of the parties that enter my head – not if the parties are together they are currently tied):

  1. Civilian, National, Greens.
  2. Maori
  3. Labour
  4. Internet-Mana, United
  5. NZ First, ACT
  6. Conservative

However, this changes all the time, and any party within the first three tiers could easily end up with my vote.