Author: Ed Lotterman

Thaler’s Nobel sign behavioral econ has come of age

The award of the 2017 Nobel to Richard Thaler confirms the economics discipline is in a healthy intellectual renaissance. He and many others in the field are moving beyond long-dominant assumptions that now are more fetters than tools. This work…

Hard fact: Companies need to pay market wage rates

Central bankers must be circumspect in their public expression, lest they roil the markets, and some take this to the point of being mealy-mouthed. So Neel Kashkari, president of the Minneapolis Federal Reserve, is seen often a breath of fresh…

Developer assessments seen as good economics

As economists read news of a recent ruling by the Minnesota Court of Appeals denying certain infrastructure charges imposed on land developers, many probably reacted: “Where was Judge Posner when we need him?” Sometimes law and economics are in basic…

In theory, disasters can have silver linings

Natural disasters like floods, tornados and earthquakes destroy wealth but may spur economic production. These effects vary with the situation, especially the scale of the disaster. The destruction of wealth is a constant, but the degree to which production is…

Airbnb shows how new technologies bring new issues

Capitalism is “a process of creative destruction” according to Austro-American economist Joseph Schumpeter. That is working out right now as new communications technologies are revolutionizing sectors like short-term housing and short-distance human transportation. I use these wordings rather than “hotel”…

Effects of a new bridge hard to measure, but far-flung

People know the phrase “the Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away,” without realizing that is true for government as well. We know that income redistribution programs like Medicare involve government taking from one group and giving it to another.…