1. Via Tim Taylor, the philospher Michael Sandel on the limits of markets, series of videos. http://conversableeconomist.blogspot.com/2018/06/what-money-cant-buy-michael-sandel.html
2. Via Jonathan Athow, ONS, @jathers two very good links on measuring trade correctly:
https://t.co/m7bzR6xkaK and https://t.co/vbPhGn4cCq and https://t.co/vlr0sBfRlr
An occasional blog on economics. Designed for students and those interested in Economics topics.
Wednesday, 13 June 2018
Friday, 20 April 2018
Various teaching links
We discussed the role of the state in the last section of class on Wednesday. Here is a typically insightful essay by Tim Taylor on what the state can and cannot do.
Labels:
economic policy,
teaching reading
Friday, 6 April 2018
Today's productivity release
The ONS productivity release is out.
Performance is still horrible. Pre recession grwoth in GDP per hour was 2%, now it's been 1% for a decade. There is a very slight pick up in the quarterly rate, but nothing very strong.
This means we still have a 20% gap with the competition
What is going on? It seems to be a combination of many things. One very helpful release are the MFP numbers, now quarterly. So part of the slowdown is capital, but most is TFP.
One thing that is a big change is the contribution of labour allocation. In the previous release this was very large, accounting for 60% of the slowdown in output per hour. This release excludes sector L and finds that it now accounts for very little of the slowdown, in that it was negative before the recession and is still negative.
There is also a large contribution of financial services in London to the slowdown. Perhaps it's a combination of lots of these small things.
Performance is still horrible. Pre recession grwoth in GDP per hour was 2%, now it's been 1% for a decade. There is a very slight pick up in the quarterly rate, but nothing very strong.
This means we still have a 20% gap with the competition
What is going on? It seems to be a combination of many things. One very helpful release are the MFP numbers, now quarterly. So part of the slowdown is capital, but most is TFP.
One thing that is a big change is the contribution of labour allocation. In the previous release this was very large, accounting for 60% of the slowdown in output per hour. This release excludes sector L and finds that it now accounts for very little of the slowdown, in that it was negative before the recession and is still negative.
There is also a large contribution of financial services in London to the slowdown. Perhaps it's a combination of lots of these small things.
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