Household chores: are men really slackers?

In houses all around the world women are cleaning and doing chores right now while their husbands sit in front of the TV. Depending upon which you are it’s either a pretty sweet arrangement, or a manifestation of the oppressive patriarchal regime into which you were born (or something more moderate and boring sounding in between, I guess). Now Bryan Caplan has stirred up a hornets’ nest with a post supporting the couch jockeys:

Look at the typical bachelor’s apartment. Even when a man pays the full cost of cleanliness and receives the full benefit, he doesn’t do much. Why not? Because the typical man doesn’t care very much about cleanliness. When the bachelor gets married, he almost certainly starts doing more housework than he did when he was single. How can you call that shirking?

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The future of the music industry

The Economist laments the death of the music industry as we know it:

the results from 2007 confirm what EMI’s focus group showed: that the record industry’s main product, the CD, which in 2006 accounted for over 80% of total global sales, is rapidly fading away. In America, according to Nielsen SoundScan, the volume of physical albums sold dropped by 19% in 2007 from the year before… More worryingly for the industry, the growth of digital downloads appears to be slowing.

So perhaps it’s time for the industry to develop a new business model, but what are its options? Read more

January 08 OCR review: OCR on hold at 8.25%

As everyone expected the OCR is unchanged at 8.25%.  The statement was decidedly neutral, stating that everything is happening inline with their December forecasts, however uncertainty has increased.  As they did not state whether it is downside or upside risk they are concerned about (we cannot just presume it is downside risk), any change in their hawkish stance in December relies on our belief of the risk preference of the Bank.

If the RBNZ is risk averse, then they are less likely to lift rates in the future, if they are risk neutral they are just as likely to lift rates in the future.

It is important to note that they said they will be monitoring commodity prices – this implies that the ANZ commodity price index will be especially important over the coming months.

Government stimulus: Will Cullen be able to save the day?

There has been a lot of discussion around the internet about whether and what type of fiscal stimulus is appropriate in the US. That is not the issue I am going to discuss here. This is a New Zealand blog, and as a result, I’m more interested in the claim that Michael Cullen will be able to intervene in the economy to save us from any impending doom.

I’m not entirely convinced that Dr Cullen will be able to save us in the case of an imminent economic collapse, and here is why:

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Ten things people will say economists said

Over at the Big Picture they are discussing how silly the decoupling thesis is (the idea that that world economic growth now functions separately from US economic growth). Near the end they mention ten things that seemingly intelligent people have said, that have turned out to be complete rubbish, namely:

  1. The Yield Curve no longer matters
  2. Earnings at an unusually high % of GDP are sustainable
  3. The Business Cycle has been defeated
  4. Ignore sentiment readings, the population is just upset about Iraq
  5. Real Income gains are irrelevant
  6. Mean reversion no longer applies
  7. Supply side tax cuts pay for themselves
  8. Dow Theory is a quaint antiquity
  9. The (so-called) Fed Model “proves” equities are significantly undervalued
  10. Despite commodity prices, there is no Inflation.

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The moral high ground

Economists are often seen as cold and calculating by the public. I have personally been referred to as a ‘deranged sociopath’ for a post I made on this blog. Today’s post by Eliezer at Overcoming Bias (yeah, it’s my blog of the moment) reassures me that we economists really do have the moral high ground 😉

“What!” you cry, incensed. “How can you gamble with human lives? How can you think about numbers when so much is at stake? So much for your damned logic! You’re following your rationality off a cliff!”

You know what? This isn’t about your feelings. A human life, with all its joys and all its pains, adding up over the course of decades, is worth far more than your brain’s feelings of comfort or discomfort with a plan. Does computing the expected utility feel too cold-blooded for your taste? Well, that feeling isn’t even a feather in the scales, when a life is at stake.

Altruism isn’t the warm fuzzy feeling you get from being altruistic. If you’re doing it for the spiritual benefit, that is nothing but selfishness. The primary thing is to help others, whatever the means. So shut up and multiply!