Showing posts with label bailouts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bailouts. Show all posts

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Assorted Links

1. Good analysis of Rand Paul.

2. Are the Republicans governed by extermists or corporations? There is some tension in these theses.

3. Big story only black people are allowed to speak the truth about. Perhaps that, not racism, is why it get too little press.

4. "the fastest-growing group . . . are men who self-identify as 'mostly straight' as opposed to labels like 'straight', 'gay', or 'bisexual." I don't know what to make of that.

5. Landsburg on psychiatry. I don't think this is fair. It would be like economists asking the public what should count as a recession or unemployment, or biologists asking what should count as life.

6. Cell phone banking in Haiti. I wish I knew more about M-PESA.

7. Is Chinese education as great as everyone thinks? No.

8. I haven't kept up with financial regulation but I liked this summary

9. "Horizontal" health care programs were all the rage a few year ago. Now a Gates Foundation study says they don't work. I'm a little skeptical of the methods based on this AP report. Easterly weighs in.

10. A high school in MA is forcing every student to buy a MacBook.

11. Maureen Dowd wrote a good column for the first time in her life.

12. Ezra Klein on the word "bailout"

13. "Good" professors are easy professors.

14. More debate on whether the Internet is good for you

Sunday, May 23, 2010

UPS Bailout?

The House is going to "bail out" UPS and the Tea Party, fed up will bailouts, is leading the charge against government malfeasance. (Watch the video. It's a great parody.)

Well, almost. The site I linked was paid for by FedEx, UPS's chief rival. It's astroturf, not grassroots. I don't know where the Tea Party stands on this issue (I'm sure I can guess), but I think they're too busy trying to destroy the Federal Reserve to care.

So what is the real issue here? This WSJ editorial lays it out pretty clear. FedEx is regulated by one bill that, to prevent strikes from disrupting the economy, requires unionization at the national level. This has allowed FedEx to keep from being unionized. UPS is regulated by another, which has allowed the Teamsters to unionize most (all?) of the UPS truck drivers.

A lot of people assume that the issue here is "what is the right classification for these companies?" but that misses the point by a mile. The two types of regulations are just mechanism for regulating unionization. The basic philosophical point is what "rights" do people have to unionize. But that question is as retarded as it sounds: the right amount of unionization is the one that makes society happiness (and healthiest).

So will expanding the Teamsters make society a better place?

I used to be pro-big labor. But I'm not so much anymore. Most of it probably has to do with the damage teachers unions are doing to our schools. But part of the switch has to do with my interest in institutional economics. Unions seem to drive up wages for the middle class. But they do so at the expense of the poorest and probably by driving up unemployment--esp. in recessions. Unemployment is crippling to people's happiness while higher incomes seems to do little. Higher inequality might be bad but we don't know how bad. And isn't it possible that unions are as much a cause as a by-product of the fact that people become so depressed when they get laid off?

People in this country are miserable when they lose their jobs not so much because they end up on skid row, trying to find their next meal, praying for brighter days. They don't end up poor most of the time. They become depressed because they feel a loss of identity and friends. The friends part seems natural, people need a social circle. But why do people feel so tied to their jobs? Wouldn't a more fluid (less unionized) labor market help promote a more healthy view of a job as just a job, not as your life's work and the center of your universe?

So I have mixed feelings about the Brown Bailout. I won't sign the petition because I'm "pro-labor." Yet I feel about as "pro-labor" as I do "pro-choice."