Sunday, October 11, 2020
The Electoral College by Private Land Mass
Thursday, October 8, 2020
Tax Policy as Explained by DuckTales

It should be no surprise that in this presidential election we yet again hear nothing but nonsense regarding tax policy from those seeking office. Among the many principles being ignored are:
- You cannot tax wealth more than once--if you can even tax it the one time given tax avoidance and evasion opportunities and incentives.
- You cannot lower taxes and increase government spending--government spending is taxation (today through taxes or tomorrow through debt).
- You cannot tax without discouraging that which you tax--there is no tax free lunch.
- You cannot tax income--it may look like you are taxing income, but you are actually taxing consumption. On this point we have DuckTales and the hero Scrooge McDuck as the perfect illustration.
What Explains Country Variation in COVID Deaths?
I see a lot of vague or implied speculation on why there are such large differences in COVID-19 death rates (et al.) among various countries and regions. But many of these have internal tensions once we think a little deeply about the arguments being hinted at. Biases are leading to a lot of lies of omission if not just outright bad reasoning.
Why is Sweden different than Finland? What explains Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea versus France, Italy, and Spain? Germany versus Belgium? USA NE versus Texas versus Florida versus USA Midwest?
Here is a partial list of the usual and some unusual suspects:
- General health in the population
- Partial immunity including from prior coronavirus exposures
- Climate including ability to comfortably be outdoors and in open-air environments (definitely relative to when the virus struck)
- Prior and continued use of various drugs and treatments
- Proportion of at-risk people especially elderly
- Quality of procedures for protecting the vulnerable
- Quality of testing
- Quality of tracing
- Population density (within cities and otherwise relative to where people actually live; e.g., excluding most of Canada when measuring for Canada)
- Government NPIs including lockdowns and other policies but not test and/or trace
- Degree of movement within and among various communities (city to city, within a city, cross sociodemographic, in and out of country, et al.)
- Strain(s) of C-19 virus affecting country and timing of the infection
The Forrest Gump Diet: A few simple rules for a better diet
Most dieting plans are nonsense. And most dieting is not about losing weight--it is about signaling that one would like to lose weight, is involved in a struggle, and would like sympathy. If people really wanted to lose weight, they would.
Diets come in a thousand varieties, but it is clear that while each might work for a while for some people, they fail (or people fail them) as often as they work. That we know so very little about this highly desired realm of knowledge, it is a big economic paradox. My guess is that it is highly dependent on individual circumstances (extreme heterogeneity) and these are both governed by external environmental factors including cultural influences as well as genetic factors. As such, one size fits more than one might not be true. And yet I do think some guiding principles can be derived that can greatly help us on our journey:
- Eat when you are hungry. (Note that this pushes back against intermittent fasting.)
- Eat slower. You are not in a speed contest.
- Eat less. You are not in a volume contest. This can most easily be achieved by simply not ever completely finishing what you have been served.
- Eat less of the things that you want to eat. It is very likely that your desire is to eat more of the things that are not as good for you.
- Eat more of the things that are not as desirable to you. This is the converse of the prior point.
- Eat a greater variety. This likely helps with the gut microbiome, and it makes life more interesting. That said, some things may just not be right for your body, and that is fine.
- Eat less processed foods and prepackaged foods. This one helps with #s 2, 3, and 4 by making food less convenient especially food that is generally nutritionally poorer for you.
- Look to make good choices at the margin, but diet over weeks and months not hours and days. No one ever starved to death by missing a single meal, and no one ever became obese by indulging oneself one time.
- The first key is to avoid temptation by avoiding bad situations.
- The second key is to routinely seek to make a slightly better choice at each opportunity.
- The final key is to be able to look back over weeks and months to see if you have generally been making good choices and improving choices. While this might entail the need to keep a journal, which is contrary to the spirit of this list of keeping things simple, evaluations over longer periods of time are essential to understanding if you’re making progress.
Wednesday, September 23, 2020
Oh, you left out a bunch of stuff.
Sunday, September 6, 2020
It’s More Than Qualified Immunity
Qualified immunity is one particular, nuanced element in a much larger set of problems. The list of police and policing and prosecution reforms is deep:
- End qualified immunity
- End mandatory police unions
- Require police to obtain individual liability insurance
- Require body cams
- End no-knock raids
- Stop militarizing police
- Implement substantial bail reform
- End civil asset forfeiture
- Reform plea bargaining to limit prosecutorial power
- Strengthen the public defender process
The Age of Fear
Now COVID-19 dominates our decision making. And the opportunists are always there to fulfill their portion of the bootleggers and Baptists story.
Tyler Cowen has seen this developing for some time. We are not the little engine that could. Where are the people not just chanting but demanding that "the show MUST go on"?
I am not arguing that fear and risk should be ignored. And it is not lost on me that our growing wealth and well being has dramatically changed the risk calculus for society--this is a good thing. But all risk analysis must be properly constructed, weighted, and continually reconsidered. Otherwise, costly errors will occur and compound.
As always, the future belongs to those willing and able to take and bear risk.