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The extraordinary attempts to prevent sceptics being heard at the Institute of Physics
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Entries in Economics (189)

Thursday
Sep112008

Insulation

My house is very very cold in winter. Ice on the inside of the windows cold. The plan for the autumn was to get the basement insulated, and maybe if I was feeling flush, putting some extra insulation in the loft.

The plans now are on hold, cos apparently Gordon Brown is going to subsidise me to do it. I'll just hold on for a while.

This action is very welcome, but it does suggest that he's a twit, because I was going to do it anyway.


Tuesday
Apr292008

Ever-decreasing circles

Someone called Philip Inman is gracing the pages of Comment is Free, where he sets out his ideas for how to deal with the pensions timebomb.

You'd think that a simple recognition that the problem has been caused by Gordon Brown taxing people too heavily and spending the proceeds on bureaucrats and dole queues and generally throwing money to the four winds would be enough to lead a relatively intelligent person to the correct conclusions. Namely that we should stop throwing money to the four winds and stop taxing people so heavily.

Alas, Mr Inman is no such person. His solution:

The only hope lies in educating all workers about how poor their retirement will be and how they can push their employer and the government to provide more and on a more equal basis.

Yes folks, the answer to a problem caused by high taxes is more taxes.

Idiot. 

Wednesday
Apr162008

Ronald Reagan on big government

If it moves, tax it.......

2001: Banks threatened with windfall tax 

If it keeps moving, regulate it.

2007: The system of bank regulation introduced by Gordon Brown was yesterday branded an “invitation to disaster” even before the run on Northern Rock.

And if it stops moving, subsidize it.

2008: Government plans to help UK banks 

Thursday
Mar272008

Toyota Prius

The Sunday Times assessed the economy of the greens favourite motor, the Toyota Prius, with an oil-burning BMW 5-Series.

And the BMW turned out to be more efficient than the gas guzzling Prius.

David Cameron, who found the Prius too small for his requirements, will be mightily relieved. 

(Via Lubos Motls

Tuesday
Feb262008

How to lose readers

Thanks are due to the Adam Smith Institute for their recent link to one of my postings. My reader figures have responded accordingly. This next post will probably scare most of them away again.

Never mind.

Nick Clegg has been regaling us with his thoughts on the profits made by electricity.

PENSIONERS sitting in coats, hats and scarves in their sitting rooms to keep warm. Others living the whole winter in their bedroom because they can only afford to heat a single room. Our senior citizens reduced to a choice between heating and eating.

And all the while, British Gas is raking in £1,000 of profit every minute of the day. The truth is, the only people who are cosy this winter are the companies who send us our ever-rising bills.

Statistically speaking this is a load of old cobblers. Pensioners, of course, have larger disposable incomes than pretty much anyone, although I accept that there may be exceptions.

However, Clegg is not only statistically wrong, but he's also wrong in about the profits of the utilities companies. The profits may look huge, but there is a reason for this. It's down to a quirk of accountancy which I will endeavour to explain. (With a bit of luck there might still be a couple of readers who will still come back to my humble blog after reading it through).

British companies are required by law to state their profits using the historic cost convention. That means you measure the profits on the basis of what you sold something for, less what you paid for it. This is fine for many businesses, but for a company which is experiencing fluctuating raw material prices, the effects of this rule is to make the profits fluctuate wildly. Let me demonstrate with an example.

Let's say you buy a widget for 10. It sits in inventory for a couple of months. At this point widgets cost 20 and you can therefore sell in the marketplace for 30. You report profits of 20 and Nick Clegg tells the Yorkshire Post you're a heartless capitalist, responsible for starving grannies to death.

When the market goes the other way though, things are different. You've bought another widget at 20, and again it sits in inventory for a while. But by the time you manage to sell it, raw widget prices are back down to 10. You can only sell for 15 and you've made a loss of 5 on the historic cost basis. At this point Nick Clegg would probably compound his error by writing to the  Yorkshire post and demanding you receive a subsidy. He would no doubt declare that your widget business was a key part of the economy. This would obviously just underline his woeful lack of understanding about what was actually going on.

In companies dealing with this kind of marketplace, profits are rarely measured against historic cost. There is too much temptation to give margin away to customers when prices are on the up. Customers never give margin back again when prices are falling. Instead companies measure profits against replacement cost - how much does a widget cost to buy from suppliers now, at the point of sale. This essentially means that they keep two sets of books. One is used internally to measure how the company is doing (the management accounts). The other is a load of old nonsense and it's this which is sent to HM Government (the financial accounts). The former is reasonably stable, while the latter will fluctuate wildly in line with raw material prices.

What we're seeing then is either ignorance by the LibDem leader, or perhaps he's turning a blind eye to the facts so that he can wallow in a little headline grabbing.

Tuesday
Jul312007

Volokh does economics

Ward Farnsworth has penned a very good guest article at the Volokh conspiracy, on the subject of why politics is bad and trade is good.

Suppose the wreck of a ship is found on the ocean floor. Four teams race to lay hands on a treasure chest the ship is known to have on board; it contains artifacts worth ten million dollars. Each team spends about three million dollars trying to get there first. Eventually one of them succeeds, and the others are out of luck. Question one: do you see why this outcome is perverse?

 

Tuesday
Jul172007

2000 jobs lost, lefties celebrate

There's a column about the closure of a supermarket supplier called Bomfords over at Comment is free today. Tim W has lots of fun laughing at the knots the liberal elite are getting themselves tied in - well worth a read.

One comment in particular struck me - someone calling themselves marydole wrote:

"Still, one lot of rapacious exploiters gone bust? Fantastic!"

It's an indictment of the left that when a company goes bust, they see the loss of a "rapacious exploiter" rather than the loss of two thousand livelihoods. And then they have the nerve to call the Conservatives "the nasty party".

Socialists are indeed evil. 

Tuesday
Jun122007

Bluff calling

I'm just off out to the school board meeting, but before I go here's an ingenious solution to global warming, penned by Ross McKitrick, an economist at the University of Guelph. 

Both warmers and skeptics agree that if there is going to be any warming it will be seen first in the troposphere. Because of this consensus (a real consensus this time) a tax on carbon, linked to the temperature of the troposphere should be supported by both sides of the debate. The tax would initially be quite low. But if the temperature rises, as predicted by the warmers, then the tax goes up. If it falls, or is stable, which is what the skeptics think might happen, then the tax remains relatively trivial.

A rather neat idea, in that it calls the bluff of both sides.  

 

Friday
Mar302007

More public choice theory in action

From the Perthshire Advertiser we learn that councils are bound by law to deal with flood risks by creation of hard flood defences. It's illegal to use natural landscape features to absorb floodwaters.

Commenting on the Minister’s response to his question, [Green MSP Mark] Ruskell said: “The existing flooding legislation from 1961 locks us into building expensive hard defences, which as we have seen recently with the Milnathort flood are not always effective.

Cui bono?

Surely the only beneficiaries of this legislation would have been the building companies and the politicians they sponsor. 

 

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