Wednesday, 21 July 2010

No 134: University Economics Lecture Notes and Assignments



HERE'S a website by the above famous American university that has links to all of their economics courses, with lots of useful lecture notes and assignments.

http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/economics/

Could be useful to those of you going to study economics at university...

No 133: Which percentile are you in?

A FUN tool from the New York Times, where you can calculate the status of yourself or your family based on occupation, education, income and wealth. 


Here's a screenshot (click here to try the real thing):




I'm not going to show you my information (I know you students always want to know how much us Bellerbys teachers earn), but I will say that overall I was placed in the 71st percentile. What about you?

Tuesday, 20 July 2010

No 132: History of the National Debt

Hi guys, by now you must be bored of being on holiday, so here's something for you to look at!




 (Source: Stock Tickle blog from Business Insider)

 A few observations.

The current increase in debt due to the Credit Crunch has been about 110% of GDP. The jump after 1918 was about the same. Financially, the cost of the Credit Crunch has therefore been about the same as the that of the First World War.

Notice that debt went down during the 1980s recession - Thatcher's government being anti-Keynesian im their belief that cutting spending would be more effective than spending more.

The 1929 onwards recession is interesting. At first, debt went down following the Wall Street Crash, as pre-Keynesian governments cut their spending. By the late 1930s, this trend was reversed as new policies were introduced, as well as increased spending on rearmanent before WW2.

The "Golden Age" of the UK economy from the 1950s to mid 1970s saw a consistent fall in national debt as governments used favourable economic situations in order to pay back debt. The "Nice Decade" of Blair and Brown did not see any similar reduction in borrowing.

As I was reading earlier today, we should all remember that recession spending by governments is only one half of Keynesian fiscal policy; building up savings in good times is the other.

Oh dear, not much summer fun in this post. Here's a video of a fight in the Taiwan parliament. When I lived there, there seemed to one every week...... good to see democracy being taken so seriously.