Elliot Kevane, San Jose tennis: He won two matches in straight sets to complete an undefeated season at No. 1 singles as San Jose won its league championship.
Elliot Kevane, San Jose tennis: He won two matches in straight sets to complete an undefeated season at No. 1 singles as San Jose won its league championship.
I have been remiss in not regularly posting. Here’s my suggestions for your leisure time.
Viet Thanh Nguyen’s The Sympathizer, that just won the Pulitzer Prize. I read it about a month ago and enjoyed it. I think it has special resonance for someone living in San Jose. Old-timer Vietnamese are walking around every day in my neighborhood downtown. Makes me see them in a new light; I “sympathize.” It is a complex and ambitious novel. I didn’t think it worked at the end, just went on too long and tried to get very metaphysical. Needlessly, I thought. The first two thirds are gripping and a delight to read. It is a clever, self-aware novel, but still profound.
Stephen Jarvis’s Death and Mr. Pickwick did not win the Pulitzer. It should win something else: The Rambling Prize for Catering to Literary-Minded Readers Who Love Literary Ecosystems and Dot-Connecting. Hey, that’s me! This 800 pager is so ambitious, so full of trivia, with so little plot (Robert Seymour becomes England’s premier cartoonist/caricaturist/illustrator, only to have his Mr. Pickwick idea hijacked by the writer of the copy, Charles Dickens, and in despair he commits suicide, and Dickens and publisher then claim all the credit for the surprise success of the “novel”), and so deliberately modeled on a Pickwickian smorgasbord of characters and vignettes, that it can feel overwhelming. The book easily makes you want to stay up all night, finding Seymour’s prints on Wikipedia, on ebay (I can buy one for only $100… hmmm), and learning ever more historical trivia. Gadzooks!
Occupied. Pretty good Netflix drama, produced in Norway. About 10 episodes. The Norwegians try to stop pumping natural gas and oil. The Russians, at the behest of the Europeans, dependent on cheap energy, take over in a kind of protectorate. Great subtle politics ensue, marred by a competing desire to turn the story into an action thriller. Good production values.
Music? How about Kasey Chambers – Oh Grace. This live version is OK, the recorded version much better.
I love browsing, and sometimes I do too much of it. Today, listening to Inti-Illimani mix on Youtube, next in the lineup was the song Vientos del Pueblo, written by Victor Jara, but sung here by Carlos Puebla. Then since half of the “proposed videos” are about Che Guevara, I clicked on an interesting video about the woman who avenged Che Guevara, Monika Ertl. Daughter, apparently, of a Nazi filmmaker who ended up in Bolivia, she became in her mid-20s a revolutionary, and joined the Bolivian liberation army after Che Guevara was killed in 1967. She went back to Germany in 1971, and allegedly killed Roberto Quintanilla, a member of Bolivia’s secret police then working at the Bolivian consulate, who was responsible for cutting off Che Guevara’s hands “for identification.” She returned to Cuba, and then back to Bolivia, where she was ambushed and killed in 1973. Her body was never recovered.
But the German journalist who reported this story about Monika Ertl was Jurgen Schreiber. Turns out he is well-known in Germany for another story about the most famous post-war German painter, Gerhard Richter (for me Betty has been a touchstone of what contemporary art should be, with its central idea of “shifting the gaze” as her face is turned away). Another of Richter’s well-known paintings, Tante Marianne, has as subject the painter as a child, with his young aunt, sister of his mother. The aunt was murdered by the Nazis, in a program of “euthanasia” and the team that carried out these murders included Richter’s own father-in-law. Two lives, two complications.


Only people of my generation and older find the expression, “Does that even work?” to be slightly odd.
Increased respect for animal intelligence also has consequences for cognitive science. For too long, we have left the human intellect dangling in empty evolutionary space. How could our species arrive at planning, empathy, consciousness and so on, if we are part of a natural world devoid of any and all steppingstones to such capacities? Wouldn’t this be about as unlikely as us being the only primates with wings?
Source: What I Learned From Tickling Apes – The New York Times
Students wiser than administrators? Look at the last line of the section reproduced here.
Two years ago, campus Provost Alison Galloway informed the athletics office that it would need to transition from central campus funds to a funding model that relies solely on student fees. However, in February 2015, students voted against a $351 annual fee that would have provided the UCSC Athletics Department with an estimated $3.55 million in additional funding. Now time is running out. Advertisement If the students decide against the fee this year, Scott Hernandez-Jason, UCSC director of news and media relations, said, the campus likely will wind down the intercollegiate athletics program next year, making Santa Cruz the first school in the UC system to cut its athletics department. UCSC offers NCAA Division III athletics teams in men’s and women’s basketball, cross-country, soccer, swimming and diving, tennis and volleyball; plus women’s golf and track. However, the school’s club sports programs, including baseball, rugby and badminton, would continue. Approximately 280 students, or less than 2 percent of undergraduates, participate in the NCAA program. About 900 students, or 5.5 percent of undergraduates, play club sports.
Source: UC Santa Cruz to vote whether to cut NCAA program – San Jose Mercury News
Probably they are both based on some earlier piece. But what an interesting connection. Listen to “Canto a los caidos” starting at 2:35:
Then listen to “Memorial” starting at 1:00:
But I have one objection: many of those quoted in the article probably have conflicts of interest because they are lobbyists or consultants to the various parties. Journalists should ask and report these potential conflicts.
To those creditors, the draft financial plan is major threat to their leverage. The proposal would allow the control board to mediate negotiations between Puerto Rico’s government and creditors and if the board deemed it necessary, to facilitate a court sanctioned restructuring. Such a restructuring would apply to all of Puerto Rico’s debt—what creditors are calling Super Chapter 9. The draft also proposes a stay for all debt litigation upon enactment.The government faces a $422 million debt payment on May 1 and another $2 billion payment on July 1, and it is unclear whether it has the funds to pay either of them. That’s put increased pressure on Congress to come up with a solution. The Natural Resources Committee plans to hold a hearing on a final discussion draft the second week in April and proceed to a markup of the full legislation soon thereafter. The Senate is likely to move quickly as well.
Very interesting for its overview of national policy issues. I will summarize some of the points relating to economics. Some interesting political issues addressed were the Guillaume Soro and Yacouba Zida “scandals”. The full interview in Sidwaya is here.
This … the Sendek hiring … is the first major test of Engh’s commitment: Sendek is receiving a substantial raise over his predecessor, Kerry Keating. That’s partly to be expected because of his resume — Keating was a UCLA assistant when he came aboard — but it also seems like the administration is actually putting its money where its apathy used to be. It’s only a start. What about the salary pool for assistant coaches? What about the recruiting budget? The staff size? The money earmarked to buy a reasonable number of winnable home games? (Victory has a price, if you hadn’t realized.)
A bad egg. From Bill Sundstrom’s Blog:
Based on his words and behavior as a candidate, if Trump were a kid in my son’s seventh-grade class, he’d be the kid my son would have to send (repeatedly) to the office for being a disruptive brat or bully… not to mention a failing student and a bigot. But is it all an act? I’ve wavered between two alternative theories of Trump. (1) He really is that way, in which case we would be better off with the median American seventh grader as our next president. (2) He is a talented if unpleasant showman, and this is the show he is putting on, because he has figured out that he can win the nomination by appealing to people who for some reason want a badly behaved 7th-grade boy as their president. Despicable, and bad for our country, either way. I had been subscribing to theory (2) until I read the transcript of Trump’s interview with the Washington Post editorial board. I recommend this to any and all citizens. Trump is so alarmingly and convincingly incoherent, I find it difficult to believe that he is having us on. He’s not just despicable, but pathological and downright scary. I wish I had more confidence in HC. A lot could be riding on her success.
I have also read through The New York Times interview, and now there are two separate credible sources about the man being quite superficial in his thinking. He talks as if his words do not matter. He talks as if repetition of generalities was actual communication of ideas.
You know if you look at the number of jobs that we’ve lost, it’s millions of jobs. It’s not a little bit, it’s millions. And if you look at our phony numbers of 5 percent unemployment, even opponents would say that, and would agree to that fact that the jobs that we have are bad jobs. They’re not good jobs, they’re bad jobs. We’re losing, you know, when you see a Carrier move into Mexico, those are good jobs. We’re losing the good jobs. We now have a lot of bad jobs, we have a lot of part-time jobs. It’s not the same country. We’re losing our companies.
Race-specific given names have been linked to a range of negative outcomes in contemporary studies, but little is known about their long-term consequences. Building on recent research which documents the existence of a national naming pattern for African American males in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries (Cook, Logan and Parman, 2014), we analyze long-term consequences of distinctively racialized names. Using over 3 million death certificates from Alabama, Illinois, Missouri and North Carolina from 1802 to 1970, we find a robust within-race mortality difference for African American men who had distinctively black names. Having an African American name added more than 1 year of life relative to other African American males. The result is robust to controlling for the age pattern of mortality over time and environmental factors which could drive the mortality relationship. The result is not consistently present for infant and child mortality, however. As much as 10% of the historical between-race mortality gap would have been closed if every black man was given a black name. Suggestive evidence implies that cultural factors not captured by socioeconomic or human capital measures may be related to the mortality differential.
Source: The mortality consequences of distinctively black names
Well I finally went on a long run and so got to listen to the 72 minute long podcast of Russ Roberts talking with MIT economist David Autor. Disappointing. Mostly the blame falls on Russ Roberts, and he basically admits it himself during the podcast and on the website. He spends the first 45 minutes engaging Autor in an undergraduate-level discussion of intermediate trade theory. Talk about comparative advantage gone wasted: Autor is an empirical economist, after all.
Finally about 45 minutes into the podcast you get some facts. Surprisingly few, though. U.S. employment in manufacturing has been declining for 70 years, since the 1950s. China’s share of manufacturing in global trade and in manufacturing value added increased a lot, from 1990 to 2010. Autor and co-authors estimate three numbers it seems.
As I listened, I wondered about the magnitude of the 1-2 million jobs lost in manufacturing. Roberts unfortunately does not clarify and neither does Autor: is this an average displacement per year, or the total displacement over 20 years of China’s manufacturing imports? The context (and other references to the work) suggests it is the total net cumulated job loss over 20 years. So 200,000 a year, say. That just doesn’t sound like a big number in an economy like the United States, where job openings at any given time are on the order of magnitude of 4 million. Another way of saying that is that about 5 million people move jobs every month. Net job creation in the U.S. economy is about 200,000 every month (since 2010). Autor’s estimates sound like about 5-10% of all displacement per year is due to China. A lot of that would have happened anyway, as automation and import competition from other countries would have led to job displacement. So I think maybe we are talking about 2-5% of all displacement is due to one of the biggest economic changes of the past 30 years. Again, that seems fairly small, to me. “Small” meaning that it seems like what I would have guessed… is anyone surprised by this number? 200,000 a year means 200 factories a year close (employing 1,000 each), due to trade with China. Sure, viral videos of factory closing are heart-breaking. But my local hair and nails parlor closed when the boss retired, and her two assistants were displaced. Heartbreaking as it is, that closing, like the closing of 200 factories in an economy of 150 million workers, does not suggest the need for a major shift in public policy. A modest shift. But not a “Oh my we’ve been wrong for 20 years” shift. And definitely not a reason to elect Donald Trump with his promises of 35% tariffs on Mexican manufacturing exports.
On the transfer payments. Say annually there is increase in import penetration of $100 billion from China. So the increase in transfer payments is on the order of magnitude of $6 billion per year. Say we cumulate this over 20 years. Realistically, of course, the initial transfer payments decline after a few years as people do get jobs, or start collecting social security, etc. So maybe we are talking about maybe $50 billion in annual transfer payments. Presumably this is the peak, since Chinese manufacturing imports have started to slow in recent years. Given the Federal, state and local government transfer budgets, this is about 2% of all government transfer payments. So the biggest economic “shock” to the economy, Autor is saying, has a total negative effect of about 2% per year on transfer payments (and probably has already peaked). My take again is that doubling transfer payments to displaced workers is well within the budget possibilities (especially when combined with dropping a few United Technologies weapons programs, which of course would displace a different group of manufacturing workers).
Coming back to the magnitudes again. Suppose the job loss indeed is 1.5 million. Suppose it is the bottom tercile that is significantly affected for a long period of time. Suppose $20,000 per year for these workers is a reasonable amount to cushion the shock. Then we are talking about 500,000 x 20,000 = $10 billion per year in trade adjustment assistance. For obvious reasons, this is a huge budget issue, with TAA being opposed by Republicans (they would rather have tariffs than adjustment assistance?). The current budget for TAA seems to be about $1 billion. My point is that $10 billion just isn’t that much. (One stealth bomber apparently costs about $1 billion.)
Remember, this discussion of the magnitudes of the displacement and the transfer payments is not counting any of the positive effects (see below), in the United States or in China. (To be fair to Autor, he does mention and I agree that job displacement has some pretty negative psychic effects. That is why TAA is a good thing, if well-implemented.)
All in all, to me Autor’s (and coauthors) findings sound like a pretty convincing case that the displacement costs are actually fairly small. Should we not be pursuing even greater trade liberalization? Autor by the way apparently is in favor of TPP. So really the argument is about what should be very reasonable reform and increase in TAA, but instead has become this way-out-of-proportion political football.
So that was my take. A very good podcast for students in an intermediate trade class.
Here are a few other points.
How long can people keep repeating the exact same analysis, as if there was someone who didn’t understand why 30% of the Republican Party votes for Trump? It is not a mystery. Nor is there a mystery about how likely a big chunk of the remaining 70% will support him if he locks up the nomination. And not a big mystery either that Democrats will have to be very smart in making sure that Republican turnout is low. What did Obama say? “No stupid shit”? This is like one of those boring sports events: you keep watching because both sides are making a lot of mistakes. But you just keep muttering, “Pathetic.”
The simultaneous economic disaster and delegitimation of their values marginalized this class. When Mitt Romney referred to the 47% who were parasites in our society, he was referring to these people. When Barack Obama was elected, this group felt that the focus had shifted to the black community and saw itself as invisible (and to the extent seen, contemptible). Economic, social, and cultural evolutions had bypassed them. Their perception of the political system has become intensely cynical. They see the political elite, bankers, lawyers, and lobbyists as a near criminal and entirely incompetent class. We speak of unemployment after the 2008 recession in terms of numbers. These are the people who were unemployed. They view this elite as claiming rights they haven’t earned. The lower-middle class can tolerate earned wealth, and even respect it, but cannot accept what they see as manipulated wealth and power.
Source: The Roots of Trump’s Strength | This Week in Geopolitics Investment Newsletter | Mauldin Economics
It doesn’t matter if you think it is true, untrue, fair, or unfair… what matters is that practically everyone agrees that indeed, these are the vulnerabilities. There is no similar agreement about Sanders, I think. He has vulnerabilities, but his vulnerability for some is a strength for others.
Trump’s feral insight has been to play on these grievances with a message that defines the cause—and the villains—in unmistakable terms.
…We’ve been played for suckers by foreign countries, by our incompetent leaders, by politicians who serve the elite, and who do the bidding of the insiders. We’re letting our worst enemies gain footholds across the Middle East. I don’t need their money; I can’t be bought. And the very crudeness of my language, the threats, even the bullying, tells you I have the stones to take these people on. And if the “experts” think I don’t know what I’m talking about—how have the “experts” done in Iraq, in Libya, in protecting the jobs and incomes of regular Americans?…
It’s not hard to think of potential Democratic candidates who would be well-equipped to respond to that argument: senators like Elizabeth Warren or Ohio’s Sherrod Brown, a younger Governor Jerry Brown, a Vice President Biden not weighed down by the death of his son. Indeed, Bernie Sanders could claim substantial exemption from Trump’s argument. And it’s certainly possible, maybe more than possible, to see Hillary Clinton winning a comfortable victory by simply gathering votes from those who see Trump as utterly unfit for the office. But … if the discontent with the economy persists in the fall, or even deepens should the woes of China and Europe reach our shores, there is no Democrat more in the cross-hairs of an angry electorate than Clinton. Everything from her Wall Street financial links to her work as secretary of state become targets of opportunity.
Source: Hillary Clinton 2016: What’s Wrong with Hillary? – POLITICO Magazine
I will definitely be listening to this on my next long run!
Russ Roberts interviews David Autor on China and labor markets. Scott Sumner has asked a few times why Autor’s work is so important. I think it shows that the economic footprint of China on the West is much larger than we had thought, not that free trade is bad.
Source: Marginal REVOLUTION — Small Steps Toward A Much Better World