three mechanisms by which the digital revolution alters work:
three mechanisms by which the digital revolution alters work:
consider Baumol's cost disease & takes off in what I consider to be the wrong direction. he worries about the implications of the cost of the service sector (esp edu, healthcare) as % of GDP and potential for cutting that, and then tries to think of ways to make these sectors more "productive" (MOOCs, automation of diagnostics, etc). why ... is this necessary? BCD literally just means other things get cheaper and it doesn't HAVE to be a bad thing if people properly understand the phenomenon (which, somehow, he appears to avoid)
consider Baumol's cost disease & takes off in what I consider to be the wrong direction. he worries about the implications of the cost of the service sector (esp edu, healthcare) as % of GDP and potential for cutting that, and then tries to think of ways to make these sectors more "productive" (MOOCs, automation of diagnostics, etc). why ... is this necessary? BCD literally just means other things get cheaper and it doesn't HAVE to be a bad thing if people properly understand the phenomenon (which, somehow, he appears to avoid)
1 / 2Coase's theories on why firms exist (save on transaction costs)
Coase's theories on why firms exist (save on transaction costs)
0 / 3talks about zoning as class war which restricts housing stock. focuses on NIMBYism but not, notably, on housing being seen as an asset and being allowed to sit empty in many of the cities he mentions (NY and London in particular)
talks about zoning as class war which restricts housing stock. focuses on NIMBYism but not, notably, on housing being seen as an asset and being allowed to sit empty in many of the cities he mentions (NY and London in particular)
0 / 1he suggests policy prescriptions for solving the problem of chronically weak demand
overall, he says workers need to increase bargaining power in the economy, tho he notes that it's difficult given changes since the 60s/70s (he never once uses the word "neoliberalism" though)
he suggests policy prescriptions for solving the problem of chronically weak demand
overall, he says workers need to increase bargaining power in the economy, tho he notes that it's difficult given changes since the 60s/70s (he never once uses the word "neoliberalism" though)
1 / 1policy proposals
policy proposals