Jack’s Links
The beginning of what is hopefully a demand for rigor when politicians invoke economics. Interesting post with lots of excellent visuals from Bob Seawright on the value of financial advisors…. Read more »
The beginning of what is hopefully a demand for rigor when politicians invoke economics. Interesting post with lots of excellent visuals from Bob Seawright on the value of financial advisors…. Read more »
No links from last week because I was moving. Back with a vengeance. HBR piece on why business transformations fail. (02/21/16 edit: updated link to article) Even the people who… Read more »
Corporate inversions feel like one of those things that will go away sooner rather than later. Two good speeches on behavioral economics. The European champion of Go was beaten by… Read more »
Back with a new edition of the best links on the interwebs. With apologies to Scott Sumner, I’ll be putting a moratorium on links to posts of his through at… Read more »
Scott Sumner on RentsĀ – I agree with Sumner on rent-seeking being abhorrent. I often think of this article from 2014 whenever Elon Musk is brought up (usually extremely favorably; someone… Read more »
How to properly interpret personal exemption phaseouts and Pease limitations — a 1% surtax. Really interesting statistics post about why some small countries are better than large countries at ‘X’… Read more »
It’s been two months since my last post, but with the exception of a trip to the Grand Canyon, Zion, & Bryce, I have been collecting links the whole time…. Read more »
It’s been a month, but here are the links. Try not to panic tomorrow if things are kinda downish. Free > Paid when paid doesn’t adapt. A dozen things: Charlie… Read more »
I have no idea when people will stop saying that rates are being [insert devious sounding adverb-ly depressed], but if they read this post they might stop sooner. Interesting article… Read more »
I walk a lot of places. Sometimes I want to listen to music, but sometimes I want to learn something. When I want to learn something, I turn to my… Read more »