In Defense of Idleness

Mariano Torras Economic Theory, Future, General, Health/Disease, History, Macroeconomics, Public policy/Wellbeing, Reflections 1 Comment

September 11, 2020

Modern society’s belief in the virtue of industry, productivity, or plain hard work is well ingrained in our psyche, and far predates capitalism. According to an old Arabian proverb, “the devil tempts all men, but idle men tempt the devil.” Ouch! If in any way representative of our opinion of human inactivity, it should hardly surprise that no sooner than Covid-19 forced idleness upon us all, we heard a chorus of voices keen to return to the status quo. But from …

The Free Competitive Market as Red Herring

Mariano Torras Economic Theory, General, History, Macroeconomics, Microeconomics, Politics, Public policy/Wellbeing, Reflections Leave a Comment

August 28, 2020

I like to ask my economics students whether competitive free markets are a good thing. Despite the fact that many of them want to go into business as a career, they mostly agree that competition and free markets are universally desirable. I try to remind them that absence of competition is what most helps businesses stay alive – never mind rake in abnormal profits – but they are not easily persuaded. Further discussion with them reveals a widespread and ingrained …

On Getting “Back to Normal”

Mariano Torras Environment/Sustainability, Finance, Future, General, Health/Disease, Politics, Public policy/Wellbeing, Reflections 1 Comment

August 13, 2020

It is quite understandable that after five months of one unprecedented event after another people in the United States are experiencing Covid fatigue and yearning for a return to normal. But what exactly is “normal?” And should we be wishing for a return to it? The question reminds me of a comedian I saw almost exactly four years ago who was discussing the 2016 contest between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. “Clinton or Trump,” he mused, “it’s a little like …

The Great Divergence: The Economy and the Stock Market

Mariano Torras Finance, General, Macroeconomics, Public policy/Wellbeing 1 Comment

July 17, 2020

Our economy presently faces by far the greatest collapse in the lifetime of most people alive today. Indeed, long after the Covid-19 scare passes, we are likely to remain mired in a high unemployment trap for an extended period. The U.S. economy has lost over 40 million jobs in the past four months, even if several million have been temporarily recovered as a result of the federal government’s Paycheck Protection Plan. Consumption fell by record amounts in April and May …

Economic Depression and the Liquidity Trap

Mariano Torras Economic Theory, Future, General, Macroeconomics, Public policy/Wellbeing Leave a Comment

July 3, 2020

I never quite got the liquidity trap when I was in college. Not having grown up during a major war or an economic depression, the concept always seemed kind of abstract. I understood it a bit better when I was in graduate school, probably because by then I had greater general curiosity about economics. But even then, it was not easy to fathom without direct observation or experience. Things change. The past 10-12 years are, arguably, Exhibit A. According to …

What the Unemployment Rate Conceals

Mariano Torras Future, General, Macroeconomics, Methodology/Statistics, Public policy/Wellbeing Leave a Comment

June 19, 2020

A couple of weeks ago the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported the May unemployment rate at 13.3 percent. In normal times, such a number would be considered alarmingly high. But we are not in normal times. And compared the 14.7 percent rate for the preceding month, many – not the least President Trump – took the announcement as good news. Unfortunately, there are a number of factors underneath this single statistic that should give us pause. First, there are …

Why Economic Generalist?

Mariano Torras Complexity, Economic Theory, Future, General, Methodology/Statistics Leave a Comment

June 12, 2020

Welcome to my blog! I am an academic economist, but professional writing for a specialized audience gets old given enough years. Academic writing has always run against my generalist tendencies because I am interested in too many different subjects. I have recently grown interested in writing about economics for a broad audience, instead of trying to communicate exclusively with economists. I disagree with many of them on most things anyway. A “generalist” approach to economics will, I hope, help me …