Theme: Education

  • “Hello Curt. I’ve been talking to my teenage daughter about Propertarianism, and

    —“Hello Curt. I’ve been talking to my teenage daughter about Propertarianism, and your ideas of psychology. She finds it fascinating and would like to know more. Where would you suggest that she begins?”—

    We will offer the psychology, sociology, group evolutionary strategy course as soon as we have it ready. I think most people would enjoy this course, and It is the least technical course with the greatest influence on your understanding of the world.

    She can add herself to the mailing list and or register and we’ll send out a notice when it’s ready.

    I can’t really recommend my work in its current condition to a teenager, because it’s hard enough for the college educated person to grasp it as it is.

    We will also offer courses in Relationships: Family Members, Friends, Dating, Marriage, Children,

    And we will also offer mindfulness (how to insulate yourself from peer pressure or bad feelings etc). But it will take us the rest of this year to put most of this together.

    -hugs


    Source date (UTC): 2019-01-16 15:00:00 UTC

  • THE HIDDEN DECLINE IN HUMAN CAPITAL—AND THE DANGER AHEAD by Peter Temin, Profess

    THE HIDDEN DECLINE IN HUMAN CAPITAL—AND THE DANGER AHEAD

    by Peter Temin, Professor Emeritus of Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology(MIT).

    U.S. GDP accounting underestimates intangible capital, overstates financial capital, and is all but oblivious to the the erosion of human and social capital. A serious growth slowdown is coming.

    The American economy changed rapidly in the last half-century. We kept track of this transformation through the National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA), a set of statistical constructs that were designed before these changes started. Our national accounts have stretched to accommodate new and growing service activities, but they are still organized by their original design. This can be seen in the growth of financial activity and the efforts of many economists to fit finance into our measurement of national product and of economic growth. I argue in my paper that our current economic data fail to describe accurately the path of growth in our new economy. They fail to see that the United States is consuming its capital stock now and will suffer later, rather like killing the family cow to have a steak dinner.

    Modern growth theory started with two papers by Robert M. Solow in the late 1950s. The first paper showed that it was possible to create a stable model of economic growth using a Keynesian model of investment and capital. The second paper showed that this model failed to explain most of American growth in the first half of the 20th century (Solow, 1956, 1957).

    Other economists expanded Solow’s model by adding additional types of capital: human capital, social capital, financial capital. The first addition was to add human capital by measuring the effect of education on productivity. This enabled economists to work with an expanded Solow model. The second addition was to add social capital. This was added in cross-sectional regressions and has not been applied to ongoing growth estimates. The third addition was added by assuming that wealth equals physical capital, that is, financial capital is indistinguishable from physical assets (Mankiw, Romer and Weil, 1992; Hall and Jones, 1999; Dasgupta, 2007; Piketty 2014).

    These additions furnished explanations of economic growth in the United States and other countries. The importance of these contributions was confirmed in many empirical studies, but the NIPA continues to calculate Private Fixed Investment, a Keynesian construct, as the investment part of GDP. This problem is acute in the data for finance. Philippon (2015, 1435) concluded that, “The unit cost of financial intermediation does not seem to have decreased significantly in recent years.” As he says, this is surprising on several grounds. I build on his work to understand whether this result is the result of how the underlying data were collected.

    This disconnect infects the calculation of economic growth. Griliches (1990, 1994) noted over two decades ago that more and more of GDP is composed of services, which also have been called intangibles. It is hard to estimate the output of the financial sector, for example, so it is measured by its inputs. As I will show, although this may give a useful measure of current activity, it is less informative about economic growth.

    There are two problems. It is hard to measure productivity if inputs and outputs are conflated. If we fail to include productivity growth of an increasing part of the national product, we increasingly will underestimate the growth of the national product. Further, if we do not have a good measure of output, it is almost impossible to measure investments in finance and other intangibles. If we do not have good measures of the various forms of capital listed here, we will not be able to think hard about longer-run growth. Concern about this latter point provides the motivation for this paper.

    Outside the literature on the national product, there are many treatments of these new forms of capital. In addition to financial capital, human capital has been the center of explanations for the United States’ economic domination in the twentieth century as well as the progress of individuals within the United States (Golden and Katz, 2008; Heckman, Pinto and Savelyev, 2013). Social capital has been the center of analyses of economic growth in the United States and elsewhere and in the long and short run (Putnam, 1993, 2000; Dasgupta, 2007). Measuring these forms of capital poses many of the same problems as measuring financial capital.

    I review in this paper the accounting methods used to compile investment data to understand how these other forms of capital behave in an economy that has changed markedly since the 1950s. I conclude that current accounting of growth in GDP fails to include the kind of investment that generates these other forms of capital. This conclusion has three implications. First, short-run growth as currently calculated bears more relation to short-run Keynesian analysis than to what we know about long-run economic growth. Second, financial capital increases inequality more than it generates growth for the entire economy. Third, we are now allowing human and social capital to depreciate, auguring ill for future economic growth in the United States.

    Peter Temin is Elisha Gray II Professor Emeritus of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). His “The Political Economy of Mass Incarceration and Crime: An Analytic Model,” has just been published by the International Journal of Political Economy. A revised version of an earlier INET Working Paper, it will be freely available on line for the month after January 5, 2019: https://www.tandfonline.com/do…

    References

    Dasgupta, Partha. 2007. Economics: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

    Golden, Claudia, and Lawrence F. Katz. 2008. The Race between Eduction and Technology. Cambridge, MA Harvard University Press.

    Griliches, Zvi (ed.). Output Measurement in the Service Sectors. Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1990.

    Griliches, Zvi. 1994. “Productivity, R&D, and the Data Constraint.” American Economic Review, 84 (1): 1-23.

    Hall, Robert E., and Charles I. Jones. 1999. “Why Do Some Countries Produce So Much More Output per Worker than Others?” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 83-116.

    Heckman, James, Rodrigo Pinto, and Peter Savelyev. 2013. “Understanding the Mechanisms Through Which an Influential Early Childhood Program Boosted Adult Outcomes.” American Economic Review, 103 (6): 2052-2086.

    Mankiw, N. Gregory, David Romer and David N. Weil. 1992. “A Contribution to the Empirics of Economic Growth.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 107 (2): 407-37.

    Philippon, Thomas. 2015. “Has the US Financial Industry Become Less Efficient? On the Theory and Measurement of Financial Intermediation.” American Economic Review 105 (4), 1408-1438.

    Piketty, Thomas. 2014. Capital in the Twenty-First Century. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

    Putnam, Robert D. 1993. Making Democracy Work: Civic Tradition in Modern Italy. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

    Putnam, Robert D. 2000. Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community. New York: Simon and Shuster.

    Solow, Robert M. 1956. “A Contribution to the Theory of Economic Growth.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 70: 65-94.

    Solow, Robert M. 1957. “Technical Change and the Aggregate Production Function.” Review of Economics and Statistics 39: 312-20.

    VIA:

    https://www.ineteconomics.org/perspectives/blog/the-hidden-decline-in-human-capital-and-the-danger-ahead?

    PAPER:

    https://www.ineteconomics.org/uploads/papers/WP_86-Temin-Finance-in-Economic-Growth.pdf


    Source date (UTC): 2019-01-16 07:00:00 UTC

  • WHY YOUNG PEOPLE SAY THEY ARE NOT GOING TO CHURCH The 66 percent who said they s

    WHY YOUNG PEOPLE SAY THEY ARE NOT GOING TO CHURCH

    The 66 percent who said they stopped attending church regularly as young adults cited a variety of reasons for leaving.

    The reasons fell under four categories:

    Nearly all — 96 percent — cited life changes, including moving to college and work responsibilities that prevented them from attending.

    Seventy-three percent said church or pastor-related reasons led them to leave. Of those, 32 percent said church members seemed judgmental or hypocritical and 29 percent said they did not feel connected to others who attended.

    Seventy percent named religious, ethical or political beliefs for dropping out. Of those, 25 percent said they disagreed with the church’s stance on political or social issues while 22 percent said they were only attending to please someone else.

    And, 63 percent said student and youth ministry reasons contributed to their decision not to go. Of those, 23 percent said they never connected with students in student ministry and 20 percent said the students seemed judgmental or hypocritical.

    “We’re tapping into a lot of different feelings and logistical things as well,” said McConnell, pointing out that this age group is often in a time of transition.

    But leaving was not an intentional decision for many. Of those who dropped out, 71 percent said they did not plan on it.


    Source date (UTC): 2019-01-15 20:49:00 UTC

  • Knowing the deflation, operationalism, and grammars is a bit like having a super

    Knowing the deflation, operationalism, and grammars is a bit like having a superpower. And I just realized that if we teach everyone Testimonialism I won’t be the only person with the superpower…. sigh… 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2019-01-13 17:36:00 UTC

  • I had to do the catholic school thing. Saturday morning catechism. All that stuf

    I had to do the catholic school thing. Saturday morning catechism. All that stuff.
    The problem was i read encyclopedias. That’s wisdom. There is very little wisdom that cannot be found by reading the Encyclopedia Britannica and the OED. 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2019-01-12 18:00:41 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1084148173050953728

    Reply addressees: @I_Vae_Victis_I

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1084118526812712961


    IN REPLY TO:

    @I_Vae_Victis_I

    @curtdoolittle My first glimpse of wisdom was from my catechism Bible, I remember reading Proverbs and talking notes, rewriting them for a 10 year in the 80’s.

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1084118526812712961

  • DEVELOPMENT

    https://www.smv4k.com/smv4k-home/why-men-need-mentors-and-coaches-with-curt-doolittle-video?fbclid=IwAR2kLdFox7cIviMb-7Ss8QVMa2W9AUFGglUbK0DMGf9zxuRbt19UJxQnZZMPERSONAL DEVELOPMENT

    https://www.smv4k.com/smv4k-home/why-men-need-mentors-and-coaches-with-curt-doolittle-video


    Source date (UTC): 2019-01-12 14:46:00 UTC

  • Long Video Chat with Noah Revoy today on mentoring and coaching men

    Long Video Chat with Noah Revoy today on mentoring and coaching men.


    Source date (UTC): 2019-01-11 19:55:45 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1083814741968146432

  • Long Video Chat with Noah Revoy today on mentoring and coaching men

    Long Video Chat with Noah Revoy today on mentoring and coaching men.


    Source date (UTC): 2019-01-11 14:55:00 UTC

  • My Education

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  • My Education

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