December 3, 2021 at 5:57 am
The Financial Times reports on the scramble by hedge funds to attract trading talent: "As the competition for staff has intensified, Millennium, a $57bn fund headquartered in New York, this year opened offices in the far more temperate Palm Beach and Miami as part of its sales pitch."
The flow of talent to Florida, and the reasons for it beyond weather, have been the topic of extensive previous coverage here.
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December 1, 2021 at 7:20 pm
December 1, 2021 at 7:08 pm
Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella sold about half his Microsoft shares. The shares he sold were worth about $285 million, the Wall Street Journal reports based on an SEC filing. "Analysts said the move could be related to Washington state instituting a 7% tax for long-term capital gains beginning at the start of next year for anything exceeding $250,000 a year," the Journal says.
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November 24, 2021 at 3:13 pm
November 19, 2021 at 8:23 am
November 11, 2021 at 5:58 pm
The photo of the day comes from my trip to the hardware store:
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October 31, 2021 at 4:09 pm
"The Bunk of Generational Talk," the Wall Street Journal "Saturday Essay" published October 22, observes, "Across a range of issues, manufacturing fake generational battles denies us the benefits of intergenerational connection and solidarity."
The Journal essay was apparently published not soon enough to halt publication of a couple of New York Times articles engaging in "generational talk" of the sort the Journal article questioned the value of.
This Sunday's New York Times featured a business-page front article headlined "The 37-Year-Olds Are Afraid of the 23-Year-Olds Who Work for Them," claiming "there's a new boldness in the way Gen Z dictates taste."
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October 26, 2021 at 8:35 am
October 20, 2021 at 8:57 am
October 14, 2021 at 9:24 pm
October 12, 2021 at 8:10 am
October 6, 2021 at 6:42 am
September 17, 2021 at 6:42 am
Characteristically sensible Greg Mankiw column in the New York Times about the downsides of President Biden's "build back better" spending extravaganza:
Providing a social safety net is like using a leaky bucket to redistribute water among people with different amounts. While bringing water to the thirstiest may be noble, it is also costly as some water is lost in transit.
In the real world, this leakage occurs because higher taxes distort incentives and impede economic growth. And those taxes aren't just the explicit ones that finance benefits such as public education or health care. They also include implicit taxes baked into the benefits themselves. If these benefits decline when your income rises, people are discouraged from working. This implicit tax distorts incentives just as explicit taxes do. That doesn't mean there is no point in trying to help those in need, but it does require being mindful of the downsides of doing so.
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September 15, 2021 at 7:50 am
September 15, 2021 at 7:40 am
The Wall Street Journal has published a letter to the editor I wrote in response to a recent column by Joe Lieberman, the former senator from Connecticut. "When both nationalism and the family are under attack, it doesn't help to confuse the two," the subheadline puts it. Special bonus: a mention of Hayek.
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