Blog Review 375

If you find that (although perish the thought) we here don’t provide absolutely everything you need to feed your blogging habit, here’s Iain Dale’s list of the top 500 political blogs in the UK.

If that’s not enough, here’s an aggregator of all the blogs reporting on the Tory Party Conference this week.

This blog post is very hard to categorize: other than the fact that it is excellent. Using civic architecture to highlight the governors’ view of the governed perhaps?

As the Magistrate points out, the pens NOMS handed out to announce their arrival lasted longer than NOMS itself did.

Amazingly, politicians and academics define poverty in an entirely different way from people in general. It might not be a coincidence that they way they do continues to leave space for politicians and academics to get paid for working on the poverty that most agree no longer exists.

Here’s an interesting thought. Ending the GM strike meant setting up a huge fund to pay for retirees’ health care. That fund must be invested. Why not buy GM?

And finally, we really all do need to start smoking in pubs again. The ban is leading to cleaner (and thus louder) accordions.

From Adam Smith Institute

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Blogged under Libertarian News on Saturday 29 September 2007 at 4:00 pm

Outrageous Court Decision Of The Week

Progress in the War Against Advil, from the always wacky Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals:
Safford Middle School officials did not violate the civil rights of a 13-year-old Safford girl when they forced her to disrobe and expose her breasts and pubic area four years ago while looking for a drug, according to the Ninth U.S. […]

From The Liberty Papers

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Blogged under Libertarian News on Saturday 29 September 2007 at 1:20 pm

Flexiblity vital in a globalized economy

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US prof Laura Tyson is adviser to one of the Democratic presidential candidates and a bit of a lefty, but I retained an open mind and turned up to her Audit Commission lecture last week, on globalization and its effects.

Her battery of statistics on this was impressive, and all designed to show that the world economy is globalizing – and changing – fast. The world used to be dependent on US spending, for example, but no more. China’s economy is just a quarter of the size of the US’s, but its growth is four times – making it just as important on world markets.

With digitization and other technologies, the range of potentially tradable goods is expanding. It’s taking less time for developing economies to get up to speed, because they can use and leap-frog existing technologies. (At current rates, China’s prosperity will rise a hundred-fold in a single lifetime.) The developing world’s population is rising faster too. All of which means that, by 2020, the consumer goods demand from developing countries will be as big as the West’s.

Prof Tyson reckoned that this process would be a huge pressure on Western jobs, lowering wages in those jobs that can be done somewhere else – non-specialized, non-face-to-face jobs being most at risk. And, as you would expect, she used that to justify all kinds of labour-market interventions – government programmes to make labour more flexible, for example.

Well, maybe. But the fact that 75% of our income is from services does not mean that all those jobs can be shipped off to Bangalore. (Indeed, some financial institutions have shipped them back in the face of customers’ complaints that they cannot understand overseas call-centre operators.) A huge volume of those jobs are actually face to face. You can’t have your hair cut, your garden tended, your children minded, your car serviced, your trains staffed, your sink unblocked, your bus driven, your roads mended, your pint pulled, your fields harvested, or your brain operated on by someone 10,000 miles away. (Though I have to admit that with technology, these things may some day be both economically and practically possible.) Inmigration of hairdressers, gardeners, child-minders and the rest might well push down wages, but (for good or ill), immigration can be controlled.

I agree that flexibility is vital, and education/training the key. Nobel economist Gary Becker says that 75% of our wealth is not land, buildings, equipment and the rest but the ‘human capital’ skills, health, and experience of our people. The best way to improve all that, though, is to get government out of the picture.

From Adam Smith Institute

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Blogged under Libertarian News on Saturday 29 September 2007 at 6:03 am

Joke of Day 891

I’ve decided to pack in my job at the RSPCA. I’m treated like a dog, and my office isn’t big enough to swing a cat in.

From Adam Smith Institute

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Blogged under Libertarian News on Saturday 29 September 2007 at 6:02 am

Sneaky Gordon gets a telling off

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Paying tax used to be like getting mugged at knife-point. It was a case of, “give us the money or something terrible will happen to you.” Today, however, things aren’t so simple. Ever since he was Chancellor, Gordon Brown has favoured ’stealth taxes’, taxes you pay but hardly notice - usually until you retire and find that you haven’t got any money. It’s more like identity theft than mugging, more insipid and less honest, but just as expensive.

Now the OECD is weighing in and has published it’s biannual report on the UK. The report makes fascinating reading and is generally positive about the UK’s economy, citing contuiing growth and falling unemployment, as well as our acceptance of globalization.

The report is less complimentary when it turns to fiscal policy. The tax system is criticized as being too complex and lacking ‘transparency’. Of course, this is just a poltet and diplomatic was of criticizing Gordon’s stealth taxes. The sneaky taxes have, it is estimated, dragged more than 1m people into the higher tax bracket.

Anne Marie Brook, the chief author of the OECD report, is quoted in the Telegraph as saying, “the Government should be making it clearer to people how they are raising taxes. It’s a question of transparency.”

The Adam Smith Institute has done a lot of work over the years worked to expose stealth taxes in the UK through Tax Freedom Day, a simple way of demonstrating how much of our money is taken by the government. The Treasury hate it of course – they prefer to keep these taxes hidden away from the public’s eyes.

Hopefully Gordon Brown and Alistair Darling will pay attention to the OECD and paying taxes can go back to simple, honest, robbery.

From Adam Smith Institute

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Blogged under Libertarian News on Saturday 29 September 2007 at 6:01 am

The principled-stand-of-the-week by Dave Cameron

Dave Cameron is actually a very funny guy. His faux sincerity and Forceful Leader hand gestures (no doubt practised in front of a mirror for best effect), combined with crassly obvious weathervane-like changes of political position, are the perfect stuff of parody. I expect most politicians to be insincere as it is more or less a job requirement, but I find the combination of mannered earnestness and whore-like opinion poll based ideology-of-the-week strangely compelling viewing….

From Samizdata.net

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Blogged under Libertarian News on Saturday 29 September 2007 at 4:00 am

Caution! Official mind at work

For every rational cause you can guarantee there will be someone who tries to pursue it in a crazy and counter-productive manner. A Cambridge school caretaker has just been gaoled for sending letter bombs in protest against the surveillance state. Quite how he thought it might help is obscure; there is no Bakhuninite theory of precipitating revolution on offer, nor the intimidation/revenge motive of animal-rights terrorists. Perhaps he is a product of what the LM…

From Samizdata.net

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Blogged under Libertarian News on Saturday 29 September 2007 at 4:00 am

Hillary Clinton: Let’s Start Socialism At The Cradle, Literally

For all the complaining I do about the Republican Party, there are days like today when I’m reminded of just how bad the alternative is:
WASHINGTON (AP) - Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton said Friday that every child born in the United States should get a $5,000 “baby bond” from the government to help pay […]

From The Liberty Papers

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Blogged under Libertarian News on Friday 28 September 2007 at 8:49 pm

Ron Paul At Last Night’s Presidential Debate

I did not watch last night’s PBS debate, but these two You Tube videos seem to comprise the majority of what Congressman Paul had to say:

From The Liberty Papers

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Blogged under Libertarian News on Friday 28 September 2007 at 7:27 pm

Smoke ‘em if You got ‘em…for the Good of the Children

With the expiration of SCHIP looming on September 30th, the congress plans to extend and expand the program by adding another $35 billion over the next 5 years despite President Bush’s threat to veto the bill. The House passed the bill 265-159 with the support of 45 Republicans. The Senate also is expected to pass […]

From The Liberty Papers

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Blogged under Libertarian News on Friday 28 September 2007 at 7:26 pm
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