The suspension of disbelief required to support the minimum wage will only take you so far. It's impossible to deny that if it were illegal to pay someone less than a mere $36 an hour, a lot of jobs would vanish. But a small dose of poison is still po ison, and in this case it's being administered to a patient who is already ill.
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Federal minimum wage laws hurt those who need help!
Steve Chapman in Reason:
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Introducing the sociological imagination.
Josh McCabe, former BHI intern, has a new blog, The Sociological Imagination that will try to drag both economists and sociologists closer to each other.
Josh McCabe is a first year PhD student at the State University of New York at Albany where I'm sure he'll drag his teachers closer to the world of Austrian economics.
Hat tip: Organizations and Markets
Josh McCabe is a first year PhD student at the State University of New York at Albany where I'm sure he'll drag his teachers closer to the world of Austrian economics.
Hat tip: Organizations and Markets
Labels:
Beacon Hill Institute,
Fellow bloggers,
interns
Thursday, July 9, 2009
The sound of wind in Texas felt like a good idea
The bloom is off the rose! T. Boone Pickens's wind farm dreams meet the gale force of reality.
Plans for the world's largest wind farm in the Texas Panhandle have been scrapped, energy baron T. Boone Pickens said Tuesday, and he's looking for a home for 687 giant wind turbines.
Pickens has already ordered the turbines, which can stand 400 feet tall — taller than most 30-story buildings.
"When I start receiving those turbines, I've got to ... like I said, my garage won't hold them," the legendary Texas oilman said. "They've got to go someplace."
Pickens' company Mesa Power ordered the turbines from General Electric Co. — a $2 billion investment — a little more than a year ago. Pickens said he has leases on about 200,000 acres in Texas that were planned for the project, and he might place some of the turbines there, but he's also looking for smaller wind projects to participate in. He said he's looking at potential sites in the Midwest and Canada.
In Texas, the problem lies in getting power from the proposed site in the Panhandle to a distribution system, Pickens said in an interview with The Associated Press in New York. He'd hoped to build his own transmission lines but he said there were technical problems.
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
STAMPing out our critics
No matter how hard they try, BHI's critics in Pennsylvania still
don't have a handle on STAMP.
don't have a handle on STAMP.
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