Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Love in the Time of Famine

For all those who think love should be analyzed in terms of economics, here is your article:

http://www.cambridgeblog.org/2008/09/james-flynn-in-the-new-scientist

The crucial thing is whether men operate in a seller’s or a buyer’s market. As usual, market analysis oversimplifies, but it isolates an important “exchange”: women provide sex and men “pay,” ideally by helping to support children. When viable men are scarce, they can get sex without paying a high price. On the other hand, women who want children must provide sex and hope for a husband, rather than being able to expect one.

Can you feel the romance just oozing from the page? What palpable romance you bring, sir.

Hat tip to E.S. Fortune for the link.

Santa Clara Magazine and Hyperinflation

I graduated from Santa Clara Law School and get their alumni magazine, The Santa Clara Magazine. The managing editor, Steven Saum, in the most recent edition (Vol. 50, No. 3), talks about hyperinflation:

A few years after the Soviet empire collapsed, I lived in Ukraine, in a town where Russian officers were once sent into exile, and I counted among my friends those whose life savings were devoured overnight by hyperinflation: when money set aside--bit by bit, payday by payday--for two decades in anticipation of a daughter's wedding in the end only covered the cost for half a watermelon at the reception.

He writes such an eloquent defense of fiscal responsibility, I had to share it. The fact remains that when the government prints money, it causes inflation--perhaps not immediately, but eventually, the chickens come home to roost. It is worth repeating the fact that inflation is the #1 enemy of the average citizen, who, like Mr. Saum says, works hard to save a little money, bit by bit, only to see external forces mock his patience.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Jaromir Jagr a Libertarian?

In The Atlantic's December 2008 edition, Jaromir Jagr, a former All-Star U.S. hockey player, sounds positively libertarian: 

"I came to Omsk [Siberia] because I wanted to. Here in Russia, you have real freedom, which is not like U.S. freedom. Back there you have so many rules." He smiled. 

See how fast the world moves? Mr. Jagr's jersey number is 68, to commemorate his Czech heritage and the 1968 "Prague Spring," when Czechoslovakia enacted a series of economic and political reforms. The Soviets opposed the reforms, which called for a decentralized government, and invaded Czechoslovakia in response, occupying it until 1990. 

A decentralized government, of course, is a hallmark of American-style governance. Mr. Jagr, an avowed anti-communist and supporter of the 1968 Prague Spring, now lives in Russia. The world has seemingly flipped overnight. America is being called the land of Soviet-style laws, while Russia has the designation as the land of "real freedom." 

From my perspective, much credit needs to be given to the Department of Homeland Security for taking us away from the America our founders envisioned. 

Oh, the shame.

Barry's Picks

Barry Ritholtz, who manages around 100 million dollars, talks about investing:

We are now running about 70% cash, which is inordinately high, but some of the names we’re watching, and have owned in the past, are NuVasive [NUVA], a medical-device company, Stanley Works [SWK], a great infrastructure story, LG Display [LPL] and Luminex [LMNX]. Industries we like are infrastructure, defense, biotech and medical devices.

It's good to see a Wall Street insider mentioning specific company names as opportunities for investment. As for me, I do believe the market will go up, but the question is whether Obama's swearing-in in late January 2009 will represent a firm baseline, or a temporary peak for the stock market.

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Graph of U.S. Bear Markets


From "dshort" at Calculated Risk blog:

http://calculatedrisk.blogspot.com/

Singapore, Part Deux

My earlier post on Singapore received quite a few hits:

In Defense of Singapore

Here is an article from www.theonlinecitizen.com about Singapore's political system:

http://theonlinecitizen.com/2008/12/current-system-lacks-accountability

The existence of The Online Citizen shows that Singapore does indeed have forums for anti-government debate, and the highly connected nature of Singapore--both communally and technologically--limit the government's power to impose overly rigorous speech codes.

American Lawyers

Attorney Raoul Felder recently talked about job prospects for lawyers in the WSJ, only partly tongue-in-cheek:

Meanwhile, Congress might consider a bailout plan for lawyers. There are now some 1,162,124 lawyers in the U.S., and the law schools are spewing out graduates at a rate of 43,518 a year, all set adrift upon a public that increasingly wants doesn't have money to pay for their services. There is no other profession more dependent on discretionary spending, except perhaps the oldest one.

Oh, the reality.