Friday, March 25, 2005

If people just want to think

Why haven't I elaborated my thinking about the controversy surrounding the gas price hike, in this blog? Because it's near useless. Have tried to talked many times and have answered many questions. But only two or three persons are willing to listen. You go find any newspaper or simply open your newsgroups. People even make stupid jokes on the issue. One of them goes like this: "In order to reduce the number of the poor, raise the gas price". And the readers laugh cynically. Yes, those who got no intention to even think. Who are not even open to a possibility that the silly "joke" might be true. Try it: just add this condition: "... and transfer the money from the less-entitled rich to the more-entitled poor". See? I can understand people's sympathy to the poor. But I can't stand those who use them to gain popularity. Some of them claim to practice "economics for the people" (for lack of better translation); while they simply rephrase "Pancasila" here and there (no, not a bit of stuff like Amartya Sen's). If this is popularity contest, I'd switch the channel to Indonesian Idol.

This is getting pestiferous!

Thursday, March 24, 2005

Midterm Exam: Environmental and Natural Resources Economics

  1. We have discussed about the two opposing views of the future: optimistic- and pessimistic models. Summarize their claims briefly. Since they talk about the future, we cannot satisfactorily decide which one is right now. (The “famous bet” between Ehrlich and Simon might just be a pure coincidence – well, it was a bet!). So, what criteria do you think we might propose for evaluating the predictions of the two views?
  1. Economists have been valuing the environment. Do you think it is ethical? Why or why not? Why do we need valuation? What are the limitations of environmental valuation methods offered by economists?
  1. Sustainable development is a matter of sharing costs and benefits between generations. True or false? Why? We don’t know what our grandkids really want, but we sometimes assume that they would like the forests to be preserved, instead of a huge shopping mall to replace the forest. Why do we do this kind of “paternalism”?
  1. One of the practical implementations of Coasian approach in environmental policy is marketable pollution permits. Do you believe market can take care of the environmental problems? Why? In case you do, tell me how. Another thing, is it ethical to look at the pollution as a factor of production? Give me your argument.
  1. In discussing the issue of population bomb, we talk about the economics of population control. Now tell me what you know about the economics of childbearing. Gary Becker says, children are durable goods. Maintaining them incurs costs and benefits. So, optimize! Comments?
  1. Read the small box in Tietenberg page 293. Yes, it’s about the “Harbor Gangs of Maine”. It seems to me that informal arrangement can be sufficient to ensure efficient harvesting. Am I right or wrong? Why?
  1. We have talked about environmental injustice. It is the condition where those who bear the negative externalities of environmental deterioration are also those who are poor. But hey, this is like what’s happening everywhere. Can you think of a rich community that is willing to bear the negative externalities? If you can imagine one, why do you think the relatively rich people want to do that?

Monday, March 07, 2005

Ticket for gas

My insightful sister was wondering. Why doesn't the government just sell tickets with different nominal values to the BBM consumers? Those with high income should buy one ticket 5 times as much as those with low income, for example. The problem with this type of mechanism is, as I told her, monitoring. Mr. Rich will ask Mr. Poor next door to buy tickets for him. With some incentives, Mr. Poor will do it happily. Moral hazard and adverse selection at play. (Still this is worth elaborating. After all, even the compensation mechanism offered by the government is not free from such problems).

Addendum:
My sister responded again:
I got the point of difficulty in monitoring. In fact what I was particularly wondering is how to make people that use public transport, regardless of being poor or rich, pay bbm/liter less than those use private cars. The justification made is simply that people using public transport use up much less space of the road and do not get as much convenience as people using private vehicle. I am fully aware of the absurdity of effort to identify who the poor or rich are in Indonesia.
I mentioned about ticketing for buses through which government gives subsidy to the public transport users, i.e: users buy bus tickets at Rp. X, then the bus operator can reimburse the tickets at Rp X+Y. ticketing system has been applied for KRL (have no info of how it works). Unfortunately, as you said, for ticketing, there is always an issue of ticket faking. Now, what about allocating oil stations for buses where oprators can get cheaper bbm?

To which I replied:
Nice thoughts. On your last question. We sure hope the bus drivers do not have some evil pact with some guy somewhere: fill up their tanks repeatedly, and go sell somewhere else at higher prices. Arbitrage at play.
And I told her, please keep stimulating such good ideas; and don't get tired by economists' skeptical starting points in looking at things -- they are skeptical.

BBM and sustainable development

Finally someone looks at the BBM fiasco from sustainable development perspective. Very well done, Bang. Thanks for educating that to public.
That's an SMS I sent to this great person (I have no idea if this site is official or not) in response to his article today in Kompas.

Sunday, March 06, 2005

Libertarianism vs Conservatism

Mises Economic Blog brings this debate into the blogosphere. Agree with them, this is a must read. Beware, don't confuse liberalism and libertarianism. Also, keep in mind that American conservatism/libertarianism are different with those of Europeans. Especially when it comes to economics. Why is Friedman "conservative" but libertarianically opposes big government? Political Compass may have some answer -- think about "liberal conservative".

Somehow, I am relieved that I don't need to resort on either one. I have my own principle and so far so good.

Friday, March 04, 2005

Malaysia, you're getting into my nerve!

Malaysia is off the line. Alright, on that illegal migrants thingy, the blame might be on us. But just because of that, doesn't mean you can annex my country! Get off!!

IMF is loosing its focus, too

Attending the IMF's presentation yesterday, I was amazed. It was supposed to be "The Role of IMF in the Globalization". As it turned out, it was simply a roadshow promoting their "new focus": poverty reduction. Say what? Are these guys now trying to takeover the job from its neighbour across the street?

Monday, February 21, 2005

Microeconomics 2

Started the new semester for Microeconomics 2 last week. It's supposed to be the second in a three-part series of microecon course for graduate students. As it turned out the syllabus I had prepared had many overlaps with that for Microeconomics 1 taught by my colleague, Arindra Zainal. So I made changes. The result is as follows:

Texts: Hal Varian (HV) and Andreu Mas-Colell et al. (MC)
Coverage: Markets (Perfect, Monopoly, and Oligopoly), Uncertaity, and Game Theory.
Outline: 1) Overview/review (HV 1,26,27; MC 1, Math App), 2) Perfect Competition (HV 13, MC 10), 3) Monopoly (HV 14, MC 12), 4) Oligopoly (HV 16, MC 12), 5) Uncertainty (HV 11, MC 6), and 6) Game Theory (HV 15, MC 7,8,9).

I know this is unusual. As some have said: when it comes to HV and MC, it's an "either-or" thing -- you can't use both at the same time. Let's see how it plays out.

Having done the changes, I guess I would also adjust my Microeconomics 3 course next semester as to stress more on General Equilibrium and Welfare Economics and less on Game Theory and Uncertainty.

Wednesday, February 16, 2005

Limits to Rationality

Inasmuch I hate Limits to Growth, this one I love: Limits to Rationality. Sharla Stewart writes very eloquently on Richard Thaler, an avant garde behavioral economist at Chicago. Stewart quotes Thaler:
“most economists recognize that some of the people are not fully rational some of the time, and some of the time that matters.”
“The combination of free entry, unfettered competition, and free choice seems hard to quarrel with, [h]owever, if participants are not well-informed or highly motivated, then maximizing choice may not lead to the best possible outcome.”

On traditionalists view that rationals cancel out irrationals,
Behavioralists disagree, arguing that bounded rationality does indeed bump the market’s invisible hand.
Of course, Gary Becker slightly resists:
“While I believe there’s value in some areas of psychology, the focus is different...” “We’re interested in how groups respond.”
"Division of labor strongly attenuates if not eliminates any effects caused by bounded rationality".
To which Thaler comments:
“Maybe Gary Becker sometimes confuses behavioral economics with psychology,” says Thaler. “Because behavioral economists think about markets all the time.”
And yes, don't forget Thaler-Sunstein good paper, Libertarian Paternalism.

Monday, February 14, 2005

Sorry

Another good thing about blogging is you don't get fine if you break your promises. One day you have lots of stories to share and the next day you lose all the excitement. Well, that's normal in blogospehere. And that happens to me. My apologies, I am no longer bloggery about the tour of disparity.

I was busy completing research reports.

And in the meantime, was also busy trying to understand this man and this man (in Bahasa). And the men are no blogging!

Thursday, February 03, 2005

NR&Env Econ Course

I kicked-off a new course yesterday. It is called "Natural Resources and Environmental Economics". It is in introductory level. This is the description:

This course is a blend of two parts, namely Environmental Economics and Natural Resource Economics, with more emphasis toward the former. The purpose of the course is to provide an overview of the principles of economics used to analyze environmental and natural resource problems. As of completing the course, students are expected to be able to assess environmental and natural resource problems with economics point of view and offer policy recommendation accordingly.

The text is Tietenberg.

This is the outline:

1. Introduction (Tietenberg, Ch. 1,2,5,21,22,23,24 / Julian Simon vs. Paul Ehrlich – some clippings.) 2. Property Rights, Externalities, and Market Failure (Tietenberg, Ch. 4 / Coase, Ronald, 1960.Social Cost," JLE 3:1-44) 3. Cost - Benefit Analysis (Tietenberg, Ch. 3 / Harrison, D., Jr. and D.L. Rubinfeld. 1978. Hedonic Housing Prices and the Demand for Clean Air. JEEM 5:81-102 / Carson, R.T, R.C. Mitchell, M, Hanemann, R.J. Kopp, S.Presser, P.A. Rudd, 2003 / Contingent Valuation and Lost Passive Use: Damage from the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill. ERE 25: 257-286. 4. Natural Resource Economics (Tietenberg, Ch. 5-14 / F.W. Bell, 1986. Mitigating the Tragedy of the Commons. SEJ 52:653-664 / Solow, R.M., 1974. The Economics of Resources or the Resources of Economics? AER Papers and Proceedings 64:1-14. 5. Environmental Economics (Tietenberg, Ch. 15-20 / M. Cropper and W. Oates, "Environmental Economics: A Survey," JEL, June 1992 / Arrow, K.J., P. Dasgupta, L. Goulder, G. Daily, P. Ehrlich, G. Heal, S. Levin, K; G. Mäler, S. Schneider, D. Starrett, and B. Walker, 2004. Are We Consuming Too Much? JEP 18(3): 147-172.

Having had the experience in the other program, I really told the students that we would be learning economics. Then we would try apply it to the problems of NR and Env. They seemed surprised that I am critical to the Kyoto Protocol and I am a pro-growth-pro-env.

Tuesday, February 01, 2005

"Very Good News"...

... was the subject of a mail sent to me by the ever-inspiring John Braden. He wrote:
Dear Arianto:
Your dissertation was chosen as the most outstanding in our Department for 2004 and is being submitted to the AAEA national competition... Congratulations! I am honored to be associated with your work ...
John
to which I replied:
Dear John:
I am very grateful to receive this recognition. No doubt, I owe this to you. I don't think I could even graduate in time without your guidance. Thank you so much!
Arianto

Much to catch up

Or, I might hesitantly call it "a tour of income disparity". Yes, I am back from a long trip to Dakar, Senegal. On the way back, I stayed one night in Dubai. Dakar-Dubai, hence the disparity. So what's the tale? Will elaborate later on -- have to catch up on tons of works. My Bloglines is fed up -- can't wait for a weekend. (By the way, these interesting blogs have joined my feeds: Graycells, Footnotes and Mahalanobis in addition to the formerly listed Dan Drezner and Matt Yglesias -- later will add them all to the sidebar, too. Ugh, another thing that I should mention: this latest post by Aria is wonderful).

Thursday, January 20, 2005

Light blogging, if any

Off to Dakar, Senegal tomorrow. Will come back in the 28th. If any, blogging will be light. In the meantime, here are fun stuff:

Tyler accuses Brad as an Austrian economist. Brad, of course, denounces it. But those who really are in Austrian school -- and who adore Mises more than Hayek, tell us that this cartoon now has a video version. Enjoy (or hate) it.

Tuesday, January 18, 2005

Paris Club communique

It reads as follows (my emphasis):
"During their meeting held on January 12, 2005, Paris Club creditors discussed the situation of the countries affected by the tsunami. Considering the exceptional scale and the devastating effects of this catastrophe, and in order to allow these countries to dedicate all available resources to address humanitarian and reconstruction needs, and in addition to the substantial commitments of their governments and citizens to provide assistance, they shared the view that, with immediate effect and consistent with the national laws of the creditor countries, they will not expect debt payments from affected countries that request such forbearance until the World Bank and the IMF have made a full assessment of their reconstruction and financing needs. In the light of that assessment, and in consultation with affected countries, Paris Club creditors will consider what further steps are necessary. The precise response to affected countries will be determined in the light of their individual requests taking into account the situation of each country."

Rizal Ramli made a point

Unusually, Rizal Ramli makes sense:
"IMF's expertise is in planning fiscal and monetary policies, not in assessing damages.... Couldn't we do the assessment?"
Thank to Rizal for the pointer.

Monday, January 17, 2005

Mbak Ani's clear vision

Very well-written article, by the State Minister of National Planning (in Bahasa). She lays out the government plan in dealing with the tsunami's aftermath in three phases: emergency, rehabilitation, and reconstruction. She also clarifies some confusion (also in Bahasa, a piece by Prof. Sadli) regarding the aid inflows.

Friday, January 14, 2005

No to a foreign military base!

This whole debate around the presence of a thousand foreign troops in Aceh is missing the point.

The pros argue, the destroyed Aceh is a world's problem. It should not be collapsed into nationalism sentiment whatsoever. Aceh needs all kinds of help, including those from foreign militaries. (On the radio I heard this morning, somebody said even the help from satan should be welcome!). So there shouldn't be any deadlines for the presence of foreign troops in Aceh. On the other hand, the government has asked them to leave Aceh in three months. The government worries that the foreign troops could be harmed by the GAM separatists -- a very bad political statement.

Both sides of arguments don't make sense. While I tend to agree with the government decision, it should have given a more reasonable justification. And that would be, the possibility of international takeover of Aceh, which would very likely be led by the U.S. The U.S. once had bases in the Philippines' Subic and Clark for their operation in East Asian region. But they get kicked out in 1992. They need a replacement to "serve" the region -- they've been everywhere else. They have been trying hard to get another strategic location. Indonesia is very strategic geographically. And add to that, it is increasingly becoming international military interest ("terrorist-haven" as sometimes the western media picture it). So,? You do the math. (I suspect the government takes this seriously, but they just can't say it -- too sensitive an issue?)

Of course you might say, c'mon. Look at those massive aid coming in, much of which from the U.S. I know. Aid is one thing. Military takeover is another. This is not about stupid nationalism. But I'm skeptical with the U.S. move. Some of you argue, we cannot rely on our own government, so why don't we open the access to foreigners as wide as possible. True, our government is slow and lame. But letting more than a thousand foreign troops there is just thrilling to me (and I never trust Bush's words about peace. You see the evidence against him everywhere). I hope I am wrong. As a note, by the way, all we get so far from the debt negotiation is debt moratorium, not debt relief. What we they give us is time, not money. Please don't say we owe them a region.

Will the government decision harm the aid inflow? It might. But it's better than having Aceh replacing Clark/Subic. I agree with setting the timetable for the foreign troops (I think civilian volunteers are fine, though). But the government should find a way not to lie to the public of what it's concern really is. At the same time, the government should be more decisive in coordinating the aid allocation as well as the reconstruction projects. So far it seems so messy: who's in charge? Alwi Shihab, JK, SBY, or whom?

God, save this country.

Aside: Now some of you might think I'm for conspiracy theories based on my foregoing assertion. No, don't ever think I also believe that the tsunami is caused by American experimental bomb under the sea. No, I never buy such crap!

Addendum: Just heard it on the radio. Things are getting worse. Alwi Shihab literally said, this is about nationalism and dignity. "How can we stand being looked at as a country that always needs helps? It's a shame if we cannot manage it ourselves". My goodness, he had no idea what he was talking about. Or, maybe he did. He's just a lousy politician.

Wednesday, January 12, 2005

The next Julian Simon

I confess I haven't read Huber and Mills' Bottomless Well. But thanks to Tyler Cowen at the Marginal Revolution, I now know what it is about (yes, I trust Tyler's reading). In Tyler's words:

1. The cost of energy as we use it has less and less to do with the cost of fuel. Increasingly, it depends instead on the cost of the hardware we use to refine and process the fuel. Thus, we are not witnessing the twilight of fuel.

2. "Waste" is virtuous. We use up most of our energy refining energy itself, and dumping waste energy in the process. The more such wasteful refining we do, the better things get all around. All this waste lets us do more life-arrirming thing better, more clearly, and more safely.

4. The competitive advantage in manufacturing is now swinging decisively back toward the United States...[information technologies]

6. The raw fuels are not running out. The faster we extract and burn them, the faster we find still more. Whatever it is that we so restlessly seek -- and it isn't in fact "energy" -- we will never run out. Energy supplies are infinite...


Of course the above is hated by many environmentalists. Somehow this reminds me of the famous bet between Paul Erlich and Julian Simon.

Tuesday, January 11, 2005

Monsanto-gate

Monsanto has been bribing Indonesian top officials and their family. The Jakarta Post reported:

"... People from Monsanto met with a senior environment ministry official on several occasions.
... an employee of the consulting firm which represented Monsanto visited the senior official at his home and gave him an envelope containing $50,000 in $100 bills.
... Monsanto made at least $700,000 in illicit payments to at least 140 current and former Indonesian government officials and their family members.
... The largest single set of payments was for the purchase of land and the design and construction of a house in the name of a wife of a senior Ministry of Agriculture official, which cost Monsanto $373,990.
... Other improper payments included, among others, payments to a senior official of Budget Allocations at the National Planning and Development Agency (Bappenas), totaling $86,690, and payments to other Ministry of Agriculture officials, totaling $8,100.
... Officials of the South Sulawesi office of the agriculture ministry also received approximately $29,500 from Monsanto.

I guess this would either a) send some vip's to jail or b) just vanish in the air.

RIP: Robert Heilbroner

The author of the ever-illuminating Worldly Philosophers, Robert Heilbroner died today in New York. Another great loss.

Monday, January 10, 2005

Early warning system

I agree with Posner, we should build one:
"...[P]oor countries may not have the resources to create tsunami warning systems or take other precautionary measures that wealthy countries could afford to do. I would rephrase the point as follows: the budget for disaster prevention will depend on the competing claims on public and private funds. The more urgent those competing claims, the rationally smaller will be the budget devoted to disaster prevention..."
"...But to keep matters in perspective, although per capita incomes in the nations affected by the recent Indian Ocean tsunami are roughly 10 times less than the per capita income of the United States, the four countries principally affected--Indonesia, Thailand, India, and Sri Lanka, have an aggregate GDP of hundreds of billions of dollars. A tsunami warning system might cost only a few million dollars a year..."

Friday, January 07, 2005

RIP: Gerard Debreu

Professor Debreu died today. Condolences.

Thursday, January 06, 2005

Moratorium or relief or what?

My two-cent op for those debating on debt moratorium:

1). Debt moratorium is not the same as debt relief. The former is temporary suspension, and the latter is permanent reduction/deletion or simply rescheduling.

2). G2G-based moratorium for official debts is very possible. But only for those under bilateral agreement. Those signed under the Paris Club are subject to discussion -- and a tough one, most likely. In the meantime, debt relief is still possible but less likely (unless Indonesia poses similar importance to donors the way Mexico was to the U.S. back in the Clinton years).

3). It's almost impossible to get relief (not to mention moratorium) for commercial debts. After all, corporations are no charity. (They will donate some money of course, for image-building).

4). So what now? Here's what I would suggest : 1) Demand debt relief (as so promised by U.K., Italy, and Belgium) -- I could imagine this would be relatively more manageable for bilateral agreements. But it would be extremely tough for multilateral: Paris Club is a cartel and the brain-child of the IMF; remember GOI has said no to the Fund; hence no more Paris Club dinners, 2) Demand debt moratorium (from Germany, U.S., Japan, Canada, and France).

5) If you are concerned with our rating, points in # 4 above will not hurt (read S&P Bulletin today) insofar the debts we are talking about are official debts. When it comes to commercial debts though, things are not pretty (see # 3, and in addition, unlike the case of official debts, this one is subject to lowered rating).

6) Yet, some would understandably cry out: why oh why are we still talking about the damn ratings in the midst of this sad sad sad catastrophe? Well, because those herds called Corporations out there always wake up in the morning and look at the S&P ratings before deciding where to put money today. And the thing is, it's commercial debts that are more volatile. Unfortunately, we are not sure if can play the Mexican way...

Tsunami's impact


Tsunami's impact (source: Citigroup: Hanna et al, 2005) Posted by Hello

The above graph (click to enlarge) shows that the impact of the recent Tsunami on financial markets is not gigantic. (Thanks to Anton Gunawan for the article).

On the economics of the Tsunami see the interesting discussion of Posner and Becker today. They both agree that despite the great uncertainty of such catastrophe, a good early warning system should be provided. Becker goes on to offer solutions. In the long run: invest on education; and in the shorter run: good access to market insurance. But, as Becker admits, these both are not easy to do, especially by low income countries. And of course, moral hazard problem. See a rejoinder by Lynne Kiesling.

My take: Yes, the economic costs of the Aceh's Tsunami might not be gigantic. However, this event requires extremely careful response from the government. Yes, we expect (and have been promised) huge amount of foreign aid. Both in the form of grant or of debt forgiveness. Good diplomacy is crucial, because no such thing as a free lunch (recall: Rubin-Summers-Greenspan's unpopular determination to help Mexico in the Clinton years)

Tuesday, January 04, 2005

Education: basic first!


Returns to and costs of education (graph by Todaro) Posted by Hello

Over examining a doctoral dissertation, a collegue and I were involved in a discussion. The examinee modeled public education provision and how it affects (or affected by) interregional movement of students. One of the results seems to imply that higher education should be centralized. Despite the fact that the dissertation treats education as consumption-only, not an investment (one serious weakness, I think), the collegue rightly argued that it is the basic education that needs centralization more than higher education. He backed up his argument with G. Psacharopoulos' finding that the returns to investment on basic education is greater than that on higher education. The referred study is a classic, and the finding seems to be a stylized fact these days (Psacharopoulos has updated again the paper in Education Economics, 12(2) Aug 2004 -- subscription required). I would have stated my agreement with him.

But instead, I misunderstood my collegue's point, and rather, raised another related point, namely: the the social returns to investment on higher education is lower than its private returns. Of course I had in mind the graph above (from the Mike Todaro's Economic Development that in turns also cites Psacharopoulos). In particular, what I really meant was that in the case of higher education, the net private returns exceeds the net social returns. This is shown in the graph above where the expected private returns and private costs diverge; while the social returns and social costs converge (and later, cross and reverse).

So, basically my collegue and I were in agreement as far as the public policy on education was concerned. That is, if the government is to centralize public education, it should do it to basic education first (In fact, I even tend to think, for higher education, no centralization should be encouraged).

Friday, December 31, 2004

New year's tears


Tsunami (photo courtesy of ThinkQuest) Posted by Hello

Suboptimal riposte

Please, all you who appreciably want to donate to or to help the victims of the Tsunami, think twice. No, I'm not saying you should not participate. Your helps and donations are of course 'priceless' (or so you think). However, many, so many of the donations so far are suboptimal. People keep sending unprocessed food (raw materials) and nobody can cook over there! Even drinkable water is terribly scarce. The lists of volunteers keep expanding every minutes. But many of those who want to be sent are not the ones the victims need. They need paramedics. Not just anybody who in turns need to eat there too. If you have all the sympathy for Aceh's tsunami victims, and you have the urge to go there, make sure you can help, not to be helped. And those who want to donate, please donate money, so the centers whatever they are can use it to buy relevant goods: body-bags, disinfectants, medicine, biscuits, bottled water, etc. I agree with a friend: this requires a careful organization. And a quick, systematic one. Yes, military.

Wednesday, December 29, 2004

RIP: Susan Sontag

In the aftermath of the Tsunami, in the midst of my condolences to the people of Aceh and the surroundings, another one eulogy goes to Susan Sontag in New York. Unlike you, Dave, I am not happy about that.

Tuesday, December 28, 2004

Put back economics into Environmental Economics!

I was a little surprised today and last week to observe my students presentation on their environmental economics projects. ("Surprised" being a euphemism). Not a single group used economics to explain environmental policy recommendation. (Well there was one, and it was sadly irrelevant). Of course this is not entirely their fault. I felt guilty: I might have failed to teach them. Or, to make me feel better, I was silently blaming those who had supposedly taught them the basic microeconomics. Should really find out another way to deliver this course next time. One group dared to suggest zero pollution, while still implying the need of, well, growth! Others were not even suggesting anything: it's all about issues, newspaperic issues. I felt terribly, terribly guilty...

So in this other class, that was scheduled to be discussing sustainable development, I started with a pamphlet: "I'm an 'environmental economist', and I am going to talk today about 'environmental economics'. But first, forget about that first word in those two phrases. We here are learning economics. Later we are going to apply it to help solve the environmental problems". I went on talking about how I am more persuaded by Bjorn Lomborg instead of by the infamous doomsters, Club of Rome. How I agree more with Becker than with Posner regarding the Kyoto Protocol (by the way, the Becker-Posner Blog is getting better: in addition to their global warming debate, the recent one on disease and growth is noteworthy -- Becker being anti-Malthusian and Posner pro).

The challenge we in the field face these days is arguably not how to contribute alternative solutions to the environmental problems. But first of all, is to convince the general public that economics offers a way around them. And the difficulty lies in the fact that most of the economic approaches are simply... unpopular.

Tsunami next door

May they rest in peace.

Saturday, December 25, 2004

Starbucks assumes my taste

I don't hate Starbucks like these people. In fact, I go to Starbucks quite often. But today I happened to notice: Starbucks assumes my (and maybe your) taste. I was ordering a small, black coffee, as usual. This waitress, she handed me instead a mug with ... hot water and black ... well, tea. Me complained. She goes: "Oh, sorry, Sir. So sorry. Let me make it up for you. I'll make you a ... cappuccino, alright?". WHAT? Why did she think I valued cappucino more than black, plain coffee? Of course I said no, I want BLACK coffee! (today they had Sumatran).

Bear with me -- more interesting one coming. There I was, sitting on a comfy couch reading my book. One subchapter done, and time for the next gulp of coffee. But, hey, what's that little thing moving around on my coffee? A suicidal fly! So, yes, I stood up for the second complaint of the day. This time, another waitress apologized. She goes: "Oh my good God! Please forgive us, Sir. I'll change your coffee..." (At the moment, I thought, she didn't need to apologize. The dead fly should). Anyway, she gave me another mug of coffee. Thanks God, it's black. Only that... "Here you are, Sir. As a guesture of our state of sorry, we give you a ... bigger mug... no extra charge"... Oh, my God! Did she think I ordered small coffee, because I couldn't afford the bigger one? Even worse, did she think I valued bigger mug of coffee higher than smaller one? (Now I think she should apologize!)

Both fiascos once again prove: most people confuse value with price. True, price should reflect value. But my valuation might be different from yours and therefore I might not think the price is right (for me), while you think so (for you). Disaster comes when you think the price is right for your valuation, and ... mine.

Tuesday, December 21, 2004

Chatuchak


Posted by Hello (photo courtesy of AsiaTravelTips)

...as you might wonder what it looked like...

Sunday, December 19, 2004

Krung Thep

Hi, I'm blogging from an inn in Bangkok. Attended the annual forum of EADN -- a child organization of the GDN. We were discussing the current development issues and challenges in the East Asian region. The forum ended on Friday, but I extend my stay until tomorrow morning. A friend has been very generous to let me stay in his place yesterday. But today he has to go to Myanmar, so here I am updating you from this bed-and-breakfast place: yes, it is in that kind, but ironically, this is where I can get good internet connection (even in the hotel the forum was held, the connection sucks!). And, it's inexpensive. I pay only 550 bahts (that's 12 bucks) for one night plus another 100 bahts for a whole-day access to wifi-hotspot. Cool! (By the way, this place is recommended by Lonely Planet).

OK, what was it I wanted to write you again? Right, the EADN forum. But... I guess I change my mind. I'm more excited to talk about Bangkok, the Oriental City. I was expecting a city similar to Jakarta: busy, crowded, traffic jam every where. Well, it turned out very close to it, except that, Bangkok now has a very nice subway system that started to operate just recently. It is integrated with the older skyway train. This of course is a very big improvement to the city's problem of congested traffic everyday. However, to my surprise, not many people use that subway! A Thai friend of mine explained that people have not adjusted well with the new facility. In addition, for now it only serves limited routes. People still prefer the traditional road traffic. And that explains why the road is still chaotic. A stranger like me is probably one of the few people who can enjoy the nice subway. It's very clean and ... well, new. You don't even find posters or ads down there. Never mind stores or ... hobos. But maybe my friend is right: it takes time. I was wondering: in the next annual forum, I will probably see a very different subway... (if the subway were in Jakarta, you know exactly what I mean)

Another difference I notice between Bangkok and Jakarta is prices. To say it directly, it's cheaper here. I went to the famous weekend market, Chatuchak yesterday. It was awesome. You can find almost everything very cheap. Not only that, they imitate branded products massively. I saw an American female tourist bargaining over a fake Rolex watch. She got it for ... less than 50 dollars! (It might break after two weeks, but who cares?)

See it yourself. And don't you forget to try this.

Tuesday, December 14, 2004

So long, departure tax

(Sorry, can't find the link, this is a news from a high level official -- will update you later). The departure tax is going to be abolished (it takes 4 years to finalize, eh?). Good. But wait, rumor has it, application fee for passport will increase ... 5 times as much! So, those who travel frequently will be happy. Those who happen to travel only once in their lifetime will be sad. The former consist of, mainly, business people, academics, bureaucrats, etc. The latter, maids, low-wage workers, etc. See my point?

Saturday, December 11, 2004

Becker-Posner Defense: Still Silly

So replies Becker, there are 3 options: 1) pre-emptive attack, 2) wait and retaliate, 3) accumulate information before decide. The most economic way today, says Becker, is the first one. Because, "deterrence is less powerful now as a tool against certain enemies than during the cold war when the adversary was a single major state..."

And Posner adds, "The case for preventive war must be debated on its merits rather than rejected outright on the ground that any war that is not defensive is aggressive and therefore "illegitimate.""

Again, Prof. Becker and Judge Posner: I can still use your arguments in favor of Iraqis and against Americans. Think about it. How would you define "irresponsible nations with powerful weapons"? What precludes it to be... the U.S., Professor? As for your assertion to merits: there you go. It has been going on forever, Judge.

Wednesday, December 08, 2004

Stiglitz vs Stiglitz

The Indonesian Economists Association (ISEI -- No, they don't have a website!) and Economica, a student-run organization at the Department of Economics University of Indonesia (I recall they HAD a website -- but it's lost in the cyberspace, no?) are hosting a public lecture featuring the Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz. Mind you, "public" here means you have to pay Rp 5 millions for the ticket. That's $500. Man, I'd rather use that money for more useful activities like this, this, or this.

Yet, I might be part of the conspiracy now. The committee has asked me to become a jury for an essay competition. The idea is, the first and second winner will get free ticket to the Stiglitz lecture. They have to write a good essay exploring Stiglitz's economics views on development. I repeat: on development. That means, he's going to talk again about the increasingly boring stuff of globalization (for better or worse). So yes, it's about Stiglitz the anti-IMF, not about Stiglitz the respectable risk-and-information economist. It seems to me, people take Stiglitz too much for a somewhat incorrect cause. Just because he won the Nobel prize for economics, people think he is good in everything. Well, I think he is good but he is certainly not the best, when it comes to politics. Or put it this way: when I need to learn about politics (or, even, development), I would not read Stiglitz for reference. As for a econ-popularizer, I'd rather read Krugman.

Poor Stiglitz. As I always say in my microeconomics class: read Stiglitz papers in JET (on risk and uncertainty), QJE (on imperfect information), and AER (on monopoly and the rate of extraction of exhaustible resources) -- each requires subscription. THEN, go ahead read the entertaining "Globalization and Its Discontents" or "Roaring Nineties". Then you can see his split personality: smart economist and somewhat-lousy political analyst.

So yes, Stiglitz is kind of overrated. But he seems to enjoy it. Well, At least I hope he will clarify what his Nobel was for.

A note on the essay competition. These 5 finalist essays: most of them mistake Stiglitz. Some even seem to think Stiglitz won the Nobel for his war against the World Bank, IMF, and the WTO. (Oh, by the way, I found one plagiarist. Rather than grant him a $500-worth ticket, I would suggest to fine him $1000 for the cheat).

Monday, December 06, 2004

Becker's debut: not cool

I'm always admirer of Gary Becker. But his justification on "preventive" war sounds silly -- the silliest "economics" I have ever read. If you say it's OK to attack Iraq for its "intention" to harm America, why shouldn't that apply the other way around, too? You watched Minority Report too much, eh?

Thursday, December 02, 2004

Kids bricolage to economics

I have these 3 nieces and 2 nephews at home. They are cute and they fight all the time. One day I was going to take shower. Pachi saw me and asked me to lift her up. So I invented this new tool to lift kids around. I used my towel (don't worry, it's clean) as a hammock-like seat; my hands being the trees. She sat in and I carried her around in the house for 3 minutes. Well, not really 3 minutes, because Aisya, Fadhl, and Figo started to demand their rights, too (the 1 year old Dzakira had no idea what was going on). That morning I ended up carrying 4 kids around, one at a time. Muscle ached a little, arrived office in rush. Later when I came home I was welcomed by this cute riot once again.

So, it's time for economics. I gave them 5 pieces of card-sized paper each. Each paper is worth one ride with me, in the morning. For night ride, they should return 2 papers. I slowly explained them the idea. Aisya dan Pachi got it straight. Fadhl and Figo, the youngers had hard time, but slowly understood by way of example. I added, they should live with the 5 papers they each have for one week.

The next morning, Pachi "bought" 2 morning-rides from me. Then, she realized, she only had 3 left. She approached her brother Fadhl. She told him she had chocolate bar, and how about she gave it to Fadhl for 1 "ticket". Fadhl refused, but the cousin Figo accepted her offer. Market works. -- Ehm, not quite so. The next next morning, Fadhl lost one of his tickets. And Pachi somehow had an extra ticket...

Today they all demand their next batch of tickets...

Tuesday, November 30, 2004

Monday, November 29, 2004

Polygamy

This is NOT to say I recommend polygamy.

But here's an interesting talk I heard on the radio this morning. An interviewee argues that polygamy should be banned. Her reasons are 1) Almost all polygamy cases are not registered in the State administration and therefore prone to abuse when it comes to raising the children and leaving them with enough bequests before the father die; 2) Polygamy contributes significantly to domestic/household violence toward women; 3) [and this one is the classic] It is not fair to the wifes.

She goes on to offer a conclusion. Ban the practice. And allow polygamy only if the first (second, so forth) wive signs a consent sealed by the court in the name of law, that she wants her husband to have a second (third, so forth) wive.

Ehm, sounds like a good solution. Only that..., it is built upon an illogical logic called nonsense!

First off, if the registration is the problem, why should you ban it all the way? That's like burning a ship to punish one naughty mouse. Why don't you just fix the administration system and enforce it? Secondly, give me statistics on domestic violance! Thirdly, hey, it takes two persons to have one marriage (well, maybe more somewhere out there, but that's not the point here). If the wive disagrees, then why should the husband proceed? After all, they should have had a pact beforehand ...

Again, I'm not arguing for or against polygamy. I'm just talking about a... funny logic.

And, it's not over yet. A listener calls in. He argues, polygamy is good. Because... -- bear with me -- the number of women is far greater than the number of men...

Wow. These two people made my day. Smiley, smiley...

Wednesday, November 24, 2004

Lincoln, Gandhi, and Kalla: What's Common?

According to Wheelan, Lincoln and Gandhi are both "great leader and bad economist". Lincoln once said, "... if we buy the rails from England, then we've got the rails and they've got the money. But if we build the rails [in America], we've got our rails and we've got our money...". While Gandhi once "...proposed that the Indian flag have a spinning wheel on it to represent economic self-sufficiency...".

Now, meet Jusuf Kalla. He's proposing Indonesian economic development based on ... self-sufficiency! (read here, in Bahasa). Kalla has yet to be seen as a great leader or not. But he seems to be a lousy economist -- in Wheelan's sense. Only, I would add, the main difference between JK and Gandhi is, the former is way richer.

Tuesday, November 23, 2004

Now this is healthy

There you go. Really, all you claiming yourselves as market diehards should read Bodreaux. If every market half-cooked proponent were willing to put things into perspective like Bodreaux does, the field wouldn't have been this divided. Anybody see Dave Friedman?

Monday, November 22, 2004

No Rubba No Hubba Hubba

I am surprised that New Zealand government is sexist. The motto was launched by the Health Minister, Arnette King (a woman, I suppose?). So, men to blame? What say you, oh feminists?

Saturday, November 20, 2004

Misc about the Eid Day

(Gmail is cool. But not cool enough -- Can't do link).

Pheew, what a week (or maybe more?). Eid celebration is always a big thing in Indonesia. This year is special to me, after having the Eid Day abroad for six years. Maybe not special enough since I haven't got a chance to visit my hometown.

Nevertheless, it's good to be back in your country, where lovely people celebrate some big day in their own unique way. Among all are the following.

Mudik ("upstream" traveling). Yes, everybody knows that Indonesia has the largest muslim population. But not many foreigners know that in observing the Eid Day, majority of the Indonesian muslims go visit their hometown. And this means massive flow of people (and money!) from (and later, back to) Jakarta, or in general, from urban to rural (then rural to urban a week or so later). The rushest days are usually D-3 (and D+4). The "mudik" activities come with lots of economic implications. Despite the official range of fares announced by the Department of Transportation, you should expect an up to 100 percent increase (you don't want it, you don't see your family). Workers from all levels, maids to managers visit their family at hometowns, bringing gifts or money. Almost 25 million Indonesians go on mudik. You see them on TV, they look happy. Unfortunately, crime rate increases too. So do accidents on the road. The police reported that accident rates triple during the Eid Day celebration.

Maaf-maafan (asking for and giving forgiveness). At the end of the Ramadhan people ask each other for forgiveness. It's sweet to see people greet one another in a very friendly way. I am a little surprised, however. Back then, people sent greeting cards to their friends and families. Now, digital technology has taken over. If you have a handphone (and you really don't need to give the number to everybody -- they will know it!), expect hundreds of short messages in the Eid Day. People send Eid greetings through handphone. I shouldn't have been too surprised, as Indonesia is the most advanced cellular country (trust me, ask Nokia or others). The Jakarta Post reported: "The country's biggest cellular operator, Telkomsel, reported traffic of 87 million short messages on Idul Fitri, which fell on Nov. 14 this year. Idul Fitri eve saw 72.5 million text messages sent, and the day after Idul Fitri, 50 million messages" And that's only for Telkomsel. Indosat has huge number too ... It's funny to see that many of the SMS senders use somebody's message to send to other friends -- just change the name (yes, suddenly everybody becomes poet!). So I made this experiment: I created a very nice, unique message. Sent it to some people. Within a day, I got an SMS from a friend with a nice message in it. My message :-) God, I love Eid Day.

There are some unpleasant news though. A traffic accident following a sudden stop in a highway cost 6 lifes. The traffic was halted by the police (for a "VVIP procedure") as the President and his convoy would pass by. The sad thing is, the President Spokesperson immediately blamed the accident on a bus driver! Arrogance, no?

Another thing that has made news is this whole thing about gift parcel and corruption. The Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) has declared that gift-parcel-giving should be banned because it's a form of ... corruption! You can see the motivation, but can you see the logic? I have been applauding KPK's anticorruption mission so far. But this banning the gift parcel business is surely off the target. Rather than discouraging corruption, it puts end to small businesses -- those who produce the parcel baskets and the likes. Yet, the big corruptors keep feeding the state officials through ... internet banking. It's funny to hear that the governor of Jakarta has this notice on his front door "We do not receive gift parcels". OK, how about a transfer to your account, Sir? In fact, I think gift parcel is a nice thing if given from superiors to subordinates in the same office. The other way around? Now, that can lead to corruption.

Friday, November 19, 2004

Gmail to Blogger via Google

This is a test post. Last time I mailblog via Yahoo, it failed -- well
it was through, but with some Yahoo self-ads appeared at the bottom,
that's a failure. Now I use Gmail. Hope it works better, considering
that Blogger and Gmail belong to Google. Otherwise, still have to rely
on Outlook.

Monday, November 08, 2004

If even the NYT chickens out

Read this FAIR report. Why am I not surprised?

Thursday, November 04, 2004

"Inlaander" mentality

So bothered with this news. It says basically that Indonesia has sent a team to US to learn how to conduct a good election. What?? Nazaruddin Sjamsuddin, the team leader, should really learn how not to fail like US. Read the Florida reports! And by the way, you can do it from here. You don't need to use our money to get you ticket.

No harm at all?

Bodreaux is defending free trade too much. As he points out, even the "convinced free traders" admit that "some people are harmed by free trade". But Don is in denial. Says he, you can be disadvantaged by free trade, but surely your children or grandchildren will benefit from it. Oh, c'mon. I love free trade, but I'm not a utopist, and that's why I love Bhagwati's stuff. I recall (I believe I got the impression from Landsburg's "Armchair Economist") that some economists once ridicule environmentalists by saying that people maximize their own utility, not their children's. That's one. Two, who can make sure if our future grandchildren will like a particular spot to be forest as it is now or to be a huge shopping mall? By that, Steve should ask Don: who can make sure if your grandchildren perceives the gains from trade the same way as you do? (To answer that challenge, you may want to use Thaler and Sunstein's "Libertarian Paternalism" in May 2003 AEA P&P -- subscription required)

Oh no, not again

Bush wins again. Tabarrok blames it on Karl Rove the Greed. I blame it on the American stupid winner takes all system.