Bryan Cutsinger (@bryanpcutsinger) 's Twitter Profile
Bryan Cutsinger

@bryanpcutsinger

AP at @faubusiness | AE at @_PublicChoice | Fellow at @AIER’s @SoundMoneyProj | Monetary History & Political Economy | Views my own

ID: 1570904341829001217

linkhttp://www.bryancutsinger.com calendar_today16-09-2022 22:36:22

1,1K Tweet

673 Followers

840 Following

Macro Musings (@macro_musings) 's Twitter Profile Photo

New episode! Bryan Cutsinger on the What the History of Growth Driven Deflation Can Teach us about a Potential AI Boom Bryan Cutsinger and David Beckworth respond to Ben Bernanke’s 2002 speech titled, Deflation: Making Sure IT Doesn’t Happen Here.

Brian Albrecht (@briancalbrecht) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Great question! I’d recommend 3 things. 1. Chicago Price Theory 2. Deirdre Nansen McCloskey’s old undergrad text for a bunch of examples to work through deirdremccloskey.com/docs/price.pdf 3. Any of Matthew E. Kahn’s lecture note books, again for examples of research questions amzn.to/3LxpCVC

Clara E. Piano (@clara_jace) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Recently, the lovely people at Institute of Economic Affairs provided me an opportunity to share my latest thoughts on fertility and policy. As always, the writing process clarified my thinking. The report includes an argument for my preferred fertility statistic for policy debates (the gap

Matthew E. Kahn (@mattkahn1966) 's Twitter Profile Photo

As the job market in economics begins, I'd like to point out my friend Jon Hartley of Stanford. He is more productive than I am. In a truly competitive market, he should take my spot. jonathanhartley.net/research

Bryan Cutsinger (@bryanpcutsinger) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Landes: "[Coase] said he had gotten tired of antitrust because when the prices went up the judges said it was monopoly, when the prices went down, they said it was predatory pricing, and when they stayed the same, they said it was tacit collusion"

Peter Isztin 🌐🏛 (@peterisztin) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Sometimes when a murder mystery has a simple solution, the reader revolts. I consider much criticism against the economic approach in a similar vein. Heterodox econs and many Austrian types just cannot stand that it explains so many phenomena in such a simple manner.

Econlib (@econlib) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Bryan Cutsinger new Econlib post shows how Texas’s low-flow mandate raises costs, lifts prices, and leaves both plumbers and consumers worse off. When supply shifts more than demand, deadweight loss follows. loom.ly/I-5QqzQ

Lawrence H. White (@lawrencehwhite1) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The WSJ writes that the Fed is "getting used to 3% inflation," raising its de factoinflation target. It shouldn't. I review the reasons here: onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.10…