Friday, December 16, 2011

Economics should be a public service discipline.

The conversation about what I want to do with my life came up recently. The short answer to that is that I want to have a career in public service. I was lucky to stumble into UMKC and find a department that supports a public service attitude toward economics. This is rare according to the New York Times.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Just a Reminder

“The end of democracy and the defeat of the American Revolution will occur when government falls into the hands of lending institutions and moneyed incorporations.”


“If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be.”

 “Those who surrender freedom for security will not have, nor do they deserve, either one.”

-Thomas Jefferson.
Learn More, Call your Congressman.This is unconstitutional.

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Khan Academy: Topics of Relevance

Khan Academy has a few helpful sections for people who want to understand economics: The following is a list of the various economics related topics on the site, and my opinion of the sections I have seen. Each of these has between 10 and 60 videos. Each video is about 10 minutes. This is a great way to get through some pretty dense material at your own pace. Khan makes it easy.




Banking and Money: Textbook style topics related to the technical side of Money and Banking which is commonly taken by students who study business, economics, political science, finance or other related topics. If you want to know about money though, check out the UMKC Department of economics blog on Modern Monetary Theory. Khan does go into detail about how money is created, which give insight into the financial crisis.


Credit Crisis: Topics directly related to the 2008 credit crisis. Explains the various "financial instruments" we keep hearing so much about: Credit Default Swaps, Mortgage-backed securities etc. This is only part of the story, but Khan tells it well.


Current Economics: This topic is mostly applications of economic theory and some explanations of trade issues tied to current events at the time he filmed the original lectures.  Its good, but mostly studies the kind of things we have to study before we can get started disputing the typical assumptions of standard economic theory. (Which offer little connection to reality, completely theoretical, but most people who study economics at an introductory level are only exposed to this junk) Khan is good about raising questions where the theory doesn't hold up, though he may not explore them, just plant a seed of doubt.



Currency: All about international currency exchange. Useful, tangent to the topic at hand, but not completely unrelated.


Finance: Macroeconomics. I have not watched any of these yet.

Geithner Plan: Debunking Timothy Geithner. This one is particularly important and there are only a handful of videos.


Paulson Bailout: Khan comes out against the Paulson Bailout.


Valuation and Investing: I have not seen these either. Building blocks and case studies on the financial analysis and valuation of public equities.


Venture Capital and Capital Markets:  I have not watched any of these. All of the sources of funding (capital) for a business.