Brilliant idea.
RachelCitando "Rosser, John" <[log in to unmask]>:
> As someone who has contributed to some of the discussions/debates
> here and who is sorry that things have reached a point where someone
> like Roy Weintraub feels a need to withdraw and others are talking
> of separate lists, let me note something. Much of the problem here
> is the difference between lists and blogs. Whereas a decade ago and
> more lists dominated internet discussions/debates, blogs do now,
> with surviving lists mostly being informative and not major debate
> fora. Part of the difference I think is that with a blog one can
> choose to go there or not and choose to read something or not when
> one is there. On a list, everything anybody sends as posts
> everybody must deal with at least to see if we want to read it or
> just delete it, and many of us are indeed swamped with way too much
> email, much of it spam. We are wading through all kinds of stuff we
> do not wish to read to get at the stuff we want to or need to read
> or deal with. That is basically why a decade ago the old lists that
> people debated on in the 90s by and large disaappeared, to be
> replaced by the blogs. Most of the lists that have survived that
> sea change have been largely of the informative, non-debating, type.
>
> So, I and others clearly have hung on to this list (one of the few I
> am on), partly because while there were discussions and debates,
> they tended to be relatively low key and not too lengthy. They
> would appear, flare up a bit, but then usually pretty quickly
> disappear, with an occasional exception.
>
> However, I agree with Roy that things have gotten out of hand now
> here. This is indeed a matter of negative externalities. A small
> number of people have been engaging in lengthy and repeated
> arguments over the same handful of topics, repeating endlessly their
> same old same old arguments that we have all seen many times before
> ad nauseum, apologies to some here. I would hope that this small
> group of people could be prevailed upon to willingly restrain
> themselves. Maybe not post more than twice within any round of an
> argument that comes up, especially if what you are doing is not
> informative in the sense of "Oh, here is another source that is
> relevant to this discussion that people here may not know about,"
> rather than, "Of course according to the doctrine of blah blah blah,
> I am right again and you are wrong again for the umpteenth time
> squared blah blah blah and more blah blah blah." I do not know if
> the moderator can encourage this or others can encourage it. Maybe
> a rule? No commenting more than twice on a single thread, or
> something like that? Otherwise, indeed, this list will go the way
> of many others that no longer exist.
>
> Barkley Rosser
>
> ________________________________
> From: Societies for the History of Economics [[log in to unmask]] On
> Behalf Of Ken Gordon [[log in to unmask]]
> Sent: Sunday, April 18, 2010 8:54 PM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: SHOE: DISC -- Gunning -- Bubbles, Booms, and the
> Austrian Theory of the Trade Cycle
>
> I agree with Weintraub on this. Much of what appears on this list
> these days are back-and-forth discussions between two members of the
> list. To the observers, each often seems to be talking past, not
> to, the other. In gentler times, those discussions would have taken
> place privately by letter, with the result, if any, bringing forth
> a paper or a book by one or both of the correspondents. Couldn't,
> for example, Robin and Pat take their discussion to private e-mail
> exchanges, then when they reach a conclusion tell the rest of us
> about it? And if they don't reach a conclusion, that'll tell them
> something about the value of the exchange. This is a classic
> externality: the marginal cost of one more bit traversing the
> Internet is vanishingly small; the cost to me of scanning and
> deleting is more than I want to spend.
>
> Ken Gordon
> On 2010-04-17, at 7:46 PM, E. Roy Weintraub wrote:
>
> Colleagues: Although I may be the only one interested in this
> posting, I still would like to let folks know that I have asked the
> list manager to remove me from this SHOE List. Once upon a time,
> this list served to bring together announcements, information, and
> indeed community to the far-flung and isolated members of the HE
> community. It now no longer appears to do so, as a number of
> individuals have informed me, off list, that they have no interest
> in the limited range of subjects that appear, like Gresham's Law, to
> have driven out all other subjects. I hope that, if others feel the
> same way, the list owners at HES and ESHET will find a way to
> address the issue of reduced subscriptions. If others do not feel
> the same way, the list will go on as it has been doing. In any
> event, in the future please feel free to email me privately at
> [log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>. ERW
>
> On Sat, Apr 17, 2010 at 7:30 PM, Pat Gunning
> <[log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>> wrote:
> Robin, I must admit that I cannot follow your reasoning. Perhaps you
> could clarify. Here is what you say about the causes of an increase
> in productivity:
>
> "When prices rise because demand has risen, it is reasonable for
> agents to respond by producing more, thereby increasing the
> productivity of the system. Further, it is reasonable for
> individuals to hasten their purchases in anticipation of further
> price increases. This, too, increases the productivity of the system."
>
> I take it that you are proposing two causes of increases in the
> productivity of the system: (1) an increase in demand for consumer
> goods and (2) the expectation that the prices at which they buy
> capital goods (including consumer durables and land) will rise.
>
> Neither of these is sufficiently specified for me to evaluate your
> claim. Let me start with the first: the idea that a demand increase
> could cause economic growth. Are you writing about aggregate demand?
> You cannot mean the demand for a specific consumer good. This
> cannot occur without an offsetting decrease in demand for another
> product, an increase in resource supply, a technological advance,
> or a reduction in demand for a capital good (a decrease in saving).
> To support your claim, you would have to specify much more than you
> do. Or if you are writing about aggregate demand, what else are you
> assuming? Again, you would have to specify much more before one
> could evaluate your claim.
>
> The second cause is the expectation of a higher price which
> presumably would occur if one buys a durable consumer good or a
> durable capital good, including land. But why would someone expect
> the price of such a good to rise without an offsetting expectation
> that the price of some other good to fall? Again there must be other
> changes that are occurring that you have not specified.
>
> It is difficult for me to make sense of your distinction between
> bubbles and increases in productivity if you do not specify more
> fully.
>
> --
> Pat Gunning
> Independent economist
> Groton, Connecticut
> http://www.nomadpress.com/gunning/welcome.htm
>
>
>
> --
> E. Roy Weintraub
> Professor of Economics
> Duke University
> www.econ.duke.edu/~erw/erw.homepage.html<http://www.econ.duke.edu/~erw/erw.homepage.html>
>
>
|