ebook img

Naked Economics by Charles Wheelan PDF

41 Pages·2012·0.71 MB·English
by  
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Naked Economics by Charles Wheelan

Naked Economics by Charles Wheelan Chapter 6 Productivity and Human Capital  Bill Gates’ house  Why do some people have trampolines in their house and have private jets, while others have to sleep in bathrooms at the bus station?  13% of Americans are poor  1/5 children (35% black children) live in poverty  3 billion people are desperately poor in the world  About 7 percent of the population was living under or near the absolute poverty line in 2010, the Ministry of Health and Welfare said Monday. The figure is a slight increase from 6.7 percent in 2006 More than two-thirds of them were jobless, and many lived on their own or suffered from chronic illnesses with expensive medical fees, the ministry said. The report showed that 3.2 percent, or 1.5 million people, were living under the poverty line ― set at 1.4 million won ($1,217) a month for a family of four. Such families qualify for governmental aid. Another 1.8 million people lived barely above that line, making less than 120 percent of the poverty wage, but were excluded from the benefits.  Korea Herald, April 6, 2012  At least 80% of humanity lives on less than $10 a day.  More than 80 percent of the world’s population lives in countries where income differentials are widening.  The poorest 40 percent of the world’s population accounts for 5 percent of global income. The richest 20 percent accounts for three-quarters of world income.  According to UNICEF, 22,000 children die each day due to poverty. http://www.globalissues.org/article/26/poverty-facts-and-stats Poverty Rate in World  Economists study poverty and income inequality  They ask why?  One answer is the theory of human capital.  Human capital: the sum total of skills in an individual: education, intelligence, charisma, creativity, work experience, entrepreneurial vigor, physical skills  Stripped of wealth and possessions, what is left? How would Bill Gates do? Tiger Woods? Bubba who dropped out of 10th grade and struggling with a crystal meth addiction? How about the sultan of Brunei?  Labor market like any other: some skills are in greater demand than others  More unique the skill, the better compensated  A-Rod makes $275m over 10 years  He can hit a ball, win games, fill stadiums, sell merchandise, and earn television revenues A-Rod  Price of certain skill not related to social value, but to its scarcity  Robert Solow (1987 Nobel Prize in Economics) earned less money for the Nobel Prize than Roger Clemens earns in one season: “There are a lot of good economists, but there’s only one Roger Clemens.”  The wealthy more often than not have specialized training; this requires investment  A college education earns a 10% return  Education/human capital is an economic passport; in some countries the right to immigrate depends on skills and education  Mr. Abouali’s thoughts on his son’s education; no leisure time, no breaks; gain the skills now to better insure the future  Few skills required for a fast-food worker; 150 million people in the USA capable of serving a value meal  A high unemployment rate is not necessarily because there are no jobs; there is not the right human capital  Poverty is having little human capital  High school dropout poverty rate 12 times more than college grads  Why is India one of the poorest countries? - 35% illiterate  Or some suffer from conditions that render their human capital useless: in the US, many homeless suffer from substance abuse, disability, and mental illness  A healthy economy helps: a rising tide lifts all boats  A booming economy doesn’t help parking lot attendants to become professors; they need to invest in human capital  Macroeconomic factors control the tides; human capital determine the quality of the boat  Imagine: 100,000 high school dropouts left in the middle of Chicago  Imagine: 100,000 graduates from the best universities left in the middle of Chicago  Consider the case of the Naval Air Warfare Center; produced advanced electronics, and was shut down due to military downsizing  Usually a plant closing in a city is disastrous, but the quality of human capital, with scientists, engineers, and technicians, allowed the plant to be sold to a private buyer  On Friday, the employees left work as recently laid-off government employees, then on Monday, 98% of the workers returned as Hughes Electronics employees  Different from the stories of the closing of a mill, mine, or factory; lower quality human capital  Economists estimate a 25% earning capacity lost when a factory closes  The Lump of Labor Fallacy: the belief that there is a fixed amount of work to be done in the economy, and every new job must come at an expense of a job lost elsewhere  But, jobs are created anytime a new service is offered, or a new and better way to make an old one is discovered  Over the past 3 decades, tens of millions of jobs were created; the internet and high-tech industry  Since the 1950s, millions of women entered the labor force, yet unemployment remained low  Immigrants have come, without increased unemployment  Some jobs are lost, but many more are created. Every worker will have money to buy more goods, more demand; a virtuous cycle

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.