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Friday, June 5, 2009

Matthew Yglesias » Home Page

Matthew Yglesias » Home Page: "one additional potential bonus of Plumer’s ideas is that the public also seems to have no concept whatsoever of how tax incidence works. Thus it’s possible that if you could reformulate the basic gas tax concept as not a tax on gasoline that consumers pay at the pump, but a tax on oil paid by evil oil companies, that you could get further with it politically even though the actual impact would not really be different."

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Parental Leave


Matthew Yglesias » Home Page: "the general lack of paid parental leave in the United States. In most developed countries some form of paid leave is mandatory.

This is basically a recognition on the part of everyone from Japan to Norway to Canada that having a child isn’t just a random consumption choice that we should leave entirely up to the free market. Parents have a special social role to play, and it’s important to all of us to put them in a position to play it well."

Economist's View: "An Umbrella that Melts in the Rain"

Economist's View: "An Umbrella that Melts in the Rain": Health insurance is like 'An Umbrella that Melts in the Rain' for many people.

Bankruptcy

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

CQ Politics | Gas Taxes Fall Short Again, Strapping Highway Trust Fund

CQ Politics | Gas Taxes Fall Short Again, Strapping Highway Trust Fund: "The federal Highway Trust Fund will run out of cash this summer, marking the second year in a row that gasoline tax revenues have failed to meet prior projections and federal spending commitments. ...Congress approved an $8 billion transfer of general tax revenues in September to shore up the Highway Trust Fund, which ran low because revenues from gasoline and diesel fuel have slowed as motor vehicles become more fuel-efficient and Americans drive less because of the economic recession."

According to The WonkRoom:
Currently, 81 percent of the fund’s money is dedicated to highways, while 19 goes toward mass transit.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Matthew Yglesias » Home Page


: "Via Felix Salmon, a helpful dataset that allows me to put together this chart, showing car ownership rates in a few wealthy, sparsely populated countries:"