“Essentially, the bank doesn’t want the kroner to increase in value— at least until 2% inflation has been reached — and is prepared to intervene to stop it doing so, by making its negative interest rates even more negative.”
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Why A Group’s Power Dynamics Interferes With Collaboration
from: March 15, 2016 at 06:52AM
Reshma Saujani’s TED Talk: Teach girls bravery, not perfection
from: March 15, 2016 at 06:07AM
Tweet by FiveThirtyEight
Is Twitter making us more productive? https://t.co/7umnhkjjva pic.twitter.com/gAx9oLkQl0
— FiveThirtyEight (@FiveThirtyEight) March 11, 2016
The Next Amazon (Or Apple, Or GE) Is Probably Failing Right Now
“Put another way, the U.S. may have as many would-be Bezoses as ever, but it’s getting fewer Amazons. That finding is consistent with other recent research showing that even the most successful companies aren’t creating as many jobs as they used to. Together, the two trends suggest that the U.S.’s problem is less a failure to create enough new businesses and more a failure to help those businesses grow.”
in the simple foundation | Fredrik deBoer
“My many unhappy debates with liberals have demonstrated to me that, for every one of them that is motivated by a sincere desire to help everyone, another is motivated by the base instinct to place him or herself above others on the hierarchy of righteousness. American liberalism has become so deeply habituated to the practice of ceaseless and totalizing moral judgment that it seems incapable of expressing itself with any other kind of vocabulary. And the inevitable outcome of a politics of personal righteousness is an ideology made up only of commissars, an army of inquisitors who must by necessity believe in a vast throng of sinners and a small band of saints, with themselves standing as the greatest among this latter group.”
Tweet by stratechery
The Voters Decidehttps://t.co/eTxOCzSDsT
An apolitical analysis of U.S. politics through the lens of Aggregation Theory
— Stratechery (@stratechery) March 2, 2016
The Voters Decide – Stratechery by Ben Thompson
“The likelihood any particular message will “break out” is based not on who is propagating said message but on how many users are receptive to hearing it. The power has shifted from the supply side to the demand side. […] the most successful politicians in an aggregated world are *not* those who serve the party but rather those who tell voters what they most want to hear.”
Tweet by ProfAbelMendez
Oldest Nervous System Found in 520-Million-Year-Old Fossil https://t.co/5WxBQKrlq7 pic.twitter.com/O5PEXX6CEm
— Prof. Abel Méndez (@ProfAbelMendez) March 2, 2016
Tweet by ObsoleteDogma
17. Bottom line: Conservatism has failed most GOP voters, so they’d rather try nationalism. It was what they liked most anyways.
— Matt O'Brien (@ObsoleteDogma) March 1, 2016
Tweet by hilzoy
@hilzoy Anyways: in world w/o trust, gestures are everything. In world in which GOP leaders have lost trust, they can't give those gestures.
— hilzoy (@hilzoy) March 1, 2016
Tweet by bogcommenter
I always bristle at "if we could just educate voters they'd agree with me" analysis, but there's truth-sliver here. https://t.co/72CYrhj7vi
— Internet Contrarian! (@bogcommenter) March 1, 2016
Tweet by mthayer_nj
Practical Theoretical Ethics, by @iwelsh: https://t.co/4kxfKd2oqn
It really can be that straightforward if we decide that it will be so.— Mike Thayer (@mthayer_nj) March 1, 2016
Tweet by freddiedeboer
Maybe the world is trying to tell you guys something. https://t.co/UmF1o0fx0Z pic.twitter.com/cKlsgr5AUq
— Freddie deBoer (@freddiedeboer) February 28, 2016
Nothing else matters: Evolution of preference for social prestige
“First, if a greater social activity of an individual enhances oblique (i.e. to non-relatives) transmission of her cultural traits at the expense of vertical (i.e. to children) transmission as well as family size, which behavior is optimal from cultural evolution standpoint? I formalize a general model that characterizes evolutionarily stable social activity. The proposed model replicates the theory of Newson et al. (2007) that fertility decline is caused by increasing role of oblique cultural transmission. Second, if social activity is a rational choice rather than a culturally inherited trait, and if cultural transmission acts on preferences rather than behaviors, which preferences survive the process of cultural evolution? I arrive at a very simple yet powerful result: under mild assumptions on model structure, only preferences which emphasize exclusively the concern for social prestige, i.e. extent to which one’s cultural trait has been picked up by others, survive.”
Poorest Areas Have Missed Out on Boons of Recovery, Study Finds
“…once a downward spiral begins, it is very difficult for residents or local political leaders to reverse the slide. “When businesses close and there is no investment, the tax base erodes,” Mr. Lettieri said. “Local governments can’t invest their way out.””
Why playing peekaboo with babies is a very serious matter
from: February 26, 2016 at 12:55PM