Wednesday, 11 May 2011
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Miley Cyrus Has a New Revealing Outfit

Miley Cyrus has a new outfit! It involves chaps. But I know you guys think Miley posts are dumb, so for those people, I'll also include in this post a portion from Paul Krugman's famous essay for Slate on the cycles of Austrian business theory.
The many variants of the hangover theory all go something like this: In the beginning, an investment boom gets out of hand. Maybe excessive money creation or reckless bank lending drives it, maybe it is simply a matter of irrational exuberance on the part of entrepreneurs. Whatever the reason, all that investment leads to the creation of too much capacity—of factories that cannot find markets, of office buildings that cannot find tenants. Since construction projects take time to complete, however, the boom can proceed for a while before its unsoundness becomes apparent. Eventually, however, reality strikes—investors go bust and investment spending collapses. The result is a slump whose depth is in proportion to the previous excesses. Moreover, that slump is part of the necessary healing process: The excess capacity gets worked off, prices and wages fall from their excessive boom levels, and only then is the economy ready to recover.
Except for that last bit about the virtues of recessions, this is not a bad story about investment cycles. Anyone who has watched the ups and downs of, say, Boston's real estate market over the past 20 years can tell you that episodes in which overoptimism and overbuilding are followed by a bleary-eyed morning after are very much a part of real life. But let's ask a seemingly silly question: Why should the ups and downs of investment demand lead to ups and downs in the economy as a whole? Don't say that it's obvious—although investment cycles clearly are associated with economywide recessions and recoveries in practice, a theory is supposed to explain observed correlations, not just assume them. And in fact the key to the Keynesian revolution in economic thought—a revolution that made hangover theory in general and Austrian theory in particular as obsolete as epicycles—was John Maynard Keynes' realization that the crucial question was not why investment demand sometimes declines, but why such declines cause the whole economy to slump.
As a matter of simple arithmetic, total spending in the economy is necessarily equal to total income (every sale is also a purchase, and vice versa). So if people decide to spend less on investment goods, doesn't that mean that they must be deciding to spend more on consumption goods—implying that an investment slump should always be accompanied by a corresponding consumption boom? And if so why should there be a rise in unemployment?Most modern hangover theorists probably don't even realize this is a problem for their story. Nor did those supposedly deep Austrian theorists answer the riddle. The best that von Hayek or Schumpeter could come up with was the vague suggestion that unemployment was a frictional problem created as the economy transferred workers from a bloated investment goods sector back to the production of consumer goods. (Hence their opposition to any attempt to increase demand: This would leave "part of the work of depression undone," since mass unemployment was part of the process of "adapting the structure of production.") But in that case, why doesn't the investment boom—which presumably requires a transfer of workers in the opposite direction—also generate mass unemployment? And anyway, this story bears little resemblance to what actually happens in a recession, when every industry—not just the investment sector—normally contracts.

Ok guys! What do you think about A. Miley's outfit, OR, B. Krugman's view on Austrian economics?
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Comments (76)
+1 for mentioning Schumpeter!
I think people are less annoyed with the fact that you guys post about Miley, and more that you're overly critical of her. If any other pop start wore this outfit, everyone would be saying how great her body looks.
I'm not a Miley fan, and I usually dislike her rather than like her, but I see nothing wrong with this. She's of age now, and I think she looks great.
LOL. I love your snark.
I totally didn't read that essay..
She is so annoying.
When I saw the top half, I thought, "All things considered, that's not too bad." (Compared to entertainment norms of today, I was half expecting a Borat swimsuit.) Then I saw the bottom half. I don't think it's necessarily that revealing...I just don't get it. If it were me, I would've done it with plain leather pants, but that's her thing.
Given the fashion choices of other former Disney stars, I'd say this is pretty safe. Even so, she's no longer tied to Disney, so she's more or less free to do what she wants.
I smiled at how you did this, with the Miley photo and the article lol. Kudos and a fist bump for awesomeness.
I'm literally rofling.
The outfit is trashtastic. I don't like high waisted stuff on her. It makes her look short with like no torso.
I actually read it. Every word. I even went to the link! I was thinking about how economic theory would differ between countries. I had never really considered the concept that Austrian economics, for example, would not be the same as German, or French, or American, or economics in other developed countries. It would seem that the foundational concepts of how economies change would be somewhat universal, but economic trends are essentially based on the spending/investing habits of the citizens, and different cultures would likely have different ways that they handle their money and conduct business. That's all speculation, I don't really know anything about economics.
Go Miley. Rock them high-waisted leather hotpants or whatever the f those are.
She can wear whatever her heart desires but those look horribly unflattering for her thighs. o.o
^^ definitely unflattering for her thighs. OOGLY.
Ew yeast infection
What is up with high-waisted bikini bottoms (or leather bikini bottoms) nowadays?
In that first photo her thighs look grrrrrrroooooooossssss.
She's got such a pretty face though, I wish she quit wearing Lady Gaga's leftovers.
LMAO at first I thought they were related and was like... what???
She's so desperate for attention, how about she get some recognition for her voice and not for her close or lack there of..
i think her legs look niiice.
Post Milton Friedman next!
I'm getting a lot of pompous self-inflation from Krugman. He cleverly asks, "So if people decide to spend less on investment goods, doesn't that mean that they must be deciding to spend more on consumption goods—implying that an investment slump should always be accompanied by a corresponding consumption boom? And if so why should there be a rise in unemployment?"
The answer is no. In his "simple arithmetic", he fails to consider the point that people are spending less money on investment goods AND consumption goods. So instead of a rise in consumption goods that he expects, there is a slump in the economy in it's entirety. Less demand for goods of all kinds leads to unemployment necessarily. Perhaps I'm being too simplistic for Krugman. And I don't even want to address that last paragraph, it was so full of snark and smug self-importance. It's not important, Mr. Krugman, that you one-up your colleagues with a clever question that can't be answered, what's important is finding solutions to the problem.
Never thought I would call an accomplished economist juvenile, but come on, that tone is just too much. Bet he masturbates to his own reflection in the mirror.
PS I really enjoyed this post, thank you.
Also- I will accept any amount of Miley posts if you keep giving me food for thought like this. :D Bring on the bad outfits, Miley!
i don't get why everyone is saying her thighs look gross in that first pic. ???? they may look a little thick but they don't look gross. what would you rather her have skeleton legs? sheeeeesh. nothing wrong with thick thighs.
:S her thighs look fine. I don't get the comments on them looking gross. :/ there is no pleasing lovelyish commenters. c:
And I like her outfit.
@rachelinlove@xanga - Nailed it! People really need to get over the fact that she started out as a wholesome little girl. Girls grow into women.
@needmoreink@xanga - If you're into economics and how it's changed through history you can pick up "The Worldly Philosophers" by Heilbroner.
@WaitingToShrug@xanga - The man's a highly accomplished economist. Plus Friedman's dead. Would've loved to see his insight on this recession even though he's a dictator supporter and honestly believes a completely free market fixes anything (Yeah, we saw how well that worked)...
Meh, I'm tired of reading on economics for today. It's my field. I hope to win a Nobel Prize as well
I was reading this on my RSS reader, and only saw what was above her hips in that picture ("not bad"), then I scrolled down...O_O. But after the shock wore off, I realized that you gotta remember that she's performing...so it's not that bad. This comes from a person that's not a fan of Miley (just an FYI).
I just busted out laughing. At both the outfit and the essay inclusion.
SO MUCH WIN!Except for Miley's outfit. That's a whole lotta LOL.