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[481] Of Man Ure

Every dog has its day. I wish Chelsea godspeed and Man Ure the devilspeed. Must be a bad weekend for both Ajax and Arsenal. At least Ajax didn’t lose.

At the same time, a lot of cruel people are having fun on me. But that is expected of since I always zealously push everything down Manchester United fans’ throat whenever they lose to anybody. It’s only fair to let them have a holiday once or twice during the season.

Thank goodness for people that I meet in person everyday don’t give a damn for soccer. And now I remember why I’m a Manchester-United-hater.

Anyway, Google is running amok.

The earnings were seven times higher than a year earlier on revenue that doubled to more than $1 billion. The news also lifted shares of rival Internet companies Yahoo Inc. (YHOO.O: Quote, Profile, Research) and Ask Jeeves Inc. (ASKJ.O: Quote, Profile, Research) , setting the tone for a possible tech rally on Wednesday.

I wish I were one of the stockholders.

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Economics This blog

[480] Of Ford School Citigroup Lectures

Nobel prize winner and author of the highly regarded Globalization and Its Discontent, Prof. Joseph Stiglitz will be giving a lecture here in Michigan roughly in two weeks time. He and along with two others won the prize for economics in 2001 for their research on asymmetric information.

I’ve read Globalization and Its Discontent long ago but I borrowed it from the library. It is an enlightening book though I do feel the title is a misnomer. It should be International Financial Institutions and Its Discontent or something like that. Nonetheless, I need to buy it, meet the Prof and get it signed!

This time, I promise myself to be at the lecture hall an hour earlier and I’m going to sit in the front row. Maybe second or third but you get the idea. I’m sure the lecture will be as packed as Prof. Noam Chomsky’s and I really hate standing by the door.

Details at Michigan Economics.

And w00t! 500th post. Another 500 to my 1000th post. Also, another 100006505606161000 t0 the 100006505606161500th post – quite meaningless actually.

Categories
Books, essays and others Economics Environment

[476] Of development and the environment, II

In my previous entry, I said that I suspect opportunity cost plays an important role between development and the environment and a country will only turn to environmental issues when it reaches certain economic level. I continued further by saying, a possible correlation between wealth of nations with environmental commitment could be a possible proof.

And guess what?

There actually is an index that could be used as a proxy for environmental commitment. I found this out after browsing the New York Times (reg. req.). It – the Environmental Sustainability Index – is produced by people at Yale and Columbia for the World Economic Forum, first published in 2002 and the 2005 issue has just been released earlier. The 2002 index is located at Columbia University server. Index for 2005 should be up soon.

In general, countries with high GDP per capita have higher ranking when compared to countries with lower GDP per capita.

There are a few wildcards however, like Belgium being 125th out of 142 in the 2002 index and Uruguay at sixth. I had expected a country like Uruguay, which has GDP per capita a bit lower than Malaysia, to be in the middle of the table and Belgium to do much better. The Arab nations, despite their high GDP per capita, linger at the bottom of the pit and they provide seemingly contradicting proof to the idea presented in the previous entry.

Perhaps, their cost of forgone economic benefit is higher than most people. It needs to be said that the opportunity cost idea is valid when all things are equal. The opportunity cost from one subject to the next does vary and this might explain why certain countries differ from their expected ranks. Furthermore, there are several issues with the methodology of the survey and this affects the accuracy of the index. The Times article states a few. One of the them:

He also said a system that rated Russia, whose populated western regions have undergone extraordinary environmental degradation, as having greater environmental sustainability than the United States had inherent weaknesses.

At 33, Russia’s ranking, Mr. Esty said, is in large part a consequence of the country’s vast size. While it “has terrible pollution problems” in the western industrial heartland, he said, its millions of unsettled or sparsely settled acres of Asian taiga mean “it has vast, untrammeled resources and more clean water than anywhere in the world.” So, he added, “on average, Russia ends up looking better than it does to someone who lives in western Russia.”

Alrighty, I’m going for breakfast. I won’t commit myself to any environmental course if my stomach is growling.

p/s – ReMag 5 is out. I’m not quite satisfied with the end product but more tweaks should happen soon.
pp/s – I wanted to play World of Warcraft so badly but the delay is too much for me to handle. I’ve thus canceled the Amazon order.

Categories
Economics Environment Humor Science & technology This blog

[475] Of development and the environment

There seems to be a strong relationship between the level of economic development and environmental protection. I’ve always suspected this and a post in a forum reminded me of it. The poster presented the idea and asked why that seems to be so. I offered her a short answer. A few hours later, I sat down somewhere and gave it a further consideration quietly.

I think the relationship between the two aspects is actually the opportunity cost – the cost of investing in one variable is the forgone benefit of other variable. In our context, if a country is poor and lack capital, the society there will be more concerned with wealth buildup instead of safeguarding the Earth. The cost of protecting the environment in term of development is too great; that country cannot afford to protect the environment at the expense of development.

The enforcement of environmental laws needs resource for implementation. If a country has no sufficient resource or wealth, then environmental laws enforcement greatly forgoes the benefit of accumulating capital. That is, the resource will be better put in use in improving the economy. Therefore, better attention will be given to economic issues instead of environmental ones, given that a country or a person is poor. Now, if that is so, the only way to instill the care for the environment is to reduce the forgone benefit of economic growth while engaging in environmental protection.

The reduction of forgone benefit cost is possible if wealth increases. This grows from the idea of diminishing returns – the more one has of a good, the less one wants more of it. In other words, another additional some sort of unit of wealth will have less benefit to the society of great wealth than to some improvised populace. Hence, as wealth increases, the cost of forgone benefit decreases.

Furthermore, environmental protection will only come when the cost of forgoing economic pursue is lower (or possibly lower or equal to) than the cost of forgoing environmental protection. Hence, if one cares for the environment, accumulation of wealth should be paramount because the accumulation of wealth reduces the cost of forgoing development.

One possible supporting proof is the possible correlation between wealth of countries with the strength of environmental laws and its enforcement; developed nations do seem to have stricter environmental requirements relative to poor countries. It would be interesting to see if there is an actual data set on this.

So, let’s all get rich in the name of the environment!

I’m not quite certain on this however. Some variable must have been left unconsidered and thus, I dare not assert this model as perfect.

p/s – there seems to be a character encoding problem with this new template.

pp/s – godddamn! This entry took some serious proofread. When I first read the completed version, I was lost in my own words!

ppp/s – the Malay version of Windows XP will be shipped soon! But, given that the OS uses confusing Malay terms and it’s sort of XP lite, I’ll stick with the English version, thank you. (Via)

p4/s – this is, um, retarded.

p5/s – updated the about section.

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Books, essays and others Economics Gaming Photography Travels

[465] Of the charming Keys

For those that wasted their winter break, I hope you are jealous of me.

Somewhere near Key Largo, the largest key in Florida. The photo sucks since the real thing was far better. The ocean was true, clear turquoise, the clouds were cleanly white and the sky was magnificiently blue. To experience it is to be there. No word nor picture is able to describe atmosphere.However, one t-shirt tries to say it all:

Up close and personal:

It was so much different than Ann Arbor. Here currently, it’s all gloomy.p/s – lokitorrents.com is being sued. I wonder if SuprNova.org is facing the same issue.

pp/s – I’ve ordered my first book of the year through Amazon.org – In Praise of Slowness: How A Worldwide Movement Is Challenging the Cult of Speed. I first found it while browsing a bookstore down in Miami.

Well, it is not actually my first book since I bought a set of accounting texts earlier but I’m content to say academic stuff doesn’t count. Also, along with the book, World of Warcraft. There goes another 70 bucks.