Brian Asquith

1.9K posts

Brian Asquith

Brian Asquith

@basquith827

Economist at the @UpjohnInstitute. Research chiefly on "this wild, bizarre, unpredictable, hog-stomping, Baroque country of ours". And also rent control.

Kalamazoo, MI Katılım Haziran 2016
272 Takip Edilen614 Takipçiler
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Brian Asquith
Brian Asquith@basquith827·
🚨🗣 ALERT The @UpjohnInstitute is accepting proposals for Early Career Research Awards, for proposals focused on labor economics topics. We are also explicitly encouraging applications from researchers outside of economics. Info here: upjohn.org/about/news-eve…
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Conor Sen
Conor Sen@conorsen·
There’s a bit of a “Two weeks to stop the spread” vibe when the admin talks about the pain of higher gas prices.
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Conor Sen
Conor Sen@conorsen·
At some point (idk when) "the Strait is closed/open" is going to be a bit like "we shut down/reopened the economy for covid" -- a binary that glosses over various phases of the process.
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Brian Asquith
Brian Asquith@basquith827·
Do people with happy childhoods have more kids? A paper I'm reading (link below) says: "No revolution has yet envisioned a future in which everyone who benefits from a healthy, joyful childhood looks forward to sharing in the work of giving one to the next generation" Here in the US, lots of people feel they had a bad childhood. It seems like impressions of own-childhood happiness might play an important role in number of own children.
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Brian Asquith
Brian Asquith@basquith827·
Not just recently - that's pretty much been the pattern of the past 50 years. We just don't build anything like Ford's 100,000 worker-strong River Rouge plant any more. Outside of maybe the fracking boom, has their been any one single employer that built a plant for tens of thousands of blue collar workers since 1970?
Conor Sen@conorsen

Big economic development projects these days typically take a lot of space, use a lot of electricity, and don’t generate that many jobs. Politics have to overcome this.

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Conor Sen
Conor Sen@conorsen·
Big economic development projects these days typically take a lot of space, use a lot of electricity, and don’t generate that many jobs. Politics have to overcome this.
Matthew Zeitlin@MattZeitlin

anyway, i think opposition to the micron fab puts data center opposition into perspective: there's just opposition to doing stuff, anything economically productive will be disuprtive in some respect, including/especially the type of development people claim to want

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Peyman Milanfar
Peyman Milanfar@docmilanfar·
minimum viable product
Peyman Milanfar tweet media
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Matthew Zeitlin
Matthew Zeitlin@MattZeitlin·
during the day you open the tabs, at night you close them, like penelope at her loom
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John B. Holbein
John B. Holbein@JohnHolbein1·
Two brand-new preprints on the effects of GLP-1s just dropped. They use different populations, data, and research designs. And they focus on different outcomes. But they come to the same conclusion on one point: GLP-1s do not generate meaningful short- to medium-run reductions in non-GLP-1 medical spending, despite clear health benefits. In other words, both papers reject the idea that GLP-1s "pay for themselves" through downstream medical cost offsets: at least, not yet. GLP-1s clearly improve health. Medical cost savings just aren’t where those benefits show up. If GLP-1s are cost-effective, it's likely through: -longer-run health effects beyond current data horizons -non-medical channels (e.g., labor supply, quality of life, disability, longevity)
John B. Holbein tweet mediaJohn B. Holbein tweet media
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Brian Asquith
Brian Asquith@basquith827·
The reporter reached out to me about this piece, but our exchange didn’t make it into the final report. For more info, check out my mini report on the different paths St Paul and Minneapolis took to solving their housing affordability problem in the tweet below.
Richard Hanania@RichardHanania

In the last few years, St Paul enacted rent control. Meanwhile, nearby Minneapolis made it easier to build. Guess which one saw a boom in new contraction, and which saw a decline by 79%. Even without rent control, rents in Minneapolis went up less. When will we learn?

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Brian Asquith
Brian Asquith@basquith827·
I don’t understand why no politician has run against social media. I’m not talking about being against the companies. I bet someone running on banning or restricting social media itself would do shockingly well, especially with young people.
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Midwest vs. The Rest
Midwest vs. The Rest@midwestern_ope·
Michigan has more lighthouses than any other state, despite it not bordering an ocean
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Brunella
Brunella@brunellaism·
fascinating how the core message of ferrante’s neapolitan novels, the thing they repeat again and again, is that being a writer is the worst, most boring, most cowardly thing you could do with your life, and that instead you should be like lila and found a b2b Saas startup
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