- Rising living costs hitting the poorest: look at the policy choices that got us there. [Dom Post]
- Covid and Great Policy Resets? Start with housing. [Newsroom]
- Puke Ariki and the Mothers of Invention [Insights]
- What if the best way of reducing NZ's net emissions is by planting trees elsewhere? Landsburg's Iowa Car Crop applied to emissions trading. [Newsroom]
- The Covid job losses that didn't happen [Dom]
- Want to get into New Zealand through MIQ? If the Aristocracy of Pull is on your side... [Insights]
- Missing the obvious at the border and the cheems mindset [Newsroom]
- Building Better Borders [Insights] [And see also my chat with Rako's Leon Grice]
- Street-level upzoning [Dom] [And catch my chat with Bryan Crump about it]
- Economists only found the errors in Reinhart and Rogoff because their data was open. The Climate Commission's modelling, meanwhile... [Newsroom]
- Meatball surgery and the Covid response: the After-M*A*S*H [Insights] [I hit similar themes in my talk at the Waikato Economics Forum]
- Emissions trading and remembering the target. [Dom]
- That umbrella, we employed it - by August we were an indoor area subject to a vaping ban [Insights] [And see my submission on the vaping regulations]
- Remember when Mr Burns became a recycling convert? Consider the Ministry of Health and vaping. [Newsroom]
- Want a recipe for conflict over congestible tourist-facing places? Simple. Refuse to charge for access. [Dom]
- End the 'wartime' policy responses. [Newsroom]
- Funding Councils [Insights]
- In praise of paper roads [Dom]
- Stronger borders [Insights] [And a podcast chat about strengthened safety measures that should have accompanied a TransTasman bubble]
- New Zealand's geologic risk is unavoidable. Don't compound it with policy risk. [Newsroom] [See also my short note with Bryce]
- What's at the heart of Let's Get Wellington Moving? It isn't transport. [Insights]
- Wishing for proper parametric earthquake insurance. [Dom]
- Focusing on public health [Newsroom]
- What if the real problem is that we don't have enough local councils? [Dom]
- Voiding vaccine patents won't vaccinate developing countries. [Newsroom] [And catch my chats with Bryan Crump and Graeme Jarvis on the same topic]
- Stare not at the Brussels lest the Brussels stare back [Insights]
- If only the Fair Trading Act applied to Immigration New Zealand [Dom] [And catch my chats with Wallace and the RNZ Panel, and with Kate Hawkseby at Newstalk, on the same issue]
- Productivity and Budget 2021 [Insights]
- Ring-fencing ETS revenues and a Carbon Dividend [Newsroom]
- The case for congestion charges [Dom] [See also my submission and my later chat with Wallace on RNZ's The Panel]
- The government isn't risk-averse at the border. It's worse than that. [Insights] [See also my podcast chat with Josh Gans on Covid policy and my chat with Jesse Mulligan at RNZ]
- What's left for councils when the water's gone? [Newsroom]
- Film subsidies and campaign finance. If the government subsidised a film about a politician, would it be a campaign donation? [Dom]
- Feebate follies [Insights] [And you'll really want to hear the chat we had with the Financial Services Federation's Lyn McMorran about this mess.]
- Electric vehicles, subsidies, and keyhole surgery [Newsroom]
- Debt limits and prudent approaches in imprudent times [Dom] [And my chat with Wallace Chapman on The Panel on similar topics]
- Planning for the Covid years [Newsroom]
- Decriminalisation and reducing harm [Insights]
- Fixing the carbon price cap [Dom]
- Bomb the city to save it - heritage edition [Insights]
- Bring heritage onto the balance sheet [Newsroom] [And discussion with Anna Thomas on RNZ Nights]
- Penny wise, pound foolish. Don't scrimp on vaccines. [Insights]
- New Zealand and the post-Covid future [Dom]
- Want more supermarket competition? Break the zoning cartel. [BusinessDesk]
- Kiwigrocer's Catch-22 [Newsroom] [And our later submission on the topic]
- The End of the Beginning - the vaccine rollout [Insights] [And catch our chat with Des Gorman on similar issues]
- Deciding how to decide about transport [Dom]
- Political pull and MIQ allocations. [Newsroom]
- Get it done: Auckland's new lockdown [Insights]
- Freshwater protection that's fit for purpose [Dom] [And my report on same]
- Second-hand smoke and second-hand Covid [Insights] [And our submission on the smoking rules]
- Fresher Water [Insights]
- Better testing systems can allow antigen testing [Newsroom] [And catch our later webinar with Yale's Anne Wyllie!]
- There are no answers, only tradeoffs [Insights]
- Vaccine mandates need legal clarity [Dom]
- Chernobyl and the merits of openness [Newsroom]
- That we all be vaccinated [Insights] [Oh, I got so much hate mail from the anti-vaxers. So I chatted with Bryan Crump about it on Nights]
- The Ease of Dodgy Business [Dom]
- A beautiful end-run around council: the Squamish example [Dom]
- Vaccine Certificates and the New Normal [NZ Herald] [And my report on strengthening Covid policy and a podcast chat on the same issue]
- And then, we hope, we all win. [Insights] [And my submission on the same issue, urging that the government not give itself the power to just steal all of Rako's testing capacity]
- Beware of the Leopard, and of the Ministry of Health [Newsroom]
- Fixing local government: the slow-burn [Dom]
- An entry pitch [Insights]
- Of intensive care and trolley cars [Newsroom] [And my chat with Heather Du Plessis-Allan about it]
- A Curley election question [Insights]
- Making climate finance pay by striking the root of the problem [Dom]
- We will miss central bank independence when it is gone [Newsroom] [And see my webinar with John Cochrane on the same topic]
- Believing fairy tales [Insights]
- Failing the Covid testing test [Dom]
- Three houses of up to three stories, and a supermarket [Insights] [See also my submission on the housing intensification legislation, and my second submission on the ComCom supermarket inquiry. And my chat with Bryan at Nights on similar issues.]
- Smokefree 2025 and a looming black market [Newsroom]
- Paxlovid Paradoxes [Insights]
- Medsafe Delenda Est? [Dom]
- Prudential Climate Reservations [Insights]
- Tyranny of distance and of Zoom [Newsroom]
- A Christmas wish for righting an old Festivus grievance [Insights]
- Offers that should be refused [Dom]
Friday, 24 December 2021
A year in columns
Thursday, 23 December 2021
How can Immigration NZ keep being this bad?
Immigration New Zealand has received more than 10,000 applications for the one-off 2021 Resident Visa since it opened on 1 December.
It was set up to streamline the residency process for critical workers already onshore but has left some ICU nurses, already in priority queues, in limbo.
An ICU nurse - RNZ is calling Anna - moved to New Zealand with her partner two years ago with a plan to settle permanently.
She applied for a working residency visa last month and got put on a priority list as an essential worker, but this process has now stalled.
Anna said INZ had emailed to say her application was on hold so immigration officials can work through applications for the 2021 Resident Visa.
She has been told to apply for this newly-introduced visa, but while waiting on her residency application she missed the cut-off for its first phase.
"We don't qualify for that just yet. We will do next year but it's just another application with another set of paperwork and another fee we have to pay them.
"And it's just another wait when we were already on the pathway to residency which I find a bit frustrating," she said.
...
Anna said, although she would like to stay in New Zealand, her experience with the residency process doesn't make her feel like part of the team of 5 million.
"It's just incredibly frustrating to feel that you're just undervalued. You're needed somewhere else, you know. I could go somewhere else.
"I will try not to because we really love New Zealand but loving New Zealand if New Zealand doesn't love you back doesn't work."
RNZ understands there are 10-15 ICU nurses in Wellington alone in similar situations, and the problem is not isolated to the capital.
College of Critical Care Nurses chair Tania Mitchell said New Zealand was competing with other countries and must cut through bureaucracy and financially incentivise ICU nurses to stay.
The borders have been effectively closed since March 2020. The government failed to find adequate ways for critical medical staff to get through the system and enter. I hate that entry winds up being by government largesse. But priority entry for health workers ultimately helps the system accept more visitors: health system capacity is one of the many binding constraints floating around.
But these cases don't even require finding an MIQ space. They only need someone at Immigration NZ to pull out the file, blow the dust off it, and stamp it.
And they aren't managing it.
Tuesday, 21 December 2021
Medsafe Delenda Est?
Now imagine that Medsafe had never existed. New Zealand could rely on approvals provided by trusted regulators elsewhere.If at least two of Australia, Canada, the United States, the UK, Singapore, the European Union, Israel, Switzerland or Japan approved a drug, it would automatically be approved here too. There are a lot of approval agencies out there. New Zealand would never be slower than the second-slowest trusted agency.Why replicate the efforts of better resourced agencies elsewhere who are already on the task?There could be a good reason.If international regulators err on the side of being too slow, a New Zealand agency could be faster and nimbler than others. Where other agencies harm their public by taking too long to approve drugs, ours could avoid such errors.That does not seem to be the role Medsafe plays.Instead, Medsafe adds further delay on top of delays seen abroad.Delayed approvals put us at the back of procurement queues for effective Covid treatments that will be in high demand. Those treatments keep patients out of scarce intensive care beds. Delays will matter.
Former head of the Salaried Medical Professionals Ian Powell gives the standard establishment line in response with a piece in BusinessDesk.
My column began by noting that agencies optimally balance two risks. If they just approved everything, some bad drugs would get through despite pharmaceutical companies' reputational incentives to avoid that. I wrote:
Pharmaceutical companies have strong reputational reasons to avoid releasing unsafe drugs – not to mention liability concerns in some jurisdictions.
But an approval agency that simply rubber-stamped every application it received would risk approving a lot of unsafe drugs. And some people would be hurt or die as consequence.
That was the one polar extreme. The other is the agency that takes half a century to approve anything. No bad drugs get through, but a lot of people are harmed through treatment denied.
I wrote:
But you could also imagine an agency that took half a century to approve any application. No drug would be approved unless the agency could determine, with certainty, that no adverse effects were encountered for decades after taking a drug.
So of course Powell chooses to pretend that my first polar case is actually me arguing for complete deregulation. Here's Powell:
I don’t know whether Crampton is familiar with Victorian satire but, if he is, he may have had the Charles Dickens novel ‘Bleak House’ in mind. In particular, the fictional Jarndyce and Jarndyce probate case progressing in the English Court of Chancery. The case has become a byword for seemingly interminable legal proceedings. The closest Crampton gets to satire is his metaphoric use of “half a century” to describe Medsafe’s approval process.
In the context of extending Pfizer coverage to children over five years, Crampton argued the pharmaceutical companies had sufficient motivation to give confidence over safety. He is right to the extent that it is not in the interest of pharmaceutical companies to intentionally or otherwise produce ineffective or dangerous vaccines. At the very least the reputational damage would be bad for business. Similarly, it is counter-intuitive for them not to employ competent scientists.
But these companies are driven by profit-maximisation. Not just profitability. They are a risky fit for the provision of a universal public good such as vaccines. Until the current coronavirus pandemic this meant their vaccine research and development was a lower investment priority. However, the pandemic generated a new lucrative market opportunity. Unfortunately profit-maximisation creates opportunities for standards and carefulness to slide.
I guess I must be worse at writing clearly than I'd thought because Powell completely failed to understand what I was getting at, or pretends not to.
I was saying that agencies' processes can lie on a continuum from "approve everything" to "take half a century to approve anything". In the former case you get harms from drugs being released that shouldn't have been approved but no harms from delays; in the latter case you get zero harms from bad drugs being released but lots of harms from delayed access. The trick is finding processes that minimise the sum of those harms.
Powell goes on to provide some examples of one agency or another getting things wrong. Fortunately, I did not suggest "Approve anything the FDA approves." I suggested automatically approving if two other agencies had approved.
But he gives a great example of how medical types think about this stuff. Harms from delay seem not to factor into his thinking.
Crampton could not be more wrong. Medsafe should take as long as is needed before approving a vaccine application because the risk of harm to the innocent is too great. Efficacy is important. However, relying on what the results of clinical trials reveal or what other regulatory authorities in a small number of ‘approved’ countries decide is insufficient when there is an opportunity to drill down further.
I view a death or harm caused by releasing a drug that shouldn't have been released (in some perfect-omniscience world) as being just as bad as a death or harm caused by delaying a drug or treatment. But for people like Powell, only one kind of harm exists. Unfortunately, they're the exact kind of people who set the system and processes here, resulting in futile harmful delay. They're the reason we need a rule requiring approval of drugs approved elsewhere, and they're also the reason we won't get that kind of rule.
"As long as it takes" is the wrong standard. "Investigate until another day's worth of process results in as many expected reduced harms from the drug as expected increased harms from delayed access" is the better standard.
What would have been a first-best with kid-vax, where popular acceptance is a factor and where people here put some value on Medsafe that I don't? Simple. Allow the vanguard of the willing to be vaccinated early, while holding the broad rollout until Medsafe had done it's useless-but-for-building-public-confidence thing. There was a non-crazy case for saving the big rollout until a couple weeks of US and Canadian data showed that kids weren't having a pile of adverse reactions. That would have had rollout of first doses at school before the end of the school year. But we're having to wait for freaking January now.
And I note, not for the first time, that neither Covid Classic, nor Delta, nor Omicron, had to pass any MedSafe approval process to be allowed to infect children. They could just go ahead and do it, without any clinical trial or assessment of potential long-term harm.
Monday, 13 December 2021
Offers that should be refused
A snippet:
The real problem is not tech platforms’ bargaining power.
The problem rather is media companies wishing for government to use force of law to restore market conditions that slipped away with technological change.
...
Taxing a sector you do not like to fund a sector you do like is not a good basis for tax policy. One might as well impose a tax on hipsters’ beard oil to fund tÄ«eke (saddleback) recovery programmes.
If you think that tech companies do not pay enough in local tax, you should want Inland Revenue to make sure the tax code is rigorous.
If you think good journalism deserves better funding, you should contribute to it yourself and encourage others to do likewise.
There may be a public interest case in tax-funding public interest journalism. But no principle of public finance in existence says that funding should be compelled from Google or Facebook through compulsory arbitration rather than being provided from the public purse more generally.
Breaking basic principles of public finance, and the basic principles on which the web was founded, to compel tech companies to fund journalism – that belongs only in bad modern-day gangster movies. Not in New Zealand public policy.
Thursday, 9 December 2021
Chronic confusion and disappointment
Looks like Canada is facing similar pressures around central banking and mission creep. Here's Steven Ambler, Jeremy Kronick and William Robson in Canada's Financial Times:
A more overtly inflationary recommendation is to add something else – usually a labour-market indicator, such as the unemployment rate, to the Bank’s framework. Proponents often argue that inflation control hurts jobs and, more specifically, that central banks have been too quick to tighten before the economy reaches full employment. But unemployment in Canada has been lower and less volatile since the two-per cent target came into force. And the blow-out jobs report last week just underlines the problem of determining what full employment actually is, especially after a major disruption like the pandemic.
As for other goals, such as reducing inequality and or slowing global warming, we need to keep people’s expectations about monetary policy in line with what it can actually do. Monetary policy is about short-term interest rates, the growth of money and credit, the pace of spending, and the results of all this for inflation. While the Bank must assess how inequality and global warming impact its ability to hit the inflation target, asking it to target the price of assets held mainly by the wealthy or favour credit for some industries at the expense of others will lead to chronic confusion and disappointment.
The two-per cent inflation target has been a signal success in Canadian economic policy for a quarter century. We know it is achievable, and with inflation currently running close to five per cent, we are getting a timely reminder that alternatives can easily be worse. It is time to reassure Canadians that their government and central bank are committed to low and stable inflation in the future.
Emphasis added.
Nick Rowe quips:
My biggest worry:
— Nick Rowe (@MacRoweNick) December 7, 2021
Dove vs Hawk Central Banks
gets replaced with
Woke vs Based Central Banks https://t.co/qwmVX5ky1M
Wednesday, 8 December 2021
Stupid government tricks
Here's the trick.
Tuesday, 7 December 2021
Solutions in search of problems
Proper policy starts with problem definition. Define the problem that needs to be solved, establish that it really is a problem, assess alternatives including the option of just leaving things be, and go from there.
If you start instead with a solution, you then have to go looking for problems.
And so we come to New Zealand Post's new fleet of electric vehicles.
Stuff reports that NZ Post is shifting to electric vans. And that could be a great move - they're currently not paying road user charges, and could work out to be a bargain for the state-owned delivery company. I certainly wouldn't second-guess that commercial decision.
NZ Post isn't a small shop. They've recently invested $170m in processing infrastructure.
But to get the vans, they're going through another state-owned outfit. NZ Green Investment Finance. Here's how they describe themselves.
New Zealand Green Investment Finance is a green investment bank established by the New Zealand Government to accelerate investment that can help to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in New Zealand.
NZ Post is working with NZ Green Investment Finance to fund the fleet vehicle purchase though a complicated lease plan.
The state-owned postal service and the state-owned green finance investor will each put up $10 million through Sustainable Fleet Finance to provide attractive and competitive finance for electric vans or low-emission vehicles. Sustainable Fleet Finance is majority owned by NZ Green Investment Finance.
The investment will initially be used to finance an order for 60 Mercedes eVito panel vans for the NZ Post fleet which will arrive in the second half of 2022. Under a four-year tiered lease plan, the vehicles will first be leased by NZ Post and then offered by Sustainable Fleet Finance to NZ Post’s delivery contractors at more affordable rates as second and third owners.
Ok. So one SOE with the implicit backing of the Crown against losses, and with a balance sheet big enough to handle fleet renewal, is running financing for fleet renewal through a finance company part-owned by another government outfit, all aimed at preventing 7.8 tonnes of emissions per diesel van per year.
Every tonne of which is already covered by the ETS, which has a binding cap.
And the annual value of the emission reduction, per vehicle, is about $500.
So if NZ Post, backed by NZ Green Investment Finance, fails to purchase 8 carbon credits per vehicle per year, somebody else will buy the credits instead.
I've occasionally heard arguments around credit market barriers that might be some kind of market failure. They seem ridiculous when there are plenty of non-government outfits that will finance your car for you, whether privately or for a company fleet. There's a whole industry association of the outfits that finance peoples' cars for them. And EVs being expensive isn't a market failure. They're just expensive.
Using a government-backed investment fund to finance vehicle purchases by an SOE that doesn't have obvious barriers against just buying its own vans - that's the kind of mess you get when you set up a policy without really thinking through the problem you're trying to solve.
This place is rapidly losing its "Outside of the Asylum" status. At least they haven't yet gone for anything as absolutely stupid as cash for clunkers.
Monday, 6 December 2021
Afternoon roundup
High time the computer gets a reboot. And so, the closing of (some of) the browser tabs:
- The Australians approve vax for 5-11 year olds. Omicron is spreading, though not in NZ yet as far as we know, and there is some indication it is sending more kids to hospital. Canada has been vaccinating kids since 23 November, and America weeks before that. But Medsafe, like a New Zealand city council that just doesn't wanna approve a resource consent, has punted the application back to Pfizer for more detail. Medsafe Delenda Est.
- Maybe, for Labour, Immigration NZ being a complete mess and chasing away potential migrants is a feature rather than a bug.
- Aranui, Avonside, Woolston West, Rawhiti, Wainoni, Bexley, Styx, New Brighton. Sounds like a rollcall of neighbourhoods most hit by EQNZ in 2011 (maybe not Woolston West). But it's the Christchurch suburbs with the lowest vaccination rates.
- Hayden Donnell on the anti-housing media blitz.
- Point of Order on the mess at Royal Society. Bottom line: Profs should be joining the Free Speech Union rather than either the Royal Society or the TEU.
- City Journal has a couple of excellent pieces on corporate culture. The Genealogy of Woke Capital and Why Woke Organisations All Sound the Same. A usual rule of thumb is to avoid pieces with 'woke' in the title. Don't miss these. Gabriel Rossman is author on the latter - seriously good academic sociologist.
- From the "Well, can't blame 'em for trying it on but really?" files: Council adds sand to some Auckland beaches, prompting nearby property owners to assert that their riparian rights extend further down the now extended beach.
- If car insurance companies could overcome collective action problems, there would be a case for them to fund wolf reintroduction programmes in US states with a lot of deer.
- The Herald has started putting up lovely tables showing case and hospitalisation rates sorted by vaccination status.
A politicised central bank
Politik this morning reports that the Reserve Bank Governor has lost the support of the National and ACT Parties. Or, at least, they would not be keen on his being reappointed.
Now that Simon Bridges is National’s finance spokesperson, the future of Reserve Bank Governor Adrian Orr will be an issue.And this is why Reserve Bank Governors ought to stick to monetary policy and why prudential regulation colonising other policy areas far outside of their proper domain without any evidential basis is risky.
Orr’s contract as Governor expires in March 2023, outside the three months prior to an election when Governments normally defer significant appointments.
But with the election expected in September that year, a move in March to reappoint him would be bound to be an election-year issue.
If the decision were to be left to ACT and National, Orr would go. Both ACT Leader David Seymour and Bridges confirmed that on a podcast last week, and Bridges has confirmed again to POLITIK that was his position.
But at the same time, Bridges has to be careful.
The Bank is supposed to be independent, and one of National’s criticisms of Orr is that he has allowed it to become a little less so under Labour and Finance Minister Grant Robertson.
Last week, we hosted John Cochrane to talk about central bank independence and the problems they can get themselves into.
PRUDENTIAL CLIMATE RESERVATIONS
Central bank independence matters.
The grand bargain struck between governments and their central banks, coming out of the turmoil of the 1970s, and led by New Zealand in the late 1980s, was simple.
Governments stopped meddling in monetary policy. Central banks were given operational independence to pursue low and stable inflation. It was a difficult bargain for governments who preferred to avoid interest rate hikes as elections loomed.
That independence required Banks stay within limited bounds.
Monetary policy and prudential bank regulation are powerful tools with economy-wide consequences. They need to be used only toward the core ends of central banking: low and stable inflation, and the stability of the financial system.
Straying to pursue other objectives, regardless of whether they match the goals of the government of the day, is dangerous.
On Thursday, the Initiative hosted a webinar with John Cochrane – one of the world’s leading experts working at the intersection of macroeconomics and monetary policy and financial regulation. That he has a stronger record of published work in this area than the entirety of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand is a safe bet. Whether he has three times the work in the area might depend on how you weigh pages in different journals.
John has been increasingly critical of worldwide moves by reserve banks to consider climate change as a risk to financial stability. While it is very clear that temperatures are rising and that sea levels will rise with them, with obvious consequences for storms and beachfront properties, evidence of risks to the financial system is wanting.
Not everything that is a globally consequential risk is also a risk to the financial system. Systemic financial risk requires a particular kind of fragility. And the financial system, here and abroad, simply appears to be robust to the kinds of shocks that climate change will bring.
Indeed, earlier this month, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York published work showing that storms increase, rather than reduce, bank profits. People take out loans for rebuilding. Storms are bad, but they are not a risk to the financial system.
Using prudential regulation to address political concerns takes the regulator’s eye off the ball. More substantial risks can be missed. But, more importantly, doing so politicises their operations, putting their independence at risk.
And that may yet be the biggest systematic risk of them all.
Shortly after the webinar, one of the RBNZ's board members decided to weigh in. Draw your own conclusions about the adequacy and rigor of governance at the Bank.
Just some of @nzinitiative ‘members’. Full list is on website (credit for transparency). Not really ‘mum and dad’ level organisations. pic.twitter.com/1802cf8A0s
— Chris Eichbaum (@ChrisEichbaum) December 2, 2021
Wednesday, 1 December 2021
Cochrane on Reserve Banks
Webinar tomorrow with John H. Cochrane: What central banks should and shouldn't do
Central bank independence in monetary policy was hard fought and desperately needed. The deal was simple. Central government would stay out of a Reserve Bank’s way as it dealt with monetary policy, and the Bank would not abuse its independence in pursuing other agendas.
That deal is fraying badly, if it has not fundamentally broken. If central bank independence in monetary policy is lost as consequence, rebuilding the institutions will be costly.
Join us for an insightful webinar with John H. Cochrane, Senior Fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution.
Event details:
Time: 11.00am – 12.00pm
Date: Thursday, 2 December
Registration: Please register for this event via Zoom.
We encourage you to ask questions you have through Slido.
The access code for our event is: #024262
About the speaker:
John H. Cochrane is the Rose-Marie and Jack Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is also a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research and an adjunct scholar of the CATO Institute.
Before joining Hoover, Cochrane was a Professor of Finance at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business, and earlier at its Economics Department. Cochrane earned a bachelor’s degree in physics at MIT and his PhD in economics at the University of California at Berkeley. He was a junior staff economist on the Council of Economic Advisers (1982–83).
Cochrane’s recent publications include the book Asset Pricing and articles on dynamics in stock and bond markets, the volatility of exchange rates, the term structure of interest rates, the returns to venture capital, liquidity premiums in stock prices, the relation between stock prices and business cycles, and option pricing when investors can’t perfectly hedge. His monetary economics publications include articles on the relationship between deficits and inflation, the effects of monetary policy, and the fiscal theory of the price level.
Cochrane frequently contributes editorial opinion essays to the Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg.com, and other publications. He maintains the Grumpy Economist blog.