America’s university graduates live much longer than non-graduates


Oct 2nd 2023

America’s economic record over the past 20 years has been impressive, outperforming other rich countries. Less impressive is its measure of wellness, or how long people live. A study by Anne Case and Angus Deaton, two economists at Princeton University, is a case in point. Their latest research shows that in America there is a huge and growing gap between the life expectancy of people with degrees and those without. In 2021, at age 25, Americans who do not have a four-year college degree (about two-thirds of the adult population) were expected to live on average about ten years less than those who do. In 1992 the gap was a third of that.
 


The authors, who previously made waves with their book on “Deaths of Despair and the Future of Capitalism”, speculate that the cause of this divergence is different status. “Jobs are allocated, not by matching necessary or useful skills, but by the use of the BA as [a] screen,” they say. That is persuasive, but not a complete answer. Greater despair might explain drug overdoses rising among the poor. It hardly explains why Americans are four times more likely to die in a car crash than people in Germany. As we recently reported, America does not do a very good job of keeping its people safe.

 

 
60만 명. 15만 8,000명. 앞의 숫자는 1999년부터 2017년 사이에 사망한 사람의 수고, 뒤의 숫자는 그중 2017년 한 해에 해당하는 사망자 수다. 미국 중년 백인층의 사망률에 돌연 반전이 일어나지 않았다면, 즉 20세기 들어 멈춤 없이 낮아지던 사망률의 흐름이 계속 유지되었다면 죽지 않았을 사람의 수.
 
노벨경제학상을 받은 경제학자 앵거스 디턴과 보건경제학의 귄위자 앤 케이스는 이처럼 일어나지 말았어야 하는 죽음에 ‘절망사’라는 이름을 붙인다. 이는 저소득·저학력 백인층에서 나타나는 현상으로 자살, 약물 중독, 알코올 중독으로 인한 죽음이다. 
 
나아가 두 저자는 절망사라는 단서에서 출발해 미국의 경제 시스템과 사회 전반을 해부하고 문제의 근본 원인을 파고들어, 우리가 보다 더 공정한 세계로 가기 위해 필요한 해법을 제시한다. 불평등과 불공정, 능력주의와 교육 양극화, 경기침체와 실업, 독과점과 정경유착, 공동체 붕괴와 가족 해체까지 한국의 상황이라고 해도 어색하지 않은 문제와 그에 대한 면밀한 분석이 담겨 있다. 
 

Economics in America: An Immigrant Economist Explores the Land of Inequality

by Angus Deaton (Author)

At last, a convincing explanation for America’s drug-death crisis


The synthetic opioid and its close chemical relatives were involved in about 70% of the country’s 110,000 overdose deaths in 2022. They are now almost certainly the biggest killer of Americans between the ages of 18 and 49. Every 14 months or so America loses more people to fentanyl than it has lost in all of its wars combined since the second world war, from Korea to Afghanistan.


It is thus regrettable that the economics has had little to say about fentanyl. A review of 150 economic studies in 2022 included just two that were focused on the drug.

The best-known explanation is the “deaths of despair” hypothesis, advanced by Anne Case and Angus Deaton of Princeton University.

This suffering, they argued, was related to economic insecurity. Yet their analysis had major defects, such as a failure to adjust for ageing populations. The arrival of fentanyl has highlighted a more fundamental flaw: it now kills black people at a higher rate than white people, the group supposedly gripped by anguish. An ill-defined notion of “despair” that leaps between different segments of the population does not carry much explanatory heft.

Some economists have homed in on the financial roots of the crisis. Justin Pierce of the Federal Reserve and Peter Schott of Yale University documented how areas most exposed to trade liberalisation suffered most. They found that counties exposed to import competition from China after 2000 had higher unemployment rates and more overdose deaths. Their analysis, however, ended in 2013, when the effects of this trade-related affliction were wearing off—and just before the fentanyl storm erupted.

Others have traced America’s addiction to the original sin of pharmaceutical firms pushing painkillers. In a paper published in 2019 Abby Alpert of the University of Pennsylvania and colleagues showed that states with looser prescription rules were targeted by Purdue Pharma in the late 1990s when it started selling OxyContin, its notorious opioid, and that they had nearly twice as many deaths from opioid overdoses as states with stricter rules over the following two decades. But recent years have been horrific everywhere: in California, a state with stricter rules, the opioid-overdose death rate roughly tripled between 2017 and 2021.


At last, economists are catching up with the awful turn in the opioid crisis. A new working paper by Timothy Moore of Purdue University, William Olney of Williams College and Benjamin Hansen of the University of Oregon offers a novel way of examining the spread of fentanyl. Rather than trying to account for demand for opioids, the focus of most research, they look squarely at the supply side of the equation, finding a strong correlation between aggregate import levels and opioid use. In states that import more than the national median, overdose deaths are roughly 40% higher. Put another way, 10% more imports per resident are associated with an 8.1% increase in fentanyl deaths from 2017 to 2020.


This is not because of some kind of trade-induced economic malaise. Many big importing states are wealthy, such as New Jersey and Maryland. Rather, the essential point is that these states bring in more stuff from abroad, and fentanyl is often part of the mix. It may ultimately travel around America, but much of it remains, and kills, in the states where it first arrived. None of the previous hypotheses—deaths of despair, competition from China or opioid marketing—have an impact on the relationship between trade flows and fentanyl deaths.


Policy responses often centre on the roles of China as a producer of fentanyl-related chemicals and Mexican drug gangs as distributors. America’s drug enforcers are especially active on its southern border; its diplomats want China to crack down on makers of synthetic opioid feedstocks. But Mr Moore and his colleagues conclude that more trade with pretty much anywhere is associated with fentanyl deaths. The probable explanation is that gangs are nimble and shift their smuggling routes.


This makes intuitive sense. Fentanyl’s danger stems from its potency: it is up to 50 times stronger than heroin. Criminals can sneak in tiny volumes, with devastating effects. And drug users can get one hell of a high for next to nothing: a single $5 pill contains a lethal dose. In business terms the overall picture is that of a classic positive supply shock—of a most negative product.
The forensic accounting of fentanyl’s spread by Mr Moore and his colleagues is important. It suggests that targeting China and Mexico risks a game of whack-a-mole. Any country at any given moment may be the trouble spot, so it is better to spread out enforcement resources more evenly. It also shows that legal trade is probably the main conduit for fentanyl smuggling, meaning that more sophisticated screening operations at all ports of entry would be wise. Last, it reveals that despite all the attention paid to the disadvantaged and the despairing, the core problem is at once simpler and more depressing: fentanyl is just too easy to get. ■



 

The importance of handwriting is becoming better understood

1. Studies have found that writing on paper can improve everything from recalling a random series of words to imparting a better conceptual grasp of complicated ideas.

2. One of the best-demonstrated advantages of writing by hand seems to be in superior note-taking. In a study from 2014 by Pam Mueller and Danny Oppenheimer, students typing wrote down almost twice as many words and more passages verbatim from lectures, suggesting they were not understanding so much as rapidly copying the material.

Handwriting—which takes longer for nearly all university-level students—forces note-takers to synthesise ideas into their own words. This aids conceptual understanding at the moment of writing. But those taking notes by hand also perform better on tests when students are later able to study from their notes. The effect even persisted when the students who typed were explicitly instructed to rephrase the material in their own words.

-> However, several school systems in America have gone so far as to ban most laptops. This is too extreme. Some students have disabilities that make handwriting especially hard. Nearly all will eventually need typing skills. And typing can improve the quality of writing: being able to get ideas down quickly, before they are forgotten, can obviously be beneficial. So can slowing down the speed of typing

—————-

Hosts of studies show that physical posture affects the psychology. Sitting erect with an open posture makes people more confident than those forced to slump.

——————

What to read to become a better writer

1. Editor’s update: The Economist has published a revised version of its style guide.

2. Politics and the English Language. By George Orwell. Available on the Orwell Foundation’s website

Orwell proposes six now-canonical rules. The first five boil down to: prefer short, everyday words and the active voice, cut unneeded words and strive for fresh imagery. The sixth—“break any of these rules sooner than say anything outright barbarous”—displays the difficulty of pinning down something as protean as language.


3. Style: Lessons in Clarity and Grace. By Joseph M. Williams and Joseph Bizup. Pearson Education; 246 pages; $66.65 and £43.99

4. On Writing Well: The Classic Guide to Writing Nonfiction. By William Zinsser. HarperCollins; 321 pages; $17.99 and £13.99

5. The Sense of Style: The Thinking Person’s Guide to Writing in the 21st Century. By Steven Pinker. Penguin; 368 pages; and $18 and £10.99

6. Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of English Usage. Merriam-Webster; 989 pages; $29.95


On September 7th Antarctica’s sea ice  covered just short of 17m km, according to data tracking its daily extent from America’s National Snow and Ice Data Centre (nsidc). That is 1m sq km below its previous smallest annual maximum in 1986—an area equivalent to two Spains. Meanwhile, in the Arctic, where ice has been melting during the northern hemisphere’s summer, sea ice is at its sixth-lowest level since records began in October 1978.



A recent study published in Nature Communications suggested that the first ice-free summer month in the Arctic could come in the 2040s, even if the world reduces greenhouse-gas emissions quite steeply.






'Economist' 카테고리의 다른 글

펜타닐과 절망사, 세계화  (0) 2023.10.04
손글씨  (2) 2023.10.03
Mario Draghi on the path to fiscal union in the euro zone  (0) 2023.09.22
keep digging  (0) 2023.09.15
Economist지 소개  (1) 2023.03.01

the prospects for fiscal union in the euro zone are improving

Fiscal union is typically seen as entailing transfers from thriving regions to those going through economic slumps, and in Europe public opposition to stronger countries supporting weaker ones remains fierce.

The euro zone has evolved in two ways that are opening up a different, and potentially more acceptable, road to fiscal union.

First, since 2012 the European Central Bank has developed policy tools to contain unwarranted divergence between stronger and weaker countries’ borrowing costs

Second, Europe has to confront common, imported shocks like the pandemic, the energy crisis and the war in Ukraine.

there is a serious risk that Europe underdelivers on its climate goals, fails to provide the security its citizens demand and loses its industrial base to regions

Fiscal rules should be both strict, to ensure governments’ finances are credible over the medium term, and flexible, to allow governments to react to unforeseen shocks.

That is broadly the situation in America, where an empowered federal government sits alongside largely inflexible fiscal rules for the states, which are mostly prohibited from running deficits. Balanced-budget rules are credible—with the ultimate sanction of default—precisely because the federal level takes care of the bulk of discretionary spending.

Such reforms would mean pooling more sovereignty, and would therefore require new forms of representation and centralised decision-making.


'Economist' 카테고리의 다른 글

손글씨  (2) 2023.10.03
Antarctic sea ice is 1m sq km short of its previous record low  (0) 2023.09.27
keep digging  (0) 2023.09.15
Economist지 소개  (1) 2023.03.01
새로운 거시경제, 세계경제가 도래하는가?  (0) 2022.10.17

Seventy-two countries, accounting for around 80% of global emissions, have committed themselves to net-zero targets. According to the Energy Transitions Commission (etc), a think-tank, hitting them by 2050 will require 15 times today’s wind power, 25 times more solar, a tripling of the grid’s size and a 60-fold increase in the fleet of electric vehicles (evs). By 2030 copper and nickel demand could rise by 50-70%, cobalt and neodymium by 150%, and graphite and lithium six- to seven-fold. All told, a carbon-neutral world in 2050 will need 35m tonnes of green metals a year, predicts the International Energy Agency, an official forecaster. Adding aluminium and steel, the etc expects demand between now and then to exceed 6.5bn tonnes.

This is why policymakers fear an almighty supply crunch. The etc expects shortages of market-breaking magnitudes by 2030: some 10-15% for copper and nickel, and 30-45% for other battery metals. When dwindling stocks cause prices to rise, producers will lift output and customers will use scarce materials more efficiently.

Economist란?

영국에서 발간되는 경제주간지

www.economist.com  

 

 

오랜 역사

1843년 James Wilson이 창간

Walter Bagehot이 편집자(Wilson의 사위, 최종대부자 기능)

 

세계적으로 권위를 인정받는 주간지

학술논문에 인용

뉴스 등에서 인용

빌 게이츠, 에릭 슈밋, 헨리 키신저, 헬무트 슈미트 등 세계 각국의 유명인사들이 구독

월스트리트에서 신입을 훈련시킬 때

 

 

논조

경제:  자유주의적 경향

자유무역, 세계화에 찬성

 

읽을거리

마음에 드는 어떤 기사도 상관없음

마음에 드는 기사가 없으면 Business 또는 Finance & Economics Section에 있는 거 하나보면 됨

가끔 나오는 Special Report는 관련 주제를 심도 깊게 다룸.

욕심 내지 말고 일주일에 한 건만 보면 됨. 그러나 꾸준히 봐야 됨(약 2년 정도).

=> 나중에는 안 본 사람들과는 생각이 확연히 차이남

 

기사를 어떻게 구하나?

홈페이지로 가면 한 달 기준으로 다섯 건의 기사를 무료로 볼 수 있음(단 정책이 자주 변경 됨)

스마트폰앱 Leaders Section의 기사 한 건을 무료로

유튜브

도서관

학생용 디지털판 구독료: 연간 약 5만 원

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

정부지출의 확대가 불가피하다.

1. 고령화(Ageing Population)

2. 기후변화(Climate Change) 

3. 지정학적 안보

 

고령화는 이자율을 하락시켜 경제의 지출확대를 촉진할 수 있다.

 

 

금융시스템의 불안정화

 

 

중앙은행의 딜레마(Broken Central Bank)

 

'Economist' 카테고리의 다른 글

keep digging  (0) 2023.09.15
Economist지 소개  (1) 2023.03.01
Everything's under control  (0) 2020.04.13
코로나 이후 미국 소비의 변화  (1) 2020.04.13
Finding Phillips Curve  (0) 2019.12.09

https://www.economist.com/leaders/2020/03/26/the-state-in-the-time-of-covid-19

코로나 사태 이후 정부 권력의 확대는 2차 대전 이후 최대

* 정부의 시장개입은 규모와 범위에서 급증

    미국: 2조 달러의 재정지출

        GDP의 10%, 2007-9년 지출의 2배

    영국, 프랑스 등은 GDP의 15% 수준

    중앙은행의 유동성 지원

 

* 개인에 대한 통제

    이동 통제: 벌금 부과, 구속 등

 

코로나의 전염 범위, 속도를 고려하면 불가피한 측면

지금 정부의 행위, 공공 보건의 강화는 현재에도 미래에 있을 전염병을 막는 데 기여할 것

그러나 국가권력의 확대라는 문제

 

국가 권력의 확대는 일시적일까?

코로나는 마치 세계대전이나 1929년 대공황과 비슷

위기는 "지속적인 큰 정부"를 가져왔고, 더 많은 권한과 책임을 부여하고 조세를 높였다.

 

'Economist' 카테고리의 다른 글

Economist지 소개  (1) 2023.03.01
새로운 거시경제, 세계경제가 도래하는가?  (0) 2022.10.17
코로나 이후 미국 소비의 변화  (1) 2020.04.13
Finding Phillips Curve  (0) 2019.12.09
낮은 인플레이션: 세계화와 기술  (1) 2019.11.19

A stockpiling splurge in early March has given way to penny-pinching

 

'Economist' 카테고리의 다른 글

새로운 거시경제, 세계경제가 도래하는가?  (0) 2022.10.17
Everything's under control  (0) 2020.04.13
Finding Phillips Curve  (0) 2019.12.09
낮은 인플레이션: 세계화와 기술  (1) 2019.11.19
MMT, Modern Monetary Theory  (0) 2019.03.16

Finding Phillips

Economists’ models of inflation are letting them down

Why has the “Phillips curve” failed at both ends?

 

평평한 필립스곡선

* 2010년 즈음 선진국의 실업률이 8.5% 상승하였으나 물가하락을 경험하지 않았음

* 현재 15-64세의 취업률은 최고치이나 인플레이션 조짐은 보이지 않음.

 

* 실업률이 1%p 하락할 때, 인플레이션율은 0.1~0.2%p 상승

        by Economists at Goldman Sachs

 

평평한 필립스 곡선


세 가지 가능한 설명

1. 정책의 결과

* 경기가 하강할 때, 중앙은행은 인플레이션은 신경쓰지 않고 실업감소를 위해 노력

* 실업률이 낮을 때는 인플레이션을 잡는데 매진

---> 그 결과로 평평한 필립스곡선

           by Michael McLeay and Silvana Tenreyro of the Bank of England

 

* But,

   - 중앙은행의 정책만으로 이것이 가능한가?

   - 인플레이션 없이 실업을 낮출 수 있는가?

   - 현재의 낮은 인플레이션과 더 낮은 실업은 설명하기 곤란

 

 

2. 기대인플레이션

* 기대인플레이션의 변화는 필립스곡선의 상방 또는 하방으로 평행이동 시킴

   - 물가상승 예상은 기업은 가격을, 노동자는 임금을 인상하게 만드는 효과를 가져옴

* 기대인플레이션이 잘 변동하지 않게 됨

   - 유럽에서는 유로화를 도입 후 

   - 미국에서는 경제변화에 대해 기대인플레이션의 반응 정도가 약해짐

      (주: 미래에 대한 기대는 과거에 벌어진 일에 영향을 받는 측면이 있음)

      (주: 이를 정태적 기대 또는 적응적 기대라고 함)

 

* But

   - 기대가 중요하기는 해도 전부라고 할 수는 없음

 

3. 필립스곡선이 존재하기는 하지만, 비선형(non-linear)일 수 있음

* 가장 유력해 보이는 설명

*  실업률이 일정 수준 이하로 떨어지면, 가격과 임금이 "갑자기 그리고 빠르게" 증가하는 실업률의 문턱점(threshold)이 있음

 

 

 

 

'Economist' 카테고리의 다른 글

Everything's under control  (0) 2020.04.13
코로나 이후 미국 소비의 변화  (1) 2020.04.13
낮은 인플레이션: 세계화와 기술  (1) 2019.11.19
MMT, Modern Monetary Theory  (0) 2019.03.16
Can the euphoria of the Korean summit last?  (1) 2018.04.28

+ Recent posts