April 10, 2008

INFLATION ----- HE'S BACK!!!!



The global economy, despite recording impressive economic growth in this decade, is facing its' highest inflation numbers in over a decade. This effect has been magnified in developing economies, especially with necessities such as food and energy. As usual, the cause is supply and demand. One of the reasons, among many others, is the use of crops for alternative fuels. As more food is used for fuel, less is available for food, which of course drives up the price ...and this is especially hard on developing economies and has the potential to create political instability (note the picture of riots in Egypt over food prices). Read more in today's Wall Street Journal here.


April 9, 2008

STAY IN SCHOOL! UNEMPLOYMENT RATE BY EDUCATION LEVEL


...and almost the entire .50% rise in the unemployment rate in the past 9 months occurred to people who never graduated from high school. Read more at Carpe Diem blog here.

April 3, 2008

News Story on Georgia Trip

STOCK RESEARCH ON THE WEB

Here are some websites you can use in researching stocks for the stock market game:

1. MSN: Moneycentral: good stock screener and more.
2. The Street: Get advice from Mad Money's Jim Cramer.
3. Google Finance
4. Yahoo Finance
5. Minyanville
6. CNBC: the web site of the stock channel.

April 1, 2008

Good Advice

... from the duty free shop at Amsterdam International Airport. Click on picture to enlarge

March 20, 2008

TRADITIONAL GEORGIAN MUSIC AND DANCE

Check out these amazing students from Public School #165 in Tbilisi, Georgia, as they gave a special performance for our group of US teachers. It was great to see these students honor Georgia's long and proud history thru such music and dance. Trust me, it was even better to watch this in person!

March 16, 2008

Send-Off Celebration





For our closing dinner, the amazing people of Batumi threw quite a celebration for us. Many dignitaries showed up. The local kids also put on quite a traditional Georgian dancing show. The Georgian people are the kindest and warmest people I have ever met. Before this trip many people told me that the Georgian people are the most hospitable people in the world, and now I know first hand how true this is.

March 14, 2008

More Pictures From Beautiful Georgia









Falcon Fanatics Everywhere


Here is a great teacher from Batumi, Gerogia, with her Falcon Fanatic t-shirt and hat. Another teacher from New York City gave students the Yankees hats. We watched her teach a class on Economics. The students had many questions for the US teachers about the US. The Georgian students told us they like their cell phones, Eminem, 50 Cent, and Brittany Spears, until she became a "druggie". They were very curious about US students, and many said it would be a dream for them to go to school in the US. The students gave all the US teachers several gifts, and the teachers served us a very nice lunch. Well now I am off to the beach...

March 12, 2008

Georgian Public School #165


Our visit to School #165 was an eye-opening experience. Our visit was a REALLY big deal. The head of the Georgian Education Ministry was there, and the students were very excited to talk with us. Students preformed a Traditional Dance and gave a fascinating drumming performance, which I videotaped. The students like American culture, cell phones, etc. And I even stopped by the gym class to play some ball. The other picture is from the luncheon which the school had for us, again, delicious food, and I am sitting with teachers from the school, who are very eager for me to e-mail them pictures.

Tonight we will board a sleeper train, and we will wake up in Batumi, on the Black Sea coast. You can read about Batumi on a previous post. See you next post...

Meeting With Gerogian Parliament Member, Kahka Shengelia, PhD


Today we had the pleasure of meeting with Kahka Shengelia, a member of the Georgian Parliament, like our US Congress, a fascinating man who went to college in the US, and speaks 7 languages. Mr. Shengelia talked candidly about the tensions between Russia and Georgia, which were much worse than I knew. He told us, during the Communits years, you could only speak Russian, by law, in all public buildings. But now as an independent country, Georgians have their freedoms back.

He also told us about Georgia's fast growing economy, which has been stimulated by opening up the economy to foreign investment and lowering taxes. Georgia was the world's #1 economic reformer in 2007. His apartment which cost $70,000 three years ago in Tbilisi now is worth 1/2 a million dollars. Georgia received $10 billion dollars in foreign investment in 2007, and their GDP is growing 10% a year.

He also talked about how all of the schools in Georgia will have computers with access to the internet this year. Still keep in mind, Georgia has a much smaller economy than ours, and it is difficult to deal with scarcity. GDP per capita is $4000 in Georgia, where in the US it is about $46,000. Overall, he was a very generous to take time out of his busy life to tell stories about Georgia to us.

March 10, 2008

The Georgian Supra, or Feast


I am proud to say that I survived my much anticipated first Georgian Feast Sunday night. I saw more food (all of it outstanding) on one table than I have seen in my life. Basically, we started eating one of the national dishes, khachapuri (of course), many salads, vegetables, and the like. Then the Tamada, or toastmaster, begins making toasts. The only time you can drink whatever is in your glass is when the Tamada proposes a toast. And do not make the mistake of saying a toast without the Tamada's permission, like one woman did in our group. Then the waiters bring out many different meats, and khinkhali, which is a meat dumpling, pictured above. More toasts, more food, repeat, repeat, and after many hours it was a memorable time experiencing this integral part of Georgian culture.

One Monday, we met with many Georgian economists and economics educators, hearing about the promising economic reforms here. More on this in a later post.

TRADITIONAL GEORGIAN DANCE

Georgian Dancers at a Tbilisi restaurant.

March 8, 2008

GAMARJOBA (Translation: Hello)
















Gamarjoba: We arrived in Tbilisi, Georgia about 7 PM, a day later than we left DC. Tbilisi has many ancient churches, and is set in a valley surrounded by mountains. Beautiful scenery! Today we are taking a tour of Tbilisi and the ancient capital of Mskheta, so I will have more to report later.

Food Notes: Our first Georgian Dinner last night. Katchapuri: the national food, is Bread stuffed with cheese: delicious. Basically a Dinner in Georgia is this: eat a lot of great food, and after you have eaten more than you ususally eat in a day: watch as the waitress keeps piling more food on the table

March 7, 2008

Send-Off Breakfast on Capitol Hill


This morning was our send-off breakfast on Capitol Hill. In this picture on the left is Svetlana, our tour guide for the entire trip. Svetlana is an economics professor who fluent in Russian and came to the US from Russia in 1991 after the fall of Communism. To her right are two diplomats from the Gerogian Embassy, who we also met with yesterday. They said many great things about Georgia, and, upon meeting them, it is easy to see why Georgia (as we were told) has some of the most hospitable and friendly people in the world.

The Honorable US Senator from Minnesota, Norm Coleman, and US Representative Jim Ramstad, who represents the Congressional District that includes Armstrong HS, both sent staff members to the breakfast. Pictured here is Heather, a legislative assistant from Rep. Ramstad's office. It was great to talk to them not only about the trip, but Minnesota. And of course they wished us the best.

Next up: We fly out of Dulles Airport in DC at 6 PM tonight, and 24 hours later, we arrive in Tbilisi, the capital of Georgia. We have a 8 hour flight to Amsterdam International Airport, and after a 4 hour layover, have a 5 hour flight to Tbilisi; add the time difference and it will be Saturday evening upon arrival.

March 6, 2008

Greetings From Washington DC


Hello from beautiful Washington DC. It was great to finally meet the entire group of people going to Georgia, and learn more about our trip. We have quite a fascinating group of very friendly people in our group. We are staying in the area of DC known as Embassy Row, which is full of foreign embassies, as well as numerous beautiful homes and delicious restaurants.

Yesterday we spent the afternoon time learning about the National Council on Economic Education (NCEE), the sponsor of this trip to Georgia, and all of its work on helping economic education around the world. Then we had a delicious dinner, the New York Strip Steak was great.

Friday morning, we will be having breakfast at the US Capital; I invited both Minnesota Senators and Rep. Jim Ramstad and their staff members to attend. I was happy to hear staff members from Senator Coleman's and Representative Ramstad's office will be attending, and I will be able to tell them all about the trip.

This morning some representatives from the Georgian Embassy met with our group; it was apparent they were very proud to be Georgian, and we found out we are one of the first groups of US Educators to visit Georgia since the fall of Communism in 1991. Quite an impressive fact.

Also, after our plane was delayed 1 ½ hours due to snow on Wed. morning, the 60 degree sunny weather felt like a tropical paradise after the MN winter. Also, the price of a gallon of gas in DC, $3.60.

March 4, 2008

News Clip on Georgia Trip

Check it out here. The clip starts about 5 minutes in.

OBAMANOMICS

The Economist Magazine writes here about the rise of economic populism, anti-trade rhetoric, and Obamanomics.

February 24, 2008

The Gap Between America’s “Rich” and “Poor” - "You Are What You Spend"



Fact: The richest 20% of Americans earn 15 times the income of the bottom 20%.

Fact: The richest 20% of Americans only consume 4 times as much as the poorest 20%.

From the New York Times. (Click on Image to enlarge)

The Federal Reserve Economist who writes this piece for the NYT opinion piece claims that there is more to "inequality" than just income numbers. While before tax income of the top 20% is around $150,000, the poorest 20% earn only around $10,000. Clearly these numbers indicate an enormous income gap in America.

Concerning consumption, the poor consume an average of $18,000 on everything from food to housing to entertainment to transportation. The richest 20%, on the other hand, consume an average of only $70,000, less than half their before-tax income. The consumption gap is less than 4 to 1, compared to lower income households, not 15 to 1, as is the income disparity. When compared to the middle 20% of income earners, the consumption gap between them and the lowest 20% is only 2 to 1.

Should our standard of living be based on our income, or on our consumption? If it’s income, then there’s certainly a huge gap in standard of living between the rich and poor. But if we believe it’s consumption, then the gap is narrowed dramatically. The author claims the latter:

To understand why consumption is a better guideline of economic prosperity than income, it helps to consider how our lives have changed. Nearly all American families now have refrigerators, stoves, color TVs, telephones and radios. Air-conditioners, cars, VCRs or DVD players, microwave ovens, washing machines, clothes dryers and cellphones have reached more than 80 percent of households.
It turns out that in the last 50 years, while income inequality has increased, Americans in all income levels are all much richer that 50 years ago, on average. The combination of rising wages for the lowest classes and falling prices for many household products has lead to a dramatic narrowing in the “consumption gap” in America:

In time, ownership spread through the levels of income distribution as rising wages and falling prices made them affordable in the currency that matters most — the amount of time one had to put in at work to gain the necessary purchasing power.
At the average wage, a VCR fell from 365 hours in 1972 to a mere two hours today. A cellphone dropped from 456 hours in 1984 to four hours. A personal computer, jazzed up with thousands of times the computing power of the 1984 I.B.M., declined from 435 hours to 25 hours. Even cars are taking a smaller toll on our bank accounts: in the past decade, the work-time price of a mid-size Ford sedan declined by 6 percent.

And to whom do we owe our thanks for the lower prices of all these great products? Globalization and trade, which increases wealth, and… yep you guessed it, China!
There are several reasons that the costs of goods have dropped so drastically, but perhaps the biggest is increased international trade. Imports lower prices directly. Cheaper inputs cut domestic companies’ costs. International competition forces producers everywhere to become more efficient and hold down prices. Nations do what they do best and trade for the rest.
Click on the graph above and have a look; you’ll be surprised at the revelations behind the numbers. It sure is a compelling argument; the gap between the richest and poorest Americans may not be as bad as the income numbers show!


February 21, 2008

New York Times Article on Beautiful Batumi, Georgia


Check out the article here. Highlighted on the map are the breakaway regions of Georgia, Abkhazia and South Ossetia. With Kosovo's recent independence in Europe, these regions are talking like they will try to become an independent country, and Georgia is having none of it. Hopefully the situation does not heat up during my visit.

And that 5 Star hotel mentioned in the article serving the caviar right on the Black Sea, the Intourist Palace, I will be staying there.

February 16, 2008

Authors@Google: Cornell Economics Professor Robert Frank

Cornell Professor Robert Frank talks here about his book, "The Economic Naturalist: In Search of Explanations for Everyday Enigmas."

February 13, 2008

The US Economy Since 1947


Larry Kudlow, host of Kudlow and Company on CNBC, says the following on his blog, Kudlow's Money Politics, about the long term prosperity of the US economy, as shown on the above graph:

Take a good look at those numbers. Now, even if I assume that we are headed into a recession, over the last 60 years, post WWII, real GDP has increased a whopping $10 trillion dollars. That's 634 percent. That comes to 3.4 percent growth a year after inflation. And that covers ten recessions.

Now look at the stock market. The S&P 500 percentage return has been nothing short of incredible. Almost 87,000 percent. That comes to 12 percent a year, or 9 percent after inflation.

Look, we’ve had 10 recessions between 1947 & 2007. The average length is ten months. The last two were eight months. But because of our economic freedom (particularly in the last 25 years since Ronald Reagan helped transform the economy) none of this has impeded our prosperity. None of this has stopped output or employment. None of this has stopped the robust U.S. stock market expansion.

Our Goldilocks free market economy is not recession-free. We do have corrections in business cycles. I don’t deny that. But look at those numbers again. They are spectacular. This could very well be an extraordinary time to buy stocks for the long run.

February 12, 2008

Podcast: Does Free Trade Favor Rich Nations?

Here is a debate between University of Cambridge economist Ha-Joon Chang, author of Bad Samaritans: The Myth of Free Trade and the Secret History of Capitalism, and Tyler Cowen, a professor of economics at George Mason University. Check it out here.

February 9, 2008

The Ugliest Building In The World?

This "hideously" ugly hotel, with 3,000 rooms, remains empty. And you guessed it, it was built by Communists. Check it out here

January 30, 2008

The Plane That Does Not Fly – And Makes Money

An entrepreneur in India (where 99% of the population has never flown in a plane) charges about $3 to sit on his plane. Note: The plane never leaves the ground. Regular announcements on the plane include "Watch out for turbulence ahead. "His idea is a big success. Read more here.

January 28, 2008

January 13, 2008

Goin' To Georgia...The Country, That Is




I was selected, along with 11 other economics teachers around the US, to go to the Republic of Georgia in March on a Study Tour. The study tour is run by the National Council on Economic Education in cooperation with the US State Department. All expenses are paid. First we will be flying to Washington DC for a two day orientation and to meet with members of Congress and their staff, and then we well be off to Tbilisi, the Capital of Georgia.

Georgia sounds like an incredible place to visit. It is at a crossroads of Europe, the Middle East, and Asia, although it claims to be different than all of these places. I was also thrilled to hear Georgia has GREAT food that is famous throught the world.

On the visit we will be meeting with Georgian economists, business leaders, and Ministry of education officials. We will also be visiting some schools, and it will be interesting to see what they are like.

Georgia's people are now embracing economic freedom and capitalism; for most of the past century Georgia's people were mired in poverty with no economic freedom and greatly suffered under communist rule. Georgia was ranked by the World Bank as the #1 economic reformer in the world for 2007. It will be very interesting to see these changes first hand...and did I mention the food?

Here is a Georgian tourist site to check out some of the beauty of Georgia.