Since there have been some interesting comments on two separate posts from last week, I thought I would pull them together. To get up to speed, NPR ran a piece last week which decried (slight exaggeration) the low pay of doctors. I also commented on the failure of reporting on a minimum wage hike to […]
Blog: Beat the Press
NPR’s Sob Story for Struggling Doctors
NPR did a piece this morning on doctors’ pay that leaves you wondering why they get taxpayers dollars. The basic point was that doctors, especially primary care physicians, are struggling. The news hook was a new survey that showed that doctors’ net (after malpractice) pay is not keeping pace with inflation. The survey showed that […]
Reporting Nonsense on the Minimum Wage
Suppose that the senators who support a quick withdrawal from Iraq got in the habit of saying that the United States should get out of Iraq because losing 100 U.S. soldiers a day is an unacceptable price for the occupation. Would the media simple report this claim without comment? Or, would they point out that […]
Dollars Down the Drain
The Washington Post reported on former Treasury Secretary, and soon to be former Harvard President, Larry Summers’ suggestion that the foreign central banks of developing countries begin to unload some of their huge dollar holdings. As someone who has been writing on this issue for almost five years (see here, here, and here), I am […]
Rich Countries Provide $300 Billion Annually in Subsidies to the Pharmaceutical Industry
You won’t see this headline in the newspapers. You should ask why. Newspapers have repeatedly reported on the hundreds of billions of dollars that the rich countries give to the agricultural industry. (See the Financial Times for the latest example.) While the wording of the headlines, and often the articles themselves, would lead readers to […]
From the Times Europe Bashing Desk
The NYT had a piece this morning reporting on how Europe is heavily dependent on coal, despite its “green image.” While the article had much useful information, it never mentioned the fact that Europe emits approximately 50 percent as much greenhouse gas per capita as the United States. In the numerate world, this is an […]
Do the Washington Post Editors Know How Markets Work?
The Post has a piece this morning about the non-enforcement of laws against hiring undocumented workers. The article includes several statements, including one from Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, to the effect that native born citizens will not do the jobs that are filled by undocumented workers. Believers in markets would say that if wages […]
Wasting Public Funds on Destroying the Planet
It is remarkable that ostensibly intelligent people can be made to fear the possibility that Europe and Japan will be less crowded places in the years ahead. The Financial Times has an article that reports on a warning from “top fertility experts” over “Europe’s chaotic response to its demographic crisis.” It is hard to find […]
Interesting News On China
The New York Times reported on Saturday that China’s central bank is adopting a more contractionary monetary policy in order to slow its economy and reduce inflation. If China’s central bank is concerned that inflation is getting out of control, then it would be an ideal time for the country to begin to raise the […]
Strong Words on the Fed
“The Fed chairman may be appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate, but his real bosses are on Wall Street.” This isn’t the ranting of some crazed radical; it is a line from a column in the Washington Post‘s Outlook section, by Richard Yamarone, an investment analyst. While I probably never would have […]

