I’m having an enjoyably wonky morning watching the Senate Finance Committee roundtable on options for funding health care reform. You can stream the meeting here. But for a clear and straightforward look at the ideas and issues involved, this bit of testimony from the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities is as good an introduction […]
Ezra Klein
A REAL LIFE CARBON TAX.
I’ve argued before that you can compare a perfect-world carbon tax to a perfect-world cap and trade proposal, or a realistic carbon tax to a realistic cap and trade proposal, but you can’t compare a perfect-world carbon tax to a realistic cap and trade proposal. Today, Kevin Drum draws that argument out at length: Cap-and-trade […]
THE OPPONENTS OF HEALTH CARE REFORM.
It’s good to be lucky in your friends, but it’s better to be lucky in your enemies. And as Rachel Maddow argues, Obama seems increasingly lucky in his enemies: Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy The opponents of health reform are, at this juncture, entirely isolated. Industry is adopting […]
IS CAP AND TRADE ENOUGH? (NO.)
This gets a bit wonky, but Dave Roberts has a good post explaining why cap and trade — or a carbon tax — may not be enough to really move us over to renewable energy. Simply slapping a price on carbon might be a sufficient answer if the only failure in the market was that […]
COVERAGE OPTIONS.
I’m not sure why official Washington is insisting on releasing so much health care news today, but here’s the Finance Committee’s paper on policy options to expand coverage. This is, in theory, the guidebook that the Committee will use when building its bill. The whole thing is worth reading, but for those interested, the public […]
WHAT IS THIS “CAP AND TRADE” OF WHICH YOU SPEAK?
Via Dave Weigel and Matt Yglesias comes the depressing news that the vast majority of the public doesn’t know what cap and trade” is. And I don’t mean in the sense that they don’t understand the auctions. They have no idea what problem the policy actually refers to. “Given a choice of three options, just […]
YOUR WORLD IN CHARTS: FINANCIAL INNOVATION EDITION.
The Peterson Institute’s Adam S. Posen and Marc Hinterschweiger have a couple neat graphs making the case against financial innovation. They did not begin as skeptics. They liked the idea of financial innovation. They believed the promises “that expansion in the use of newer derivatives and the like would lead to an expansion in the […]
DEPARTMENT OF SHOCK, HORROR.
This isn’t really my beat, but Wanda Sykes’ comedy routine at last weekend’s White House Correspondent’s Dinner was really shockingly offensive.
THE PROBLEM WITH CORPORATE TAX CODES.
The administration’s proposals to close some corporate tax loopholes didn’t get much attention last week. In part, that’s because the actual issues being addressed are extremely complicated. But that doesn’t mean they’re not important. This sort of thing, for instance, is really galling, and insofar as we need to raise $60 billion from somewhere, stopping […]
ARLEN SPECTER NOW OPEN TO A PUBLIC PLAN.
Lot of health reform posts on the blog today. That’s because there’s a lot of health reform policy news today. For instance, Arlen Specter, who recently gave a one word “no” when asked if he supported a public plan on Meet the Press, is now proclaiming himself open to a public plan: In a letter […]

