Tuesday, February 27, 2024

Richard Fidler - a pleasure to chat with Andrew Leigh on ABC about the new book "The Shortest History of Economics"

The Polk Awards — which honor investigative reporting and are some of the most prestigious awards in journalism — were announced Monday by Long Island University. The New York Times and ProPublica were among the big winners.

The Times won three awards, including two for its coverage of the Israel-Hamas war. Meanwhile, ProPublica — led by reporters Joshua Kaplan, Justin Elliott, Alex Mierjeski and Brett Murphy — won the National Reporting award for “revealing secret, lavish and highly questionable gifts that U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has received for decades from wealthy benefactors.” That reporting includes: “Clarence Thomas and the Billionaire.”

Opinion | Prestigious Polk Award winners are announced

ProPublica won the National Reporting award for revealing the lavish gifts wealthy benefactors gave to Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas.


Richard Fidler is one of Australia's best interviewers. Such a pleasure to chat with him on ABC Conversations about my new book "The Shortest History of Economics".


Should I park in an illegal parking space and risk a fine?

To Becker, crime generates costs to society, but fighting crime is also costly. There is, therefore, an optimal amount of crime which minimizes society's total loss and which can be attained by setting the optimal levels of punishment and probability of apprehension and conviction.
https://link.springer.com › ...

Crime and Punishment (Becker 1968) - SpringerLink



A 26-year-old Montreal man appears to have succeeded in his quest to barter a single red paper-clip all the way up to a house.

It took almost a year and 14 trades, but Kyle MacDonald has been offered a two-storey farmhouse in Kipling, Sask., for a paid role in a movie.

MacDonald began his quest last summer when he decided he wanted to live in a house. He didn't have a job, so instead of posting a resumé to look for a job, he looked at a red paper-clip on his desk and decided to trade it on an internet website.

One red paperclip is a website created by Canadian blogger Kyle MacDonald