HBO programming president Casey Bloys said he's open to the possibility of a Game of Thrones spin-off series: "For us it's about finding the right take with the right writer."
Saturday, October 08, 2016
Game of Thrones spin off
Sunday, October 02, 2016
fiscal policy, DeLong and Ip
Must-Read: Five years late, and many trillions of dollars short. But still...
Greg Ip: Fiscal Policy Makes a Quiet Turn Toward Stimulus:
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What DeLong and Ip don't tell us is that Hillary's plan of $275 billion over five years is too small. The Fed says it gave us the recovery it wanted for the most part.
Greg Ip: Fiscal Policy Makes a Quiet Turn Toward Stimulus:
Now... fiscal policy across the developed world is collectively turning more stimulative for the first time since the end of the recession...
...This may be the most underappreciated economic development of the year. While the scale of the stimulus is modest in dollar terms, it signals a more profound shift in the political winds. Globally, the rise of political populism has pushed deficits down the list of priorities while elevating tax cuts and benefits for the working class. With enough critical mass, such measures could persuade central banks to rethink their own super-easy monetary policies, which would undermine the case for today’s rock-bottom bond yields and pricey stocks.
The fiscal shift is easy to miss, because rhetorically at least, governments remain devoted to cutting their debts. But numbers tell a different story.... The near-term catalyst for the fiscal turn was Britain’s vote to leave the European Union on June 23. Not only did the resulting uncertainty threaten global economic growth, it also alerted centrist political parties to how unhappy voters are with the economic status quo....
For Japan, the impetus was both Brexit and the Bank of Japan’s introduction of negative interest rates this year, which failed to work as planned; the yen went up and stocks went down. In August, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe unveiled a $73 billion package of infrastructure spending, cash handouts to poor families, and other stimulative measures. In the U.S., budget caps enacted in 2011 have already been loosened. Meanwhile, Hillary Clinton, the Democratic nominee, is campaigning to boost spending on countless programs, from college education to infrastructure.... Mr. Trump’s rise demonstrates that austerity has lost the political energy it had in 2010....
Central bankers can take credit for the shift. As the benefits of zero to negative rates have shrunk and the side effects risen, they have exhorted finance ministers to take up the burden of supporting growth...
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What DeLong and Ip don't tell us is that Hillary's plan of $275 billion over five years is too small. The Fed says it gave us the recovery it wanted for the most part.
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