Matt Yglesias comments on a David Leonhardt article on housing costs; Leonhardt sees the issue as whether housing is a luxury or a utility. If the former, then prices might rise; if the latter, prices will track other necessities.It's an interesting article which has also attracted comments from other bloggers. One in particular was saying "housing" combined houses and land, and most of the appreciation was in land. {UPdated: Kevin Drum comments. One thing I haven't seen discussed is the increase in square footage for housing over the period.]
But all that is a side issue to me, because there's an associated graph of the proportion of household income by category over the last 80 years. Basically clothing and food had their peaks in 1947 or so, with a consistent decline in each to the present (a bit steeper for food than clothing). Meanwhile health care costs have been rising steadily since 1947. The changes in both food and health care are astonishing.
Blogging on bureaucracy, organizations, USDA, agriculture programs, American history, the food movement, and other interests. Often contrarian, usually optimistic, sometimes didactic, occasionally funny, rarely wrong, always a nitpicker.
Wednesday, September 08, 2010
Tuesday, September 07, 2010
A Bureaucrat to be Complimented
The head of the National Archives and Records Administration acknowledges his agency ranked lowest in employee satisfaction, in a press release. You can't fix a problem if you don't recognize it.
Eggs and Cage -Free Hens and Dirt
The Washington Post runs an article on caged and cage-free hens, tied in with the salmonella problem. It's accompanied by a photo, which I don't see on the website, showing hens in a row of nests. The photo called up memories, and thoughts. (Here's a link to a similar photo, found through Google Images.) The article said currently cage-free eggs are about twice the cost of cage eggs, and even with mass production the cost differential would still be 25 percent more.
Some points for anyone who didn't have a close association with hens growing up:
One final note: if you look at the photo, you'll see someone who is collecting eggs will have to lift the hens in the nest to see if they're sitting on eggs already laid. Now hens vary in their personality; some are timid, some aggressive in protecting the eggs, and some are from hell. The latter ones will grab a fold of skin on the back of your hand in their beak and pull and twist. Not a nice feeling. I still feel the anger from 60 years ago.
Some points for anyone who didn't have a close association with hens growing up:
- cages permit total control over the hen. You can use conveyor belts to bring grain to the hen, pipe in water to the waterer, and allow the eggs to roll into another conveyor belt. The manure drops through the cage bottom Presto: eggs untouched by human hands.
- cage-free hens who lay eggs in nests, as in the picture, are an entirely different matter. Someone has to collect the eggs from the nests. Because eggs are laid throughout the day, although more heavily in the early hours of the day, the eggs need to be collected multiple times a day. Why not just once? Because eggs are fragile; the more eggs you have in a nest the more likely the next egg laid is going to drop on an egg already in the nest and one or both eggs get cracked. That's bad for several reasons: you've lost one or two eggs; if the break is bad enough the white of the egg gets out and spreads over any other uncracked eggs in the nest, you've now got dirty eggs which are hard to clean; finally, if a hen tries pecking at the white/egg and finds it good, which they do, you're training a hen to peck at eggs to get the contents.
- even if you collect the eggs often enough to avoid breakage, you face another problem not found in cages: manure. Hens are not naturally fastidious and will defecate in their nests. That means some percentage of the eggs collected have manure clinging to them, sometimes really staining the shell. So after the eggs are collected you need to clean the eggs. Growing up cleaning eggs was my mother's job, which she did manually. Could take 90 minutes or so to do 900 eggs. If she was sick, we could use an early egg cleaning machine, which was faster than I or my father.
One final note: if you look at the photo, you'll see someone who is collecting eggs will have to lift the hens in the nest to see if they're sitting on eggs already laid. Now hens vary in their personality; some are timid, some aggressive in protecting the eggs, and some are from hell. The latter ones will grab a fold of skin on the back of your hand in their beak and pull and twist. Not a nice feeling. I still feel the anger from 60 years ago.
Sentence of Sept 7
"People who thought that we could end unnecessary ER visits by expanding access to primary care underestimated the vast reserves of American health paranoia." From Megan McArdle Not sure I agree with the implications, but it's a good sentence.
Monday, September 06, 2010
Congressional Websites Are Like the Executive Branch's?
Some paragraphs from a critique of Congressional websites (and this)
Seems to me the same things could be said of many government websites, particularly those I see at USDA. I'm not sure, though, how much involvement the public really wants with government.
Incumbents are locked into a website design, and sites that were rated as high quality one year typically dropped the following year, according to the report. Congressional offices also tended not to ask constituents what they want to see on their representatives' or senators' sites. "The problem with most political websites ... is they are producer-focused," said Marc Cooper, associate professor of communication at the University of Southern California.
The sites carry information about elected officials, but they don't provide a way for the constituents to communicate with them, he said. The Web pages also don't offer a lot of incentives to visitors to explore the online information. "They don't have a reason for you to continue to be there as a participant on the site," Cooper said. "Once you get the information, there's nothing left for you to do."
While congressional members often believe their sites are cutting edge, the sites often are not engaging or transparent, he added.
Seems to me the same things could be said of many government websites, particularly those I see at USDA. I'm not sure, though, how much involvement the public really wants with government.
Farm Bill and the Elections
Farm Policy today has some discussion of the 2012 farm bill by Chairman Peterson and the Iowa Farm Bureau. Of course, the results of the November elections will have a big impact on the bill. The Republicans may find themselves forced to go against their base to carry out some of their promises. It seems to me the Republicans are usually supportive of farm programs. If cutting expenditures is the platform they win on in 2010, then they can't simply extend farm programs in the next farm bill. We'll see.
Down With Tenured Eggheads
Dan Drezner finds no surge of hostility towards tenured professors. I thought I'd supply some. If government bureaucrats are going to be scorned for their job security, so too should those eggheads in ivory towers.
Government's Achievements
No oil slicks around the Statue of Liberty recently. See this photo (from early 70's)
It's easy to forget, except sometimes for geezers.
It's easy to forget, except sometimes for geezers.
Sunday, September 05, 2010
King and Beck--Taylor Branch
Taylor Branch has an op-ed piece in the Times today which I think is consistent with my post here. There's a process of building a shared mythology which Glenn Beck is participating in by buying into MLK's myth. Branch, a biographer of King and a friend of Bill Clinton, gives some background to the whole thing.
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