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Planning and the economy: a complex relationship

What sounds like a paradoxical experience may not be so much of a paradox after all. House prices, quality of life and economic growth are very much interlinked in Britain’s recent history, and it is not always easy to disentangle the three. However, if we want to understand why they are connected, it is necessary to subject them to an economic analysis, and that means analysing the way Britain’s built environment has been planned.

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Land supply at heart of home-front problems

For policymakers, the lesson is clear. If they are concerned about housing boom and bust cycles, they have to quash the expectation that house prices will continue to rise. To do that, they need to examine property markets with long records of house price stability, and learn from them how to ensure that when more housing is needed, more can be built.

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Sydney Morning Herald

Capitalism: bruised but still champion

These are difficult times for liberals. The mood around the world is turning against them. Politicians find it easier to blame crazy economists and greedy managers for financial turmoil than to understand and fix their own mistakes. Free-marketers still have the evidence of economic history on their side, but they will have to make their case more forcefully from now on. They face a constant battle of ideas that can never be decisively won. But they can take consolation in the fact that today’s swing to the left will not spell the end of history, let alone of capitalism.

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Der Medianwähler und das Ende der Reformpolitik

Wahlen werden in der Mitte gewonnen, heißt es häufig. Mindestens ebenso oft hört man die Klage, dass sich zumindest die großen Parteien immer ähnlicher geworden seien. Dass das eine mit dem anderen etwas zu tun haben könnte, liegt auf der Hand. Doch es war der Wirtschaftswissenschaft vorbehalten, für diesen intuitiv zu verstehenden Zusammenhang ein Modell geschaffen zu haben: das Medianwählertheorem.

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