SECCION Crisis monetaria: US/EURO, dolar vs otras monedas

Gráfico del tipo de cambio del Dólar Americano al Euro - Desde dic 1, 2008 a dic 31, 2008

Evolucion del dolar contra el euro

US Dollar to Euro Exchange Rate Graph - Jan 7, 2004 to Jan 5, 2009

V. SECCION: M. PRIMAS

1. SECCION:materias primas en linea:precios


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24 mar 2010

Macroperu Es la economia realmente Ciencia?

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB20001424052748704804204575069123218286094.html
OPINION FEBRUARY 27, 2010
Is the Dismal Science Really a Science?
By RUSS ROBERTS
For an economist, these are the best of times and the worst of times. We live in the best of times because everyone wants to understand what happened to the economy and what's going to happen next.
Is the mess we're in a market failure or a government failure? Is the stimulus plan working? Would tax cuts for small business spur employment? When will the job market improve? Is inflation coming? Do deficits matter?
So many questions and so little in the way of answers. And so it is the worst of times for economists. There is no consensus on the cause of the crisis or the best way forward.
There were Nobel Laureates who thought the original stimulus package should have been twice as big. And there are those who blame it for keeping unemployment high. Some economists warn of hyperinflation while others tell us not to worry.
It makes you wonder why people call it the Nobel Prize in Economic Science. After all, most sciences make progress. Nobody in medicine wants to bring back lead goblets. Sir Isaac Newton understood a lot about gravity. But Albert Einstein taught us more.
But in economics, theories that were once discredited surge back into favor. John Maynard Keynes and the view that government spending can create prosperity seem immortal. I thought stagflation had put a stake in the heart of this idea back in the 1970s. Suddenly, he's a genius once again. F.A. Hayek, Keynes's more laissez-faire sparring partner, is drawing interest. There are various monetarists to choose from, too. Which paradigm is the "right" way to think about the boom and the bust? Or are they all wrong?
I once thought econometrics—the application of statistics to economic questions—would settle these disputes and the truth would out. Econometrics is often used to measure the independent impact of one variable holding the rest of the relevant factors constant. But I've come to believe there are too many factors we don't have data on, too many connections between the variables we don't understand and can't model or identify.
I've started asking economists if they can name a study that applied sophisticated econometrics to a controversial policy issue where the study was so well done that one side's proponents had to admit they were wrong. I don't know of any. One economist told me that in general my point was well taken, but that his own work (of course!) had been decisive in settling a particular dispute.
Perhaps what we're really doing is confirming our biases. Ed Leamer, a professor of economics at UCLA, calls it "faith-based" econometrics. When the debate is over $2 trillion in additional government spending vs. zero, we've stopped being scientists and become philosophers. Do we want to be more like France with a bigger role for government, or less like France?
Facts and evidence still matter. And economists have learned some things that have stood the test of time and that we almost all agree on—the general connection between the money supply and inflation, for example. But the arsenal of the modern econometrician is vastly overrated as a diviner of truth. Nearly all economists accept the fundamental principles of microeconomics—that incentives matter, that trade creates prosperity—even if we disagree on the implications for public policy. But the business cycle and the ability to steer the economy out of recession may be beyond us.
The defenders of modern macroeconomics argue that if we just study the economy long enough, we'll soon be able to model it accurately and design better policy. Soon. That reminds me of the permanent sign in the bar: Free Beer Tomorrow.
We should face the evidence that we are no better today at predicting tomorrow than we were yesterday. Eighty years after the Great Depression we still argue about what caused it and why it ended.
If economics is a science, it is more like biology than physics. Biologists try to understand the relationships in a complex system. That's hard enough. But they can't tell you what will happen with any precision to the population of a particular species of frog if rainfall goes up this year in a particular rain forest. They might not even be able to count the number of frogs right now with any exactness.
We have the same problems in economics. The economy is a complex system, our data are imperfect and our models inevitably fail to account for all the interactions.
The bottom line is that we should expect less of economists. Economics is a powerful tool, a lens for organizing one's thinking about the complexity of the world around us. That should be enough. We should be honest about what we know, what we don't know and what we may never know. Admitting that publicly is the first step toward respectability.
Mr. Roberts is a research fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution, professor of economics at George Mason University and a distinguished scholar in the Mercatus Center.
__

Macroperu (ECONOMIA) Creaciones destructivas enviado por OBLanco

The Creative Destruction of G8 Economics
A plan to shift the theoretical foundations of our global system.




The most important thing that the global financial crisis has done for economic theory is to show that neoclassical economics is not only wrong – it's dangerous.




Neoclassical economics has contributed directly to the crisis by promoting a faith in the innate stability of a market economy, a false faith that has actually increased the financial system's tendency to instability. Touting the dubious claim that all instability in the system can be traced to market interventions rather than the market itself, neoclassical economics championed the deregulation of finance and the dramatic increase in income inequality. Its equilibrium vision of the functioning of finance markets has led to the development of the very products that are now threatening the existence of capitalism itself.




At the same time, neoclassical economics was distracting economists from the obvious signs of an impending crisis: the asset market bubbles and the mounting private debt that was financing them. Paradoxically, as capitalism's "perfect storm" began to gather, neoclassical macroeconomists were absorbed in smug self-congratulation over their apparent success in taming inflation and the trade cycle, a feat they like to call the "Great Moderation." In 2004 Ben Bernanke, now the Chairman of the Federal Reserve, said:




"The low-inflation era of the past two decades has seen not only significant improvements in economic growth and productivity but also a marked reduction in economic volatility, … a phenomenon that has been dubbed the 'Great Moderation.' Recessions have become less frequent and milder, and … volatility in output and employment has declined significantly … The sources of the Great Moderation remain somewhat controversial, but … there is evidence for the view that improved control of inflation has contributed in important measure to this welcome change in the economy …"




It is all very well to have economic theory dominated by an innate faith in the stability of markets when those markets are forever gaining – either by growth in the physical economy or rising prices in the asset markets. In those circumstances, neoclassical dissenters who align themselves with the post-autistic economics movement (paecon) can rail about the logical inconsistencies in mainstream economics all they want. During the good times, the government, business community and most of the public ignore their concerns because they don't appear to matter. Dissenters are, in fact, often dismissed as critics of capitalism or proponents of socialism because it seems to neoclassical economists – and to those outside academia – that they are attacking capitalism itself and not economic theory. "You think markets are unstable? Shame on you!"




The story is entirely different when asset markets crash beneath a mountain of debt, and the ensuing fallout threatens to take the physical economy with it. Now, in light of the global financial crisis, it should be possible to appreciate the critics of neoclassical economics for what we really are: critics of a fundamentally false theory and tentative developers of a new, realistic analysis of the nature of capitalism – warts and all.




Changing Pedagogy




Given the present severity of the crisis, the urgent need to reform economic theory and education should be obvious. But though the "irresistible force" of the global financial crisis is indeed immense, so is the inertia of the "immovable object" of economic belief.




Despite the ways in which the crisis has affected our everyday world, academic neoclassical economists will continue to teach from the same textbooks in 2009 and 2010 that they used in 2008 and earlier (laziness will be as much a factor here as ideological commitment). Rebel economists will be emboldened enough to proclaim, "I told you so" in their non-core subjects, but in the core micro, macro and finance units it will be business as usual. Many undergraduate economics students in the coming years will sit gobsmacked as their lecturers recite textbook theory as if nothing extraordinarily different is taking place in the real economy.




The same will happen in the academic journals. The editors of the American Economic Review and the Economic Journal are unlikely to convert to post-Keynesian economics, evolutionary economics or econophysics anytime soon, let alone be replaced by editors who are already practitioners of such unorthodox thought. The battle against entrenched neoclassical economic orthodoxy within academia promises to be long and hard, even though the discipline's failure is glaringly obvious to those in the outside world.




It will be a difficult struggle mainly because neoclassical economists are genuinely naive about their role in causing the crisis. Instead they will attribute any failures to poor regulation and government intervention in the markets. Any aspects of the crisis that cannot be solely attributed to these causes will be covered by embellishing basic neoclassical theory. The subprimes scam, for example, will be easily explained by the theory of asymmetric information.




Neoclassical economists seriously believe that far from the crisis calling for the abolition of their discipline, it actually calls for the theory to be more widely propagated. The idea that this financial crisis could require any change in what they do, let alone necessitate the rejection of neoclassical theory altogether, will strike them as completely incredible.




In this sense, they are like the Maxwellian physicists about whom Max Planck remarked, "A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it."




But physics is charmed in comparison to economics, since it is inherently an empirical discipline. Planck's confidence that a new generation would take the place of the old was therefore well founded. But in economics, the neoclassical old guard will not only resist change, they may – if economic circumstances stabilize – give rise to a new generation that faithfully accepts their interpretation of the crisis. That's exactly how the Keynesian counterrevolution came about, and it's the reason we are facing this crisis with an even more rabid neoclassicism than that which confronted Keynes in the 1930s.




It is crucial that this crisis galvanizes student protest against the lack of debate within academic economics. Dissident academic economists will be unable to effect change without student bodies exerting massive pressure on the old guard. I was one of many students who protested against neoclassical economics in the early 1970s at Sydney University and campaigned for the establishment of a Political Economy Department. Were it not for student protests, the non-neoclassical staff at Sydney University would have had no chance at all of changing that department.




And though we won that battle at Sydney University, we lost the war. The economic downturn of the mid-1970s allowed for the defeat of what Joan Robinson aptly called "Bastard Keynesianism" and ushered in its replacement: Friedman's "monetarism." Our protests were also wrongly characterized as being essentially anti-capitalist. Though there were indeed many anti-capitalists within the political economy movement, the real target of student protest was a poor theory of how capitalism operates, not capitalism itself.




Similar observations can be made about the paecon movement, which began when student dissatisfaction with neoclassical economics in France spilled and ignited a worldwide movement. Though the movement's initial impact was substantial, neoclassical dominance of economic pedagogy continued unabated. paecon persisted, but its relevance to the real economy wasn't appreciated because that economy appeared to be booming. Now that the global economy is in crisis, students need to regroup and pounce – they need to apply massive pressure in order to ensure that real change to economic pedagogy occurs.




Pressure from business groups is also essential. To some degree, these groups naively believe that those who herald the virtues of the market system and argue on the side of business in disputes over income distribution are their allies while market critics are their enemies. I hope that this financial catastrophe will convince the business community that its true friends in the academy are those who understand the market system, whether they criticize or praise it. As much as we need students to revolt over the teaching of economics, we need business to bring pressure on academic economics departments to revise their curricula.




Changing Economics




The pedagogic pressure from students and the wider community has to be matched by the accelerated development of alternatives to neoclassical economics. Though we know much more today about the innate flaws in neoclassical thought than was known at the time of the Great Depression, the development of an alternative is still a long way off. There are multiple alternative schools of thought extant – from post-Keynesian economics to evolutionary economics to behavioral economics to econophysics – but they're not yet developed to the point of providing a fully fledged alternative to neoclassical economics.




But the fact that we do not yet have a viable alternative shouldn't dissuade us from dispensing completely with the neoclassical approach. We have to accept a period of turmoil and uncertainty in order to overcome flawed theory. Hanging on to parts of a failed paradigm simply because it has components that other schools lack would be a tragic mistake. It is from precisely such relics that a neoclassical vision could once again rise when (or if) the market economy emerges from this crisis.




We need a rejection of neoclassical microeconomics in its entirety. An all-encompassing rejection was precisely what Keynes's revolution was missing. While Keynes tried to overthrow macroeconomic shibboleths like Say's Law, he continued to accept microeconomic concepts (such as perfect competition) and their unjustified projection into macroeconomic areas. He believed, for example, that the marginal productivity theory of income distribution, which is fundamentally a micro concept, applied at the macro level of wage determination.




From this failure to expunge the microeconomic foundations of neoclassical economics from post-Great Depression theory arose the "microfoundations of macroeconomics" debate, which ultimately led to a model in which the economy is viewed as a single utility-maximizing individual blessed with perfect knowledge of the future.




Fortunately, behavioral economics provides the beginnings of an alternative vision of how individuals operate in a market environment, while multi-agent modeling and network theory give us foundations for understanding group dynamics in a complex society. These approaches explicitly emphasize what neoclassical economics has evaded: that aggregation of heterogeneous individuals results in emergent properties of the group, which cannot be reduced to the behavior of any "representative individual." These approaches should replace neoclassical microeconomics completely.




The changes to economic theory beyond the micro level involve a complete recanting of the neoclassical vision. The vital first step here is to abandon the obsession with equilibrium.




The fallacy that dynamic processes must be modeled as if the system is in continuous equilibrium is probably the most important reason for the intellectual failure of neoclassical economics. Mathematics, science and engineering developed tools long ago to model outside of equilibrium processes. This dynamic approach to thinking about the economy should become second nature to economists.




An essential pedagogic step here is to relegate the teaching of mathematical methods in economics to mathematics departments. Any mathematical training in economics, if it occurs at all, should come after students have at the very least completed course work in basic calculus, algebra and differential equations (the last being one about which most economists are woefully ignorant). This simultaneously explains why neoclassical economists obsess too much about proofs and why non-neoclassical economists, like those in the Circuit School, experience such difficulties in translating excellent verbal ideas about credit creation into coherent dynamic models of a monetary production economy.




Neoclassical economics has effectively insulated itself from the great advances made in science and engineering over the last 40 years. This self-imposed isolation must come to an end. For while the concepts of neoclassical economics appear difficult, they are actually quaint in comparison to the sophistication evident in today's mathematics, engineering, computing, evolutionary biology and physics. In order to advance, economics must humbly submit to learning from disciplines that it has studiously ignored for so long. Some researchers in outside fields have called for the wholesale replacement of standard economics curricula, using at least the building blocks of modern thought inherent in other disciplines. In light of the catastrophe economists have visited upon the real world, those calls carry substantial weight.




In response to a paper critical of trends in econophysics, for example, physicist Joe McCauley responded that, though some of the objections were valid, the problems in economics proper were far worse. He suggested that: "… the economists revise their curriculum and require that the following topics be taught: calculus through the advanced level, ordinary differential equations (including advanced), partial differential equations (including Green functions), classical mechanics through modern nonlinear dynamics, statistical physics, stochastic processes (including solving Smoluchowski and Fokker-Planck equations), computer programming (C, Pascal, etc.) and, for complexity, cell biology. Time for such classes can be obtained in part by eliminating microeconomics and macroeconomics classes from the curriculum. The students will then face a much harder curriculum and those who survive will come out ahead. So might society as a whole."




The economic theory that should eventually emerge from the rejection of neoclassical economics and the basic adoption of dynamic methods will come much closer to meeting Alfred Marshall's dictum that "the Mecca of the economist lies in economic biology rather than in economic dynamics." As Thorstein Veblen correctly surmised over a century ago, the failure of economics to become an evolutionary science is the product of the optimizing framework of the underlying paradigm, which is inherently antithetical to the process of evolutionary change. This is the primary reason why the neoclassical mantra that the economy must be perceived as the outcome of the decisions of utility-maximizing individuals must be squarely rejected.




Economics also has to become a fundamentally monetary discipline – from the consideration of how individuals make market decisions through to our understanding of macroeconomics. The myth of "the money illusion" (which can only be true in a world without debt) has to be immediately dispelled, while our macroeconomics have to reflect a monetary economy in which nominal magnitudes matter, precisely because they are the link between the value of current output and the financing of accumulated debt. The dangers of excessive debt and deflation simply cannot be comprehended from a neoclassical perspective.




The discipline must also become fundamentally empirical, in contrast to the faux empiricism of econometrics. By this I mean basing itself on the economic and financial data first and foremost – the collection and interpretation of which has been the hallmark of contributions by econophysicists – and by respecting economic history, a topic that has been systematically expunged from economics departments around the world. It, along with a non-Whig approach to the history of economic thought, should be restored to the economics curriculum. Important names that are conspicuously absent from modern economics courses – Karl Marx, Thorstein Veblen, John Maynard Keynes, Irving Fisher,


Michal Kalecki, Joseph Schumpeter, Hyman Minsky, Piero Sraffa and Richard Goodwin – should echo throughout the halls of universities around the world.


Steve Keen is the Associate Professor of Economics and Finance at the University of Western Sydney and the author of Debunking Economics. Check out his blogs at debunkingeconomics.com and debtdeflation.com/blogs.
 
      


__,_._,___

6 mar 2010

Fwd: Today's Headlines: Jobless Rate Holds Steady, Raising Hopes of Recovery








I

  Saturday, March 6, 2010
  Compiled 2 AM E.T.
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Jobless Rate Holds Steady, Raising Hopes of Recovery
By PETER S. GOODMAN and JAVIER C. HERNANDEZ
The economy in February shed 36,000 nonfarm jobs, fewer than forecast, as the unemployment rate held at 9.7 percent, the Labor Department said on Friday.

U.S. Aiding Somalia in Its Plan to Retake Its Capital
By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN
The U.S. is concerned about terrorism links between Somalia and Yemen, and its assistance could be crucial to the effort by Somalia's government to bring order after decades of anarchy.

Unity Elusive as Iraq Grasps Trappings of Democracy
By ANTHONY SHADID
Iraq's elections are among the most free in the region, but the nation's politics are more vibrant than its institutions, threatening the democratic experiment.

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QUOTATION OF THE DAY

"Our forefathers in their infinite wisdom planned for crazy. But this week we moved to insane."
KEITH WRIGHT, a Democratic assemblyman from Manhattan, on the dysfunction of state government in Albany.


WORLD OPINION

Video: The Female Factor — Securing the Peace in Liberia
Women in peacekeeping forces have inspired Liberian women to don uniforms. Related Article
Bloggingheads: Down with 'Avatar'!
Walter Kirn and Susan Orlean discuss whether blockbusters are squeezing out story-driven films.

WORLD

On Final Campaign Day, Iraqi Leader Lists Gains
By STEVEN LEE MYERS and MARC SANTORA
Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki made a detailed and at times pugnacious case to be re-elected.

In Testimony, Brown Says Iraq War Was 'Right Decision'
By LANDON THOMAS Jr. and ALAN COWELL
Prime Minister Gordon Brown of Britain on Friday defended the decision to go to war but questioned American planning for the aftermath.

Ex-Leader Is Top Rival to Premier in Iraq Vote
By TIM ARANGO
Ayad Allawi, a former prime minister, is staging a surprising political comeback by pushing a secular and nationalist agenda and drawing support from Sunnis.

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U.S.

DETROIT JOURNAL
Seeking a Future for a Symbol of a Grander Past
By SUSAN SAULNY
Despite a vote by the City Council last year to demolish Michigan Central Station, many in Detroit now want to find a new use for the 97-year-old building.

Gunman at Pentagon Linked to Anger Against U.S.
By IAN URBINA
Officials said the shooter may have sought revenge on the government he suggested had staged the Sept. 11 attacks.

In Illinois, Race Is Set for Governor
By MONICA DAVEY
The Democratic governor, Patrick J. Quinn, will take on Bill Brady, who was declared the winner of last month's Republican primary.

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White House Postpones Picking Site of 9/11 Trial
By CHARLIE SAVAGE
The Obama administration said it would make no decision on where to prosecute the terror case "for weeks."

Congressman Accused of Harassment Resigns
By DAVID M. HALBFINGER and RAYMOND HERNANDEZ
Eric J. Massa, who had announced a few days ago that he would retire from the House at the end of his term, moved up his departure to next week, citing health reasons.

Massachusetts Democrat Won't Seek 8th House Term
By KATIE ZEZIMA
Representative William D. Delahunt, 68, said his decision had nothing to do with the current partisan political climate.

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For Auto Towns, an Obama Emissary Is Ambassador of Hope
By LOUIS UCHITELLE
Edward B. Montgomery can't bring auto jobs back, but he's helping depressed former car-assembly towns tap federal money to build new futures.

Millions of Toyotas Recalled, None in Japan
By HIROKO TABUCHI
Despite reports of unintended accelerations, Toyota denied the problems existed in Japan, where a pro-business culture undermines consumer protections.

G.M. Plans to Reinstate 661 Dealerships
By NICK BUNKLEY
The number is more than half of the nearly 1,100 dealers who challenged the automaker's termination decision last year, and allows the company to avoid costly arbitration.

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VIDEO GAME REVIEW | BIOSHOCK 2
Making Another Dive Into Evils of the Deep
By SETH SCHIESEL
BioShock 2 is fun, but it is also a bit stagnant in its creative ambition.

Apple iPad to Arrive in Stores on April 3
By NICK BILTON
Apple announced the date when the Wi-Fi only version of the iPad will arrive in United States stores. The 3G version of the device will be coming later in April.

Former Book Designer Says Good Riddance to Print
By NICK BILTON
A man who long made his living from physical books says the arguments against e-book devices miss a key point: for most printed matter, the value is in the content, not the physical form.

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Bears Are Big Spenders in Free Agency
By JUDY BATTISTA
Chicago, normally one of the more conservative spending franchises, went on a shopping spree Friday, adding Julius Peppers, Chester Taylor and Brandon Manumaleuna.

Women's Basketball Recoils From Publicity Surrounding Punch
By KAREN CROUSE
Brittney Griner's two-game suspension for punching an opponent and breaking her nose brought women's basketball the kind of attention it does not want.

Mets Will Send Reyes for Testing on Thyroid
By DAVID WALDSTEIN
The Mets pushed back Jose Reyes's spring training debut indefinitely while the 26-year-old shortstop has tests on his thyroid gland.

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MUSIC REVIEW
The Trippy '60s in a Guggenheim Time Machine
By JON PARELES
On Thursday, Animal Collective and Danny Perez took over the Guggenheim Museum, from floor to ceiling, with an event called "Transverse Temporal Gyrus" that was virtually song-free.

The Spirit of Freaknik Comes to TV
By DAVE ITZKOFF
The rapper T-Pain's bawdy, animated "Freaknik: The Musical" brings pointed commentary on race to the Cartoon Network's Adult Swim.

Fake Former Presidents Use Comedy for a Cause
By BRIAN STELTER
The kings of presidential comedy were reunited last weekend — with a little nudge from the Congressional Oversight Panel.

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NEW YORK/REGION

Haitians in U.S. Double Up to Take In Their Own
By ANNE BARNARD
Households are vibrating with relief and claustrophobia as relatives displaced by the quake seek shelter.

Dysfunction Displaces Work in a Distracted Albany
By MICHAEL POWELL and NICHOLAS CONFESSORE
No party can muster a majority in the State Senate, the governor is notable for his absence and a $9 billion budget gap must be plugged in weeks.

Paterson Insists He'll Clear His Name
By JEREMY W. PETERS and DANNY HAKIM
If he were to resign because of unproved allegations, Gov. David A. Paterson of New York says, all public officials would become more vulnerable.

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TRAVEL

Tuscany Without the Crowds
By DANIELLE PERGAMENT
With few tourists, the dead of winter is the time to visit Tuscany, when the landscape is bright green, locals fill the cafes, and the cuisine is at its best.

36 Hours in Palm Beach, Fla.
By GERALDINE FABRIKANT
This tiny island, north of Fort Lauderdale, boasts dreamy estates and wide, uncrowded beaches.

PERSONAL JOURNEYS
Hiking Deep Into Dogon Country in Mali
By JOSHUA HAMMER
A growing number of Western tourists are traveling to West Africa to experience the rituals of daily life in the Dogon cliffside villages.

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EDITORIALS

'If You Bring in the Cops'
A police training program in Afghanistan, oriented toward ensuring civilian security, not paramilitary combat against the Taliban, must be one of Washington's top priorities.

Justice for Judges
Refusing to grant pay increases for judges would be grossly unfair, undermine the quality of the court system, and ignore the ruling by the Court of Appeals.

So Much for Jobs, Jobs, Jobs
Without more fiscal aid to the states, layoffs, on the wane in the private sector, will shift to the public sector.

Refereeing the Health Care Debate
The Republicans have done a great deal to obstruct health care reform, but it's patently absurd to pick on the Senate parliamentarian.

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OP-ED

Cops vs. Kids
By BOB HERBERT
It's time to rein in the way police and safety officers in New York public schools mistreat students.

Trading Away Productivity
By ALAN TONELSON and KEVIN L. KEARNS
Washington acknowledges that much of America's economic policy rides on false assumptions, but has yet to correct it.

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ON THIS DAY

On March 6, 1857, in its Dred Scott decision, the Supreme Court held that Scott, a slave, could not sue for his freedom in a federal court.
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