Saturday, January 3, 2015

Economics: for the people, for the planet, for profit

I was visiting with a college friend yesterday, slipping around Longmont in the snow and trying to have meaningful conversation through a haze of caffeine and frozen breath. Our talk quickly turned to problems with society, or lack thereof. As curmudgeonly as I am, I tend to be of the opinion that humanity is working toward a more sustainable, equitable future. And for the amount of Marxism I spout, I also tend to favor capitalism as an economic system. However, there is an amazing amount of bad rap that capitalism gets. I think that a lot of this stems from lack of understanding, and just the fact that applying an idealized system in the real world rarely works out as ideally promised.

Hence, I am now undertaking a project to walk through certain facets of economics that I think are not well understood. After all, a major tenet of economic theory is that the consumer is completely informed, which just doesn't happen. By spreading the word about economic theory, I hope to make the world of trade a little easier to navigate. As a bonus, students of economics can hopefully get slightly better grades in their classes.

I'm going to come at this from my background as an economics tutor and teaching assistant, trying to simplify and use the most real-world examples as possible, while also investigating aspects that I myself don't fully understand. I would love any critiques of the entries here in order to inform the public better. I'd ultimately like to integrate this blog with weekly lectures in a class I'm co-instructing this spring.

So, let's begin! We'll start with the basics: What exactly is economics?

The answer Wikipedia (the ultimate source) will give you is "the social science that governs economic activity to gain an understanding of the processes that govern the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services in an economy." Cool. So, economics is the study of how things and actions are made, move around, and used. Let's break down that definition just a little more:

"Goods" are tangible, physical things that are traded in an economy, like computers, scarves or, my favorite, coffee.

"Services" are actions people perform that can be traded. For example, a medical examination is a service. This is separate from the goods used to perform the examination, because they were purchased (or traded) before the exam took place. Other examples of services are babysitting, construction work, or technical support.

"Production" is how things are made. This typically involves some exchange of goods, like machinery, and services, employee labor, before whatever it is you are making can be produced. You can see how this can get complicated really fast.

"Distribution" is how things are moved around the economy. For example, a certain laptop model can either be purchased in a store like Best Buy or on Amazon. Each of these purchases is distinct, as there are typically different prices and motivations for the person buying the laptop. Amazon will usually have a shipping fee, but the customer doesn't have to travel to best Buy when they purchase from Amazon. Hence, the customer will weigh the various factors involved in this purchase and decide whether or not to purchase from Best Buy, Amazon, or not purchase at all. Since Amazon and Best Buy are competing for the consumer's business, they are known as "competitors".

"Consumption" is the use of a good or service. When the customer in the above example makes their decision and purchases a laptop from either Amazon or Best Buy, they are consuming the laptop. Consumption can be confusing at first because it doesn't necessarily refer to using a good to the end of its useful life, like it is when used to apply to food. Consuming food is still technically consumption in economics, as long as the food traveled through the economic system, but consuming a laptop certainly isn't the same thing as eating it.

There is a distinction between microeconomics and macroeconomics, too. I'll get into this more at a later date, but for now I'll leave you with a simple definition of either. Microeconomics is the study of a specific point in an economic system, such as the supply and demand of oranges produced by a single orange grower in California. Macroeconomics, as the name implies, focuses on larger areas of the economy, such as the interaction between trade tariffs and orange sales in the USA and Mexico.

I'll let you all muddle over these definitions for a while. I'll return in my next blog post with some definitions and examples of supply and demand, which I consider the bread and butter of modeling an economy of any scale.

As always, leave your questions or critiques in the comments section below. I'll definitely take this on the thread of whatever the readers want to know more about, so give me your input!

Monday, November 17, 2014

Write a little, write a lot

November is NaNoWriMo. I have participated in the past but due to my thesis defense on November 12th, I didn't even start this year.

Oh yeah. My thesis defense was November 12th. That's over. I passed the defense but, alas, still have mountains of revisions to do. Such is life.

Both of these topics are seemingly unrelated, but hey, they're both writing. Lots of writing. More writing than I like to do. When presented with large tasks like this, I get nervous. Really nervous. Palm sweating, eyeball-rubbing, hair-pulling, eat-a-tub of cookie dough kind of nervous. I am not a big-picture kind of gal. I like small tasks, easily achievable deadlines. I also like being surrounded by people, if not to support me in my goals then at least to suffer alongside me. There's no reason every task can't be like this. I shall break down my big goals into smaller ones, and surround myself with the bathing blue glow of the internet! Because that's completely healthy. Right? *cough*

Hence, I am heretoforth setting a goal to write something every day. Whether or not it is long, whether or not it relates to my ultimate career goals, I should write something in its entirety each day. There is nothing more satisfying than finishing something, and tere has been a distinct lack of finishing things in my life as of late.

So, Blogger, expect to see a lot more activity from one Thesis Peon.

Sunday, July 27, 2014

The Rare and Exciting Bug Bites of the Amazon Rainforest

Having spent close to two weeks either next to or in the Amazon rainforest, I consider myself a near-expert on the local flora and fauna. I wanted to share a bit of this knowledge with the populace at large and give a quick run-down of the more exotic bug bites I have gotten here.

1) Mosquito bites: not your everyday Colorado mosquitos! Some of these critters are nearly the size of a teaspoon, and boy are they sneaky! Watch your back and wear your DEET, folks!

2) What appear to be chigger bites but are actually mosquito bites: When the bites are concentrated and spread over one area, for example the leg which had been covered by jeans all day and had no possibility of receiving mosquito bites, you might at first think you have been visited by chiggers. But two days will tell you that, in fact, these actually came from mosquitoes with the ability to bite through thick denim!

3) Stings of various sorts: Sometimes you feel a prickly sensation and a stinging, followed by a raised welt. If it's on your feet and you've recently been walking anywhere without the aid of boots, it could be jungle ants. However, more rare and exotic are the jungle mosquitoes! If the welt starts to itch soon afterward, you'll know you had a special visitor.

4) Bites in mysterious places: The bottoms of your feet, the palms of your hands, and yes, even your very eyelids, are all places that you wouldn't imagine you could get bug bites. But lo and behold, every inch of exposed skin is an invitation for a new type of insect. If you're especially covered in clothing, only the boldest of insects dare approach. Some especially rare varieties of mosquitoes actually have developed the ability to blend in with eyelashes and latch onto your eyelid for a quick snack. Even if you never see them, you know you've been gifted with a bite from a very exotic insect.

5) What you imagine to be botfly larvae: After sitting at dinner with a rainforest veteran telling you about the time she brought home a botfly on the back of your leg, you may start to rethink every mole and pimple on your body. Is it a botfly? Fear not, intrepid traveler! Recall that botfly eggs are carried on the legs of the uncommon mosquito. It is extremely unlikely to be a botfly. But just to be safe, keep obsessing over every unaccounted-for blemish. After all, it could, amazingly enough, be another mosquito bite!

6) Bites on bites: When your skin is completely covered in welts and you have scratched through all epidermis on your body, you may feel that the insects cannot possibly get any worse. However, now is the time to be especially cautious. Certain types of mosquitoes are filled with such hateful fury that they bite only those who have suffered the most from their brethren. Do not let your despair overwhelm you, and especially do not resign yourself to the presence of mosquitoes. Constant vigilance is your only way of surviving.

So there you have it, the many different types of bites from a large variety of jungle insects. The rainforest is full of millions of lifeforms, and it would be astonishing if you did not receive all of the above-mentioned bites during your stay here, however brief it may be. However, with a little appreciation of Mother Nature and a 100 pack of Benadryl, you too can happily enjoy your drowsy stay in the Amazon rainforest. Enjoy your adventures, my friends.

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Summertime, when the thesis is easy (relatively)

Well, our NGO's conference is over, I have run the Bolder Boulder, and the first non-snowy hike of the season was taken. Also, I have been taken by a virus, so it's obviously summer. That's how everyone defines the season, right?

The good thing about having a cold is that I've collected loads of papers for my literature review, and actually have motivation to write.

The bad thing about having a cold is that my bedside companions are medical bills and Kleenex.

Caption: This is a caption. 


So anyway, left alignment, Times New Roman, 12 point font.

I have a distinct feeling the virus is eating my brain.

I WROTE A BLOG!