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Yglesias

Olympic Hockey

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I’m not normally a big hockey fan, but I’ve been enjoying the Olympics and thought this was smart from Barry Petchesky:

The quality of players is simply better. Look at the rosters of the top teams in the Olympics. Not a third- or fourth-liner among them. No guys on the team just for the PK, or to neutralize the opponent’s first line. These teams are stronger, faster and generally more skilled than any NHL team.

This is what makes Olympic hockey really stand out for me compared to a lot of other international team sports competitions. Injecting a little nationalistic rivalry into sports is always fun, but if you look at something like basketball only the United States can regularly field a squad that’s better, talent-wise, than your average NBA team. At the moment the Spanish National Team would also probably be better than most NBA teams, and in the past that was true of Argentina, but the result is basically some slim pickings. Hockey delivers a tournament where you see really good teams going at it for their country. And of course this is part of what makes the World Cup great—soccer is a sufficiently popular sport worldwide that many countries can field excellent teams.

Climate Progress

Rep. Tom Perriello tells ˜spineless Senate to get ˜its head out of its rear end and confront climate crisis

Tom PerrielloRep. Tom Perriello (D-VA) is “sick” of the “insider baseball crap” dominating the Senate debate over global warming and energy reform. In an interview with Grist, the first-term congressman stated in no uncertain terms that the country is at risk from global warming and our economy is at risk of losing the clean energy race. Like Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), and Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-OR), Perriello has not one lick of sympathy for those in the Senate who deny these threats:

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Yglesias

Food Taxes vs Food Subsidies

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In principle, taxing unhealthy food and subsidizing healthy food ought to have similar impacts on consumer behavior. But as we know, actual human decision-making often varies from what that kind of theoretically-correct indifference. Tyler Cowen points to some evidence that taxes would have more impact:

The results, just published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, show that taxes were more effective in reducing calories purchased over subsides. Specifically, taxing unhealthy foods reduced overall calories purchased, while cutting the proportion of fat and carbohydrates and upping the proportion of protein in a typical week’s groceries.

By contrast, subsidizing the prices of healthy food actually increased overall calories purchased without changing the nutritional value at all. It appears that mothers took the money they saved on subsidized fruits and vegetables and treated the family to less healthy alternatives, such as chips and soda pop. Taxes had basically the opposite effect, shifting spending from less healthy to healthier choices.

When you think about it in a broader context, taxes look even more favorable. If you tax unhealthy food, you’ll wind up with a bunch of revenue that you can spend on subsidized preschool or fixing potholes or lower general sales taxes. By contrast, if you subsidize healthy food, you’ll wind up needing to make your preschool subsidies less generous or take longer to fix potholes or raise general sales taxes. If there’s some very compelling reason to think that subsidies will be more efficacious at promoting public health than taxes, then of course you have to consider it seriously. But insofar as the evidence implies the reverse, there’s a very strong case for taxing unhealthy foods. Of course as a first step in an ideal world we’d reduce our spending on agricultural programs that subsidize production/consumption of unhealthy foods, a crazy policy initiative supported by nobody except all the relevant members of congress.

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