This page is intended to provide ready access to all of my most important posts. To begin with, I list all of my columns and the top 150 other posts based on May 28, 2012 through July 31, 2016 data, when this blog was on Tumblr. Then I give links to other posts in categories. For more recents posts, don't miss:
Even more recent posts can be seen at the Archive link above, and my most popular storified Twitter discussions are here.
Recent Bloomberg and Quartz Columns: (no pageview data available to enable ranking):
Quartz Columns Through 2017, in Order of Popularity:
There’s One Key Difference Between Kids Who Excel at Math and Those Who Don’t
The Coming Transformation of Education: Degrees Won’t Matter Anymore, Skills Will
The Case for Gay Marriage is Made in the Freedom of Religion
After Crunching Reinhart and Rogoff’s Data, We Find No Evidence That High Debt Slows Growth
The Swiss National Bank Means Business with Its Negative Rates
The National Security Case for Raising the Gasoline Tax Right Now
Will Narendra Modi’s Economic Reforms Put India on the Road to Being a Superpower?
The Shakeup at the Minneapolis Fed and the Battle for the Soul of Macroeconomics
How Increasing Retirement Saving Could Give America More Balanced Trade
Human Grace: Gratitude is Not Simple Sentiment; It is the Motivation that Can Save the World
Larry Summers Just Confirmed That He is Still a Heavyweight on Economic Policy
How to Avoid Another NASDAQ Meltdown: Slow Down Trading (to Only 20 Times Per Second)
Benjamin Franklin’s Strategy to Make the US a Superpower Worked Once, Why Not Try It Again?
Gather ‘round, Children, and Hear How to Heal a Wounded Economy
QE or Not QE: Even Economists Needs Lessons In Quantitative Easing, Bernanke Style
Don’t Believe Anyone Who Claims to Understand the Economics of Obamacare
Swiss Pioneers! The Swiss as the Vanguard for Negative Interest Rates
Radical Banking: The World Needs New Tools to Fight the Next Recession
How Italy and the UK Can Stimulate Their Economies Without Further Damaging Their Credit Ratings
Janet Yellen is Hardly a Dove: She Knows the US Economy Needs Some Unemployment
Four More Years! The US Economy Needs a Third Term of Ben Bernanke
Japan Should Be Trying Out a Next Generation Monetary Policy
One of the Biggest Threats to America’s Future Has the Easiest Fix
Could the UK be the First Country to Adopt Electronic Money?
Optimal Monetary Policy: Could the Next Big Idea Come from the Blogosphere?
Why You Should Care about Other People’s Children as Much as Your Own
Get Real: Bob Shiller’s Nobel Should Help the World Improve Imperfect Financial Markets
Read His Lips: Why Ben Bernanke Had to Set Firm Targets for the Economy
How Subordinating Paper Money to Electronic Money Can End Recessions and End Inflation
That Baby Born in Bethlehem Should Inspire Society to Keep Redeeming Itself
Three Big Questions for Larry Summers, Janet Yellen, and Anyone Else Who Wants to Head the Fed
The Man in the Tank: It’s Time to Honor the Unsung Hero of Tiananmen Square
Yes, There is an Alternative to Austerity Versus Spending: Reinvigorate America’s Nonprofits
John Taylor is Wrong: The Fed is Not Causing Another Recession
However Low Interest Rates Might Go, the IRS Will Never Act Like a Bank
Make No Mistake about the Taper—the Fed Wishes It Could Stimulate the Economy More
Nationalists vs. Cosmopolitans: Social Scientists Need to Learn from Their Brexit Blunder
Off the Rails: What the Heck is Happening to the US Economy? How to Get the Recovery Back on Track
VAT: Help the Poor and Strengthen the Economy by Changing the Way the US Collects Tax
Talk Ain’t Cheap: You Should Expect Overreaction When the Fed Makes a Mess of Explaining Its Plans
Economics Is Unemotional—And That's Why It Could Help Bridge America's Partisan Divide
Obama Could Really Help the US Economy by Pushing for More Legal Immigration
Does Ben Bernanke Want to Replace GDP with a Happiness Index?
How to Stabilize the Financial System and Make Money for US Taxpayers
Al Roth’s Nobel Prize is in Economics, but Doctors Can Thank Him, Too
Italy Should Look to Ancient Rome to Reform Its Ineffective Senate
Symbol Wanted: Maybe Europe’s Unity Doesn’t Rest on Its Currency. Joint Mission to Mars, Anyone?
Bloomberg Columns (in Chronological Order)
Major Pieces First Appearing in Other Outlets (in Arbitrary Order)
Slate: Governments Can and Should Beat Bitcoin at Its Own Game
The Independent: Why George Osborne Should Give Everyone in Britain a New Credit Card
Columns Rejected by Quartz Because of Their Topics
Top 150 Posts on supplysideliberal.com:
How and Why to Eliminate the Zero Lower Bound: A Reader’s Guide 11,386
The Medium-Run Natural Interest Rate and the Long-Run Natural Interest Rate 10,375
The Logarithmic Harmony of Percent Changes and Growth Rates 8,894
Sticky Prices vs. Sticky Wages: A Debate Between Miles Kimball and Matthew Rognlie 7,126
Monetary vs. Fiscal Policy: Expansionary Monetary Policy Does Not Raise the Budget Deficit 6,256
Isaac Sorkin: Don’t Be Too Reassured by Small Short-Run Effects of the Minimum Wage 4,669
The Message of Mormonism for Atheists Who Want to Stay Atheists 4,485
Noah Smith Joins My Debate with Paul Krugman: Debt, National Lines of Credit, and Politics 3,819
The Deep Magic of Money and the Deeper Magic of the Supply Side 3,717
Silvio Gesell’s Plan for Negative Nominal Interest Rates 2,985
Trillions and Trillions: Getting Used to Balance Sheet Monetary Policy 2,788
How Conservative Mormon America Avoided the Fate of Conservative White America 2,574
The Shape of Production: Charles Cobb’s and Paul Douglas’s Boon to Economics 2,519
Getting the Biggest Bang for the Buck in Fiscal Policy 2,285
A Note for Graduate Students in Economics Looking for Ph.D. Dissertation Topics 2,108
Why I am a Macroeconomist: Increasing Returns and Unemployment 2,093
Ben Bernanke on Why the Fed Has an Inflation Target of 2% 1,978
Milton Friedman: Celebrating His 100th Birthday with Videos of Milton 1,901
Let the Wrong Come to Me, For They Will Make Me More Right 1,821
Is Monetary Policy Thinking in Thrall to Wallace Neutrality? 1,702
Leveling Up: Making the Transition from Poor Country to Rich Country 1,614
Henrik Jensen: Willem and the Negative Nominal Interest Rate 1,557
Jonathan Meer and Jeremy West: Effects of the Minimum Wage on Employment Dynamics 1,552
Bruce Greenwald: The Death of Manufacturing & the Global Deflation 1,198
18 Misconceptions about Eliminating the Zero Lower Bound 1,176
The Flat Tax, The Head Tax and the Size of Government: A Tax Parable 1,146
Anat Admati, Martin Hellwig and John Cochrane on Bank Capital Requirements 1,118
John Stuart Mill on Being Offended at Other People’s Opinions or Private Conduct 1,074
The Wrong Side of Cobb-Douglas: Matt Rognlie’s Smackdown of Thomas Piketty Gains Traction 1,071
Larry Summers: The Fed Looks Set to Make a Dangerous Mistake by Raising Rates this Year 1,051
Why My Retirement Savings Accounts are Currently 100% in the Stock Market 1,029
Noah Smith: Why Do Americans Like Jews and Dislike Mormons? 1,029
Robert Graboyes on Enabling Supply-Side Innovation in Health Care 999
Greg Shill: Does the Fed Have the Legal Authority to Buy Equities? 957
Preventing Recession-Fighting from Becoming a Political Football 947
What to Do When the World Desperately Wants to Lend Us Money 934
Miles’s April 9, 2006 Unitarian Universalist Sermon: “UU Visions” 929
Friends and Sparring Partners: The Skyline from My Corner of the Blogosphere 889
Jeff Smith: More on Getting into an Economics PhD Program 862
John Stuart Mill’s Argument Against Political Correctness 812
Bruce Bartlett on Careers in Economics and Related Fields 810
John Stuart Mill: A Remedy for the One-Sidedness of the Human Mind 795
John Stuart Mill’s Vigorous Advocacy of Education Vouchers 780
Principles of Macroeconomics Posts through September 3, 2012 728
Miles’s Best 7 “Save-the-World” Posts, as of July 7, 2012 708
Responding to Joseph Stiglitz on Negative Interest Rates 685
Glenn Ellison’s New Book: Hard Math for Elementary School 685
Most Important Aggregator Posts
How and Why to Eliminate the Zero Lower Bound: A Reader’s Guide
How and Why to Expand the Nonprofit Sector as a Partial Alternative to Government: A Reader’s Guide
Gabriela D'Souza on Failure in Learning Math (with links to posts on math learning)
Helicopter Drops of Money Are Not the Answer (with links at the bottom to posts on federal lines of credit, national rainy day accounts and related ideas)
Live: The Egocentric Illusion (with links to other UU sermons)
Live: Teleotheism and the Purpose of Life (with links to other key religion posts)
Noah Smith: Sunni Islam is Failing (with links to other religion posts by Noah Smith)
Happiness and Satisfaction Are Not Everything: Toward Well Being Indices Based on Stated Preferences
Math Learning for Kids Who Have a Tough Time (with links on math education and math learning)
Other Aggregator Posts
Making a Difference: Save-the-World Posts as of December 3, 2013
Principles of Macroeconomics Posts through September 3, 2012
A Guided Tour through Meta-posts at the End of the Second Cycle
Posts on Politics and Political Economy through September 1, 2012
Posts on Religion, Philosophy, Science, Literature and Culture through August 27, 2012
Monetary Policy Other Than Negative Interest Rates (most recent first)
Peter Conti-Brown on Marriner Eccles and the Refounding of the Fed
Gauti Eggertsson and Miles Kimball: Quantitative Easing vs. Forward Guidance
Luke Kawa: How Central Banks Gained More Control Over the World’s Major Currencies
Why a Weaker Effect of Exchange Rates on Net Exports Doesn’t Weaken the Power of Monetary Policy
Alex Rosenberg Interviews Miles Kimball on the Responsiveness of Monetary Policy to New Information
Owen Nie: Monetary Policy in Colonial New York, New Jersey and Delaware
Paul Krugman Deconstructs Martin Feldstein's Critique of Quantitative Easing
Jo Craven McGinty: Easy to Lose and Expensive to Produce: Is the Penny Worth It?
Allan H. Meltzer: Don't Be Distracted by the Last 5+ Years--Massive Inflation is Coming
João Marcus Marinho Nunes on Japan’s Monetary Policy Experiment
Wallace Neutrality Roundup: QE May Work in Practice, But Can It Work in Theory?
Reaching for Yield: The Effects of Interest Rates on Risk-Taking
Ryan Avent on the Fed's Plans to Keep Rates Low Even After Recovery is Underway
Michael Woodford Endorses Monetary Policy that Targets the Level of Nominal GDP
Should the Fed Promise to Do the Wrong Thing in the Future to Have the Right Effect Now?
Mike Konczal: What Constrains the Federal Reserve? An Interview with Joseph Gagnon
The supplysideliberal Review of the FOMC Monetary Policy Statement: June 20th, 2012
Is Monetary Policy Thinking in Thrall to Wallace Neutrality?
Miscellaneous Religion Posts (most recent first)
Christian Kimball: Anger [1], Marriage [2], and the Mormon Church [3]
The Mormon Church Decides to Treat Gay Marriage as Rebellion on a Par with Polygamy
Slavoj Zizek on the Psychological Insecurities of Terrorists
What If Jesus Was Really Resurrected? Musings of a Non-Supernaturalist
John Erdevig and Kenji Yano: A Personal East/West Convergence and “The Nature God”
Christian Kimball on the Fallibility of Mormon Leaders and on Gay Marriage
Marcelo Gleiser: "Astrotheology: Do Gods Need to Be Supernatural?"
Rodney Stark, the Rig Veda Hymn of Creation and the Cult of Bacchus
Inspirational Posts (most recent first)
The Importance of the Next Generation: Thomas Jefferson Grokked It
May the Best in the Human Spirit Vanquish the Worst in the Human Spirit
So What If We Don’t Change at All … and Something Magical Just Happens?
Jessica Tozer: Boldly Going into a Future Where All Men and Women are Created Equal
As I Faced the Fiscal Cliff, I Failed to Find Comfort in the Words of Winston Churchill
Milan Kundera on the Contribution of Novels to the Liberal Imagination
The True Story of How Economics Got Its Nickname "The Dismal Science"
John Locke Posts (in chronological order)
John Locke: Revolutions are Always Motivated by Misrule as Well as Procedural Violations
John Locke Looks for a Better Way than Believing in the Divine Right of Kings or Power to the Strong
John Locke: The Right to Enforce the Law of Nature Does Not Depend on Any Social Contract
John Locke: Law Is Only Legitimate When It Is Founded on the Law of Nature
John Locke: Foreign Affairs Are Still in the State of Nature
Law, Regulation and Policy (most recent first)
Gwynn Guilford: The Epic Battle Between Clinton and Trump is a Modern Day Morality Play
Next Year’s Momentous Supreme Court Decision: Reining in Public Sector Unions?
The Wonderful, Now Suppressed, Republican Study Committee Brief on Copyright Law (direct link)
Uwe Reinhardt: Does Occupational Licensing Deserve Our Approval? A Review of Work by Morris Kleiner (direct link)
Tyler Cowen: Regulations Hinder Development of Driverless Cars
Tyler Cowen on How Much Easier It Is to Create Regulations Than to Get Rid of Them (direct link)
Amanda Foreman: When Justice Drowns in Law (direct link)
Drew Hinshaw: Nigeria Produces Half the Electricity of North Dakota-for 249 Times More People
Jeff Smith: Why I Won’t Sign a Petition to Raise the Minimum Wage
Josh Barro: We Need a New Supply Side Economics–Here Are 8 Things We Can Do
John Cochrane: What Free-Market Medical Care Would Look Like
An Experiment with Equality of Outcome: The Case of Jamestown
Neil Irwin: American Manufacturing is Coming Back. Manufacturing Jobs Aren’t
Holman Jenkins on the Role of Organized Labor in Blocking Policy Initiatives in the Democratic Party
Clay Christensen Posts (in chronological Order)
Clay Christensen, Jerome Grossman and Jason Hwang on Intuitive Medicine vs. Precision Medicine
Clay Christensen, Jerome Grossman and Jason Hwang on the Personal Computer Revolution
Clay Christensen, Jerome Grossman and Jason Hwang on the Three Basic Types of Business Models
Math, Statistics, Writing and Teaching (most recent first)
Effort vs. Innate Ability: What I Learned from Being in the Spelling Bee
Jethra Spector: Using Miles and Noah’s Math Column in the Classroom
My Advice to Qatar: Make Math Education a Research Grand Challenge
Jessica Lahey: Teaching Math to People Who Think They Hate It
Marjorie Drysdale: Even When You Can Do Math, You May Not Love It
Michael Bloomberg: A University Cannot Be Great If Its Faculty Is Politically Homogenous
Elizabeth Cleland: How I Get All My Students to be Good at Math (direct link)
Matt Waite: How I Faced My Fears and Learned to Be Good at Math
Jing Liu: Show Kids that Solving Math Problems is Like Being a Detective
Eric Hanushek on the Importance of Improving Teacher Quality
Humanities, Science, History and Culture (most recent first)
Bret Stephens and Paul Krugman: What Should a Correction Look Like in the Digital Era?
Tom Bowen’s Gift to Humanity: A Powerful Australian Technology
Recasting “The Hunger Games” as a Parable about Immigration Policy
David Byrne: The Power of Democratizing Making Music and Art
The “Wait But Why” Blog on Why Generation Y Yuppies are Unhappy
Population Distribution of the United States in Units of Canadas (direct link)
Steven Pinker on How Taboos on What We Let Ourselves Think and Say Can Steer Us Wrong
Tunku Varadarajan on the Backlash Against Winner-Take-All in Online Journalism
Other Posts I Want to Highlight Not Listed Above Nor in Aggregator Posts (most recent first)
John T. Harvey: Five Reasons You Should Blame The Economics Discipline For Today's Problems
Q&A: Why is Fiscal Policy So Close to Being Neutral in Many Modern Macro Models?
Sarah Sloat: What is Cognitive Economics? Understanding the World Through New Types of Data
Q&A: Evidence that Financial Flows Determine the Overall Balance of Trade, Not Tariffs
Answering Adam Ozimek’s Skepticism about a US Sovereign Wealth Fund
Stephanie Shimko Interviews Miles Kimball about His Earliest and Latest Research
Robin Green: Don’t Recognize Racist Externalities with a Pigou Tax
Richard V. Reeves, Isabel Sawhill and Kimberly Howard: The Parenting Gap
Edward Glaeser, Joshua Gottlieb and Oren Ziv: Maximizing Happiness Does Not Maximize Welfare
The Wall Street Journal Editorial Board Comes Out for a Straight 15% Equity Requirement
Jonathan Clements on Integrating Human Capital into Your Portfolio
Another Quality Control Failure on the Wall Street Journal Editorial Page?
Brad Delong: Mr. Piketty and the “Neoclassicists”: A Suggested Interpretation (direct link)
Robert Flood and Miles Kimball on the Status of the Efficient Markets Theory
Justin Wolfers, Matthew Adler and Ori Heffetz: Round Table on Happiness
John L. Davidson on the Decline of the Quality of Information Processing in Lending
What Would Economic Growth Look Like If We Properly Valued the Web?
John L. Davidson on Resolving the House Mystery: The Institutional Realities of House Construction
Allison Schrager: The Economic Case for the US to Legalize All Drugs
Niklas Blanchard Defends Me Against the Wrath of Paul Krugman, Despite My Lack of Nuance
Miles on HuffPost Live: The Wrong Debate and How to Change It
How a US Sovereign Wealth Fund Can Alleviate a Scarcity of Safe Assets
The Marginalization of Economists at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
Bonnie Kavoussi's List on Huffington Post of "26 Economists You Should Be Following on Twitter" (direct link)
Duncan Green: Lant Pritchett v. the Randomistas on the Nature of Evidence--Is a Wonkwar Brewing?
Steven Johnson: We're Living the Dream, We Just Don't Realize It
Noah Smith: The Well-Behaved Japanese Poor Call Into Question the Idea that Poverty Stems from Bad Behavior (direct link)
Joshua Hausman: More Historical Evidence for What Federal Lines of Credit Would Do
The supplysideliberal Style Guide for Referring to Public Figures
About Paul Krugman: Having the Right Diagnosis Does Not Mean He Has the Right Cure
Another Dimension of Health Care Reform: Discouraging Soft Drink Consumption
Isomorphismes: A Skew Economy & the Tacking Theory of Growth
Milton Friedman's Thermostat: An Econometric Cautionary Tale
Joshua Hausman on Historical Evidence for What Federal Lines of Credit Would Do
“It Isn’t Easy to Figure Out How the World Works” (Larry Summers, 1984)
Adam Ozimek: What “You Didn’t Build That” Tells Us About Immigration
Will the Health Insurance Mandate Lead People to Take Worse Care of Their Health?
Bill Greider on Federal Lines of Credit: “A New Way to Recharge the Economy”
Dissertation Topic 3: Public Savings Systems that Lift the No-Margin-Buying Constraint
Miles’s Presentation at the Federal Reserve Board on May 14, 2012 (pptx)
Henry George and the Carbon Tax: A Quick Response to Noah Smith
Clive Crook: "Supply-Side Liberals"
Note: Although the primary location of supplysideliberal.com is now on Squarespace, posts from 2016 and before still exist on Tumblr. The archive for these posts on Tumblr is here at http://supplysideliberal.tumblr.com/archive.
The Scope and Readership of supplysideliberal.com
I need a post like this first and foremost for myself--to see what I have done in general, and on particular topics. But I also hope it helps both those who want to look at a few top posts and those who want to do a deep dive into supplysideliberal.com.
This post is especially valuable in showing the range of topics covered on supplysideliberal.com beyond negative interest rate policy, since here those posts are mostly covered indirectly by the one aggregator post “How and Why to Eliminate the Zero Lower Bound: A Reader’s Guide.”
I care a lot about current and future super-readers of this blog, who individually want to read many posts! Despite all of its flaws, Google Analytics is adequate for showing that there are indeed many super-readers. For example, taking the data in the graph below at face value, one can deduce using division and bounding that there are at least 73 readers with between 101 and 200 reading sessions each, and at least 193 readers with between 51 and 100 reading sessions each. At the other end of the spectrum, Google Analytics shows 364,219 distinct readers have been exposed to the website supplysideliberal.com itself exactly once.
It is interesting to see some of the demographic and geographical breakdown of readers. I wish I had more female readers, but I am happy with having readers of many different ages, though of course the young are more into blogs than the old:
I am especially pleased to have readers from around the world. Here are the top 50 cities shown by Google Analytics with the admittedly imperfect measure of sessions as follows giving some indication of relative weight:
City Sessions
New York 29,052
Ann Arbor 29,006
Washington 18,304
London 16,944
Chicago 10,034
Los Angeles 6,082
Sydney 5,663
Toronto 5,535
San Francisco 5,004
Boston 4,706
Seattle 4,424
Melbourne 4,231
Singapore 4,140
Cambridge, MA 4,077
Arlington 3,962
Philadelphia 3,871
Houston 3,460
Austin 3,176
Paris 3,118
Minneapolis 3,072
San Diego 2,747
Ottawa 2,494
Hong Kong 2,408
Madison 2,219
Dublin 2,199
Columbus 2,104
Canberra 2,069
Rome 2,063
Denver 2,044
Portland 2,026
Montreal 1,874
Atlanta 1,855
Berlin 1,848
New Delhi 1,793
Calgary 1,790
Brisbane 1,771
Bethesda 1,769
Cambridge, UK 1,738
Copenhagen 1,732
Berkeley 1,712
Durham 1,700
Bengaluru 1,696
Wellington 1,585
St. Louis 1,567
San Jose 1,557
Seoul 1,542
Evanston 1,480
Salt Lake City 1,451
Dallas 1,450
Mumbai 1,448
Explanation of the rankings:
The top 150 posts on supplysideliberal.com listed above are based on Google Analytics pageviews from June 3, 2012 through December 24, 2016. The number of pageviews is shown by each post. However, Google Analytics has been getting worse and worse in the job it is doing, both mechanically, and because more and more of the traffic has migrated to forms such as mobile access that Google Analytics is very bad at counting. Google Analytics counts 887,732 pageviews during this period but that is a big underestimate of the impact because of
that failure to count most readers on mobile devices
the failure to count those reading on Tumblr itself
not counting people reading the columns on Quartz
the mysterious dropoff to no more than a trickle of Google Analytics pageviews counted after the end of July, 2016 with no corresponding dropoff in any other measure of activity at that time.
Furthermore, of those 887,732 pageviews that are counted by Google Analytics, 221,260 are to the homepage, and so cannot be categorized by post.
(As I mentioned yesterday, in addition to greater confidence in the future of Squarespace than the future of Tumblr and increasingly greater functionality of Squarespace in creating and displaying posts compared to Tumblr, an important motivation for moving supplysideliberal.com to Squarespace is better analytics. For a long time now, I have felt I was flying blind with my blog given how little I could see through Google Analytics applied to a Tumblr blog.)
Nevertheless, the relative popularity of different posts for that limited subset of pageviews is informative. Indeed, with the passage of more time, the pageview ratings have come closer to my own judgment of the relative importance of posts as it becomes possible to see which posts have stood the test of time. And to be clear, if I think a post is more important, over time that adds to its pageviews because I link to it more often in subsequent posts and in tweets.
I have to handle my Quartz columns separately because that pageview data is proprietary. My very most popular pieces have been Quartz columns, so I list them first. I have listed them all plus a few columns in other outlets, with the ones with no data (yet) listed at the bottom. (To avoid duplication, I have disqualified companion posts to Quartz columns from the top 40 blog post list, since they eventually get recombined with the Quartz columns when I repatriate the columns. For these columns, the ranking is by pageviews at a point where things have settled down. For later posts, that is standardized to pageviews during the first 30 days when Quartz has an exclusive.)
Musings about the Top 10 Quartz columns:
The page view data I have for the Quartz columns is proprietary. But I can say that the top Quartz columns have dramatically more pageviews than are shown by Google Analytics for the top posts on my blog. So it is worth musing about the popularity of the top ten Quartz columns.
Five of the top ten Quartz columns–1, 2, 4, 7, 8–are about education. Somewhat to my surprise, this has emerged as an important theme on my blog, as Noah Smith identified when writing about this blog.
Four of the top ten columns are coauthored: 1 and 4 with Noah Smith, 8 with Anonymous and 9 with Yichuan Wang. It helps to have a top-notch coauthor.
Two of the top ten–3 and 6–are relatively recent columns with a strong religious or moral tone to them. I am glad to see that my efforts to articulate religious and moral themes find an audience as well as what I have to say about economics. I actually consider 5 to be in this category as well.
One of the top ten–9–is about Reinhart and Rogoff. Levels of interest for understanding Reinhart and Rogoff’s mistake was extraordinary.
One thing I pay attention to is how great a reach my most popular column on negative interest rates is. I am pleased to have one at 10.
Two of the top ten–3 and 5–touch on national security.