Friday, 25 September 2015

Asian greens recipe

Adam Liaw shows how to cook Oiled greens.


Wednesday, 12 August 2015

Imply vs Infer

I don't want to imply that readers might have trouble with their grammar, although some might infer that, but Tina Blue has written a useful little guide to help Learn the Difference BetweenImply and  Infer.

Friday, 17 July 2015

A mini ice age isn't coming

As Dana Nuccitelli reports in No, the sun isn't going to save us from global warming
To sum up, a number of scientific studies have asked the question, ‘if the sun were to enter another extended quiet phase (a grand solar minimum), how would that impact global surface temperatures?’. Every study agrees, it would cause no more than 0.3°C cooling, which would only be enough to temporarily offset about a decade’s worth of human-caused global warming.

Saturday, 16 May 2015

Strawberry Oatmeal Bars recipe

Ree Drummonds Strawberry Oatmeal Bars.


Note, 1 stick of butter = 113 grams, so use 200g in this recipe.
350F = 180C

Thursday, 14 May 2015

Wednesday, 6 May 2015

Walk to improve your health

In A Little Bit of Walking Can Add up to Improve Your Health Christopher Wanjek and LiveScience report on the reduced mortality risk of even a moderate amount of casual walking over a more sedentary lifestyle.

Tuesday, 28 April 2015

Thursday, 23 April 2015

NIMBYism leading to increased inequality

In Inequality is growing in our own backyards Michael Pascoe looks at an article in The Economist by Matthew Rognlie who argues that a major cause of growing inequality is the growing cost of housing.

Pascoe posits that house owners, keen to "preserve its character", actively campaign against changes that would result in more efficient and higher density housing. This not only leads to a shortage of supply, but may also rob the owners of heritage listed buildings of dubious value the opportunity to reap the maximum returns from the value of their land.
In many of the trendier suburbs, you may well be a Green or Labor supporter who rails against inequality but also rabidly supports the imposition of heritage orders to freeze often dreary and inefficient architecture and, heaven forbid, limit or ban higher density housing for the masses.

But it's you who is creating the inequality gap.
He concludes:
But that's only part of the solution to the housing problem. If any government took that problem seriously and could ignore the rent seekers, medium density should be the default option for cities like Sydney. Anyone with a suitably sized block of land or any group of willing neighbours should be able to build a fashionable row of terraces instead of their isolated boxes, if they so wish.

Those who prefer their own quarter acre would, of course, be welcome to it, and the land tax that it would incur in a rational nation interested in sensible tax reform.

So put your hand up if you're genuinely interested in a fairer society, in preventing increasing inequality, in making housing more affordable for your children, in living in a more efficient, greener city with better infrastructure, and, effectively, freezing housing prices and restoring individual property rights?

I think I just lost the owner-occupier and NIMBY vote.
I think Pascoe has nailed one of the main reasons for the high cost of housing in Australia.

Friday, 27 March 2015

Monday, 9 March 2015

How the government spent our boom

In How the Budget was mugged (Treasury publishes the photo) Peter Davidson has a great graph, taken from a speech by the Treasury Secretary John Fraser, showing the impact of our unexpected revenue windfalls, spending decisions and tax cuts on the federal budget:
The following chart, included in his slides, shows how the windfall revenue gains from the boom between 2002 to 2008 (grey bars, circled by me) were spent (green, blue and red bars).


Basically much of the boom was spent on personal income tax cuts and public support for people who didn't need it (via mechanisms such as superannuation tax breaks and the Seniors Supplement).

A brief history of tax

Peter Davidson has prepared a brief history of tax:

A brief history of tax: Part 1 Income tax, the great leveller
A brief history of tax, Part 2: Clash of the titans
A brief history of tax (Part 3): the trojan horse

Performance reviews aren't performing

In Performance reviews: Get rid of them Samuel Culbert argues that we might be better off without them.