News Analysis
Remotely Equal
Can Telework Close the Gender Wage Gap?

Working remotely saves time, money, and according to Harvard professor and president of the American Economic Association Claudia Goldin, it could be the key to closing the gender wage gap.

Solar Struggles
China’s Newest White Elephant

China picked a loser in solar energy, and to soak up its glut of cheap (and often shoddily-made) panels, it’s building out white elephant projects like a new solar power plant in a remote northwestern desert.

ACA Fail Fractal
The Great Oregon ACA Debate, Part Two

Obamacare really isn’t targeted to lower costs nationally or make people healthier; it’s targeted to make Americans more financially stable by shifting costs around. This analysis coheres with the first Oregon study from last year, that found Medicaid users weren’t more healthy those the un-enrolled but were more financially secure. The question then becomes: is there a better way to help make health care more affordable for those struggling to pay?

Speed Reads
Around the Web in 6 Clicks

Happy New Year from the AI staff! Here’s what we’ve been reading this week:

1. MOOCs as sporting events.

2. Jobs of the future…or something.

3. A dangerous provocation.

4. Avoiding the picnic-table crisis.

5. Cigars go up in smoke.

6. New Year’s resolution: Stop lying to pollsters.

And, as always, readers are encouraged to let us know what you’re reading.

Reefer Madness
Pot Policy Is Really Complicated

Attempts to legalize pot are fraught with tremendous complexities. The black market probably isn’t going away even with legalization, which means even the visible costs of punishing dealers probably aren’t going to go away either. There’s no better guide to the issues here than Mark Kleiman, perhaps our country’s foremost expert on drug policy and the person Washington state brought in to help set up their new market.

Winter for Higher-Ed
The Column the Academy Hopes No-One Will Read

Here’s a column the academy hopes no-one will read: Glenn Reynolds’ insightfully advocating in the WSJ for deep reforms to the American college system. Reynolds argues that mounting college debt paired with stagnant wages will catalyze solutions that could drastically disrupt the academy. Any college president who isn’t taking Glenn’s concern seriously isn’t doing the job.

War on Science
GMO Fight Exposes Green Hypocrisy

Even at the most basic level the distinction between GMOs and “natural” foods doesn’t make sense. When they’ve got scientific evidence on their side, green campaigners spew hate speech about the evil science deniers on the other side. But the moment a scientific consensus attacks some cherished green myth (organic good, GMO bad, for example), they spew hate speech against scientists as corporate shills.What the planet and the people who live on it badly need is a pro-environment, pro-people movement that actually cares about scientific evidence.

The Wages Of A Failed Syria Policy
Iran Helping Hezbollah Upgrade Its Missiles

New reports suggest that Hezbollah has been taking advantage of the chaos in Syria to smuggle advanced anti-aircraft and anti-ship weapons into Lebanon. As the WSJ notes, however, the key player is Iran, which backs Hezbollah and appears to be behind these shipments. For those in Western capitals making the case that Iran is ready for a real reconciliation and change of policy, life just got a little bit worse.

India Journal
Singh to Step Down After Illustrious Career, Rocky at the End

India’s Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, an octogenarian economist, announced he would be stepping down from his position after elections next year. It was the first news conference the notoriously aloof and mellow Singh has given in three years, and he used it to fire biting comments at an opposition rival who is widely seen as the man who will replace him.

The Decline of Decline
Manufacturing Sector Closes 2013 With a Bang

The US ended 2013 with a months-long spree of good news for the manufacturing sector. Total factory output hit a two-year high in November, a hot streak which continued in December where output grew nearly as fast. Manufacturing employment was going strong as well, hitting a high it hasn’t seen since 2011. We may never return to the mass employment in manufacturing of the type we saw in the mid-20th century, but America’s manufacturing sector looks well positioned to keep growing in the decades to come.

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