Monday, October 30, 2017

Scott Galloway "The Four"

https://www.forbes.com/sites/stevedenning/2015/04/09/the-future-of-amazon-apple-facebook-google/#6e7603de6172

Galloway argues that it’s as important to talk about the losers in this fast-moving marketplace as much as the winners. Galloway declares two winners—Apple and Facebook—and two losers, Amazon and Google. By “winners,” he means companies that will increase in influence and value. Losers are those that will decrease in influence and value. His valuation is relative: any of these giants could lose for the next ten years and still be terribly important. They are all, he says, “amazing companies.” He points out that these four firms are so dominant that their combined market cap is greater than the GDP of South Korea (US $1.3 trillion). They have a market cap of $5 million per employee.

Apple is a winner for Galloway. It is dominant both on-line and in stores. It’s vertical and global. Its future is strong in part because it is becoming a global luxury brand. That, he says, is good thing because rich people all around the world like the same things. Apple has all the elements to make a luxury brand work: craftsmanship, an iconic founder, exceptional price point, expanding margins, vertical control of distribution, and globally recognizable.

Facebook, says Galloway, is the platform people of all ages spend the most time on. Reports of Facebook’s decline in popularity among young people are “hogwash.” It is also doing well in Europe with around 90% share of social. Facebook has the ability to track users by their identity, something only Google is able to match (through Gmail). It successfully pulled a bait-and-switch by convincing brands to invest in building Facebook communities, and then charged for access. Galloway applauds the acquisitions of Instagram and Whatsapp, as Instagram is growing faster than any other social platform in the world, except WeChat.

“The primary drivers in social are mobile and images.”

“Facebook is pulling away. The world of social is becoming ‘Facebook and the seven dwarfs.’”

“Facebook has relationships with 2.4 billion users. The Roman Catholic Church 1.2 billion. Facebook has more relationships on the planet than God.”

Galloway’s losers: Amazon and Google

Galloway sees two major flaws at Amazon. One is that Amazon is single-channel retail. Galloway believes that the future lies in multi-channel retail. He says single-channel retail will disappear, whether it’s pure e-commerce or brick-and-mortar without an online presence. Apercus:

“Amazon cannot survive as a pure-play retailer.”

“Stores are the new black in the world of e-commerce. We have discovered these incredibly robust flexible warehouses called ‘stores.’”

Amazon’s growth has slowed, as brick-and-mortar stores have begun matching prices and providing instant pickup. He announces the funeral of e-commerce companies like Fab.com, Gilt, and Net-a-porter. For Galloway, the winner will be Macy’s, which has successfully gone online, and e-commerce players like Rent the Runway and Warby Parker that are opening up stores.

The other flaw at Amazon is shipping costs. According to Galloway, in 2014, Amazon received $3.1 billion in shipping fees and spent $6.6 billion on delivery. This, he says, is unsustainable. Some apercus:

“Free shipping is a race to the bottom.”

“Uber will be the most disruptive force in American retail. Drivers from firms like Uber are going to disrupt Amazon.”

“Drive-through pickup points have exploded in France from 1,000 to 3,000 in just the last year.”

“Retailers are not sitting around like passive prey, waiting to be disrupted. The retailer of the future is Macy’s. Macy’s is a metaphor for what’s happening the economy. It is closing stores and investing in on-line. $40k-80k sales jobs are being replaced by $20k-$40k factory and fulfilment jobs. There are some fantastic jobs at the high end, but the real employment growth is at the low end.”

“The smart-phone economy is going to be wonderful for employment, but terrible for wages.”

Google has several flaws, according Galloway. First, although Google is dominant in search, other brands are cutting into Google’s share. Facebook now has 1 billion searches compared to Google’s 3 billion. Second, two-thirds of product high-value searches—product searches–are happening on Amazon. Third, Google has yet to master mobile in the same way it mastered computer search. Fourth, Google had major failures in Google Glass and Google+, As a result of all these factors, Google’s revenue growth is slowing down. Apercus:

“Google + is dead already." It has had a "98% decline in engagement rate, year-over-year.”

“Google Glass is a prophylactic that ensures that you won’t conceive a child because no one will ever go near you.”

Galloway may be too quick to write off Amazon. If having physical stores becomes key, Amazon could easily solve it, as Galloway himself predicts, by acquiring of a brick-and mortar chain. And the issue of Amazon’s shipping costs should not be looked at in isolation from the overall shopping experience at Amazon. If “free” shipping for shoppers who subscribe to Amazon Prime makes Amazon the primary search destination of most shoppers and so trump Google search in this high-value search arena, the cost of “free shipping” may be a smart investment, both cheaper and more effective than, say, buying advertising for the Amazon brand. Just as Tim Cook declared that he “doesn’t care about the bloody ROI” of individual business activities, what matters is the overall contribution to the customer experience.

Galloway’s commends Apple for its journey towards becoming a luxury brand raises questions. Yet in the past, Apple has succeeded by producing products that are simple, easy, elegant, useful and affordable. Straying into the field of $10,000 watches is taking Apple into the domain of the useless and the unaffordable. The gains from this excursion are likely to be small in relation to the scale of Apple’s gargantuan business, while also being a distraction from what have been the keys to Apple’s remarkable success from delighting a huge number of customers with products that are low-cost to produce. Apple’s continued exponential growth ultimately depends on producing products that will make most people’s lives truly simpler and better. It’s not obvious that luxury objects like a $10,000 iWatch, even once its current obvious flaws, like limited battery life and annoying alerts, are solved, is part of that future of making many people’s lives better..

Facebook has so far done a remarkable job of mastering mobile. Facebook’s knowledge about its users’ behavior is a big advantage. Facebook ad re-targeting works across multiple devices without dependency on third-party cookies that expire or get deleted. These are great strengths. So far, Facebook has been able to live with the contradiction of a business that appears to offer the personal and the social, while behind the scenes it is ruthlessly exploiting users’ personal information for commercial purposes. Facebook says it doesn’t pass this information on to advertisers, thereby eliminating liability for privacy protection. One has to wonder how long this contradiction can be maintained and remain acceptable, as users experience the creepiness of a commercial “Big Brother” listening in on personal conversations and immediately deluging those users with ads about subjects they discussed in conversations they thought were private.

Google has enjoyed remarkable financial success. Yet anecdotal evidence suggests that Google has become hard to do business with, as a result of a certain arrogance in dealing with business partners. This may indicate that it is becoming that worrying creature, “the highly-successful process-driven company.” A process-driven company has short-term commercial advantages. With a leading share in its market, minimal thinking is required to continue on that path. Few mistakes are made. It is efficient. Its optimized processes were a good fit for its existing market. But efficiency can trump flexibility. When the market shifts due to new technology or competitors or business models, the finely tuned processes become a prison. Now that Google’s market has shifted, will Google be able to adapt quickly? Or has it become a prisoner of its existing processes? If process adherence is the overriding value system, Galloway may be right and Google may grind steadily into irrelevance. If Google can recover the focus on delighting customers that made it successful in the first place, it may go on to even greater success.

Thursday, October 26, 2017

Franchising, form of contracting/decreasing transaction cost

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franchising

The boom in franchising did not take place until after World War II.

1. Subway (sandwiches and salads) | startup costs $84,300 – $258,300 (41,916 locations worldwide in 2015).
2. McDonald's | startup costs in 2010, $995,900 – $1,842,700 (36,368 Locations in 2015)
3. 7-Eleven Inc. (convenience stores) | startup costs in 2010 $40,500- $775,300, (56,439 locations in 2015)
4. Hampton Inns & Suites (midprice hotels) | startup costs in 2010 $3,716,000 – $15,148,800
5. Great Clips (hair salons) | startup costs in 2010 $109,000 - $203,000 (3,694 locations in 2015)
6. H&R Block (tax preparation and now e-filing) | startup costs $26,427 - $84,094 (10,800 locations in 2015)
7. Dunkin' Donuts | startup costs in 2010 $537,750 - $1,765,300
8. Jani-King (commercial cleaning) | startup costs $11,400 - $35,050, (11,000 partners worldwide in 2004)
9. Servpro (insurance and disaster restoration and cleaning) | startup costs in 2010 $102,250 - $161,150
10. MiniMarkets (convenience store and gas station) | startup costs in 2010 $1,835,823 - $7,615,065

Walter Isaacson's Podcast

http://www.adweek.com/digital/walter-isaacson-is-getting-into-podcasting-with-a-series-for-dell-about-technology/

Lawrence Tosi, CFO of Airbnb

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2011-01-06/apple-said-to-have-approached-blackstone-s-tosi-to-becoming-finance-chief

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Apple Computer Marketing 1998

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=keCwRdbwNQY

Here's to the crazy ones.

The misfits.
The rebels.
The troublemakers.
The round pegs in the square holes.
The ones who see things differently.
They're not fond of rules.
And they have no respect for the status quo.

You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them.
About the only thing you can't do is ignore them.

Because they change things.
They push the human race forward.
While some see them as the crazy ones, we see genius.

Because the people who are crazy enough to think
they can change the world, are the ones who do.

Apple TV Ads: Think Different.mov (1998).

Simon Sinek - Start with Why: How Great Leaders Inspire Action

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u4ZoJKF_VuA

Simon Sinek - Start with Why: How Great Leaders Inspire Action

Image result for why how what

https://blog.hubspot.com/customers/3-takeaways-from-start-with-why
According to Simon Sinek, the fundamental difference between the "Apples" of the world and everyone else is that they start with "why."

What does that even mean? To explain this concept, Sinek has developed what he calls the "Golden Circle," image pictured right. The golden circle has three layers:
Why - This is the core belief of the business. It's why the business exists.
How - This is how the business fulfills that core belief.
What - This is what the company does to fulfill that core belief.

Sounds simple, but what Sinek found is that most companies do their marketing backwards. They start with their "what" and then move to "how" they do it. Most of these companies neglect to even mention why they do what they do. More alarmingly, many of them don't even know why they do what they do!

Not Apple. Apple starts with "why." It is the core of their marketing and the driving force behind their business operations. To help illustrate this point, imagine if Apple also started backwards by creating a marketing message that started with "what."


"We make great computers. They're user friendly, beautifully designed, and easy to use. Want to buy one?"

While these facts are true, I'm not sold. We instead want to know why they are great and user friendly. Turns out Apple has figured this out over the years and knows better. Here's what a real marketing message from Apple might actually look like:


"With everything we do, we aim to challenge the status quo. We aim to think differently. Our products are user friendly, beautifully designed, and easy to use. We just happen to make great computers. Want to buy one?"

See how different that feels? Because Apple starts with "why" when defining their company, they are able to attract customers who share their fundamental beliefs. As Sinek puts it, "People don't buy what you do. They buy why you do it." Starting with "why" makes Apple more than just a computer company selling features, and that's why their products have flourished while their competitors' products with similar technology and capabilities have often flopped.

But enough about Apple. Simon Sinek's "Start With Why" philosophy isn't just about billion dollar businesses. It also has implications for inbound marketers in any sized business. Let's take a look at some of the key marketing takeaways from the "Start With Why" philosophy.

3 Key Takeaways for Inbound Marketers
1. Step Back and Use "Why" to Think About Your Own Business

Do you know your company's "why"? (Hint: It's not to make money). Think about the core purpose of your business, and then think about how you market your products or services. Are they aligned? As Sinek has found, having loyal customers is all about attracting the people who share your fundamental beliefs. Remember: People don't buy what you do. They buy why you do it.

Yes, this might seem obvious, but it's a critical step that is often overlooked. If you were (or are) the founder of your business, wouldn't you want the people marketing it to know why you started it in the first place? Understanding "why" is essential to knowing how to communicate "how" and "what" you do.
2. Incorporate "Why" into Your Marketing Copy

The idea of starting with "why" is also a copy writing best practice. The next time you're writing an email, a blog post, or a landing page, start your writing with "why." You see, "why" explains the underlying value of what you're promoting. Consider these two opening sentences to a hypothetical email:


"Check out our new ebook, 7 Ways to Generate Leads with Social Media. We’ll show you the seven most effective ways to use social media to generate leads for your business."

Or...


"In the past decade, social media has become a very powerful tool for businesses. More and more businesses are adopting social media strategies to fuel their lead generation. In our new ebook, we’ll show you the seven most effective ways to use social media for your business. Check out 7 Ways to Generate Leads with Social Media."

What we've found is that the second type of email copy leads to a significantly higher click-through rate. Communicating the value (aka the "why") right off the bat sparks the reader's intrigue, at which point all you need to do is close the deal with the details (how and what).
3. Redefine your Buyer Personas

I'll say it again: People don't buy what you do. They buy why you do it.

With that mind, think about your buyer personas for a moment. Are they based purely on target demographics and assumed characteristics? Are they the kinds of people who might share your core values? What is it that drives your buyer personas to buy your products and remain loyal over a long period of time?

If you don't know the answers to these questions, it's ok! You don’t necessarily have to scrap your buyer personas and start over. Just add more context to who they are and how they identify with your "why." Doing so will get you to start thinking about the internal motivation that goes behind their purchase decisions. Perhaps you are a small business with large competitors and your customers are loyal to you because they like to support the little guy. Maybe you’re making the world a better place, and your customers love you because they believe in your cause. Whatever the reason, redefining your buyer personas to match your "why" is critical in creating marketing that inspires them to continue advocating for you.

The single biggest reason why startups succeed | Bill Gross

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bNpx7gpSqbY

Top 5 factors in success across more than 200 companies

Timing - 42%
Team/Execution - 32%
Idea - 28%
Business Model - 24%
Funding - 14%

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

best pension companies

https://qz.com/679808/companies-with-defined-benefit-pension-plans/

CompanyTotal Defined Benefit Assets (billions)
Kaiser Foundation Health Plan Inc.$23.39
Johnson & Johnson$14.36
JPMorgan Chase & Co.$14.02
PG&E Corp.$13.63
Prudential Financial Inc.$12.14
Consolidated Edison of New York$11.89
Merck & Co. Inc.$10.04
Southern Co.$9.46
Eli Lilly & Co.$7.16
Dominion Resources Inc.$6.43
Source: Pensions & Investments (P&I)

Judith Hellerstein. Social Capital

A lot of recent evidence that networks that match workers to employers are productive.
Neighborhood-based labor market networks are important too.
·       where workers work, (bayer et al 2008; HMN 2011)
·       tenure and earnings (Schmutte 2015, HKN 2014)
·       re-employment, earnings tenure (HKN 2016)
Moving to Opportunity (MTO).
What makes some neighborhoods more “networked” at work than others?
Is there an important role for social capital? What makes more neighborhoods more networked than others?
Social Capital: “The networks of relationships among people who live and work in a particular society, enabling that society to function effectively (OED definition).” Effectively à positive labor market outcomes.
Chetty et al (2014) who examine the relationship between social capital measures and intergenerational mobility at CZ level.
Data: “Who did you seek out when seeking a job?” in a survey.
Avoid: ex ante selection. Data mininign for significant predictors easiest to rationalize ex post as social capital measures
Combine data from: government administrative data (LEHD). Public Use data (ACS, Common Core , HEDA); Private administrative data (NETS). à better coverage of non-profits than LBD.
They use machine learning to find the variables that matter. That is, they let the data tell them what matters in social capital measure.

Networks lower information ost about existence of vacancies to unempllyed job searchers (Calvo armengol and Jackson 2007)
Networks lower information costs to employers about productivity of potential hires. (Montgomery 1991)

What is inferred is Networks are productive. They aren’t always. Their evidence suggests they are productive. We are not thinking that it is zero sum. One benefits at the cost of another. That’s a major criticism of social capital, that it excludes people. Mostly those who benefit are the low skilled people who find jobs in the neighborhood.



Four categories of social capital
-          Demographic homogeneity
-          School inputs
-          Civic participation/homogeneity (Guiso et al 2004)
-          Non-profit activity
o   Civic institutions - libraries, community centers (Coleman 1998)
o   Religious organizations (Putnam 2000)
o   Clubs (Putnam 2000)
Bowling leagues have declined. Now we bowl alone.

Individual’s network solation index.
Fraction of workers that you work with who come from your neighborhood census tract.
Evidence shows that networks are race based.

Machine learning
Estimation from objective function (Belloni et al 2014).
OLS and LASSO results.

What matters?
Amongst number of districts, student/teacher ratio, free/reduced price lunch share, majority vote share, democratic vote share, voter turnout…
What mattered was student/teacher ratio and democratic vote share.
Signs are mostly consistent with expectations
-          More districts, more networked
-          Smaller classes, more networked

-          Higher democratic vote share: less networked.

Thursday, October 19, 2017

Valuation

UPS
FedEx
USPS

All about 50 billion in revenue of which net income is +/- 5%.
I think this industry is a key to Amazon's advantage. Logistics and transportation.
2/3 are Prime members and free shipping has become the consumer luring tool.
I think also that's why it purchased a brick-and-mortar in Whole Foods.

I think USPS is most vulnerable to Uber self-deliveries and Amazon self-deliveries.

Best Economists in the World Ranking from IDEAS

https://ideas.repec.org/top/top.person.all.html

City Diversification

https://wallethub.com/edu/cities-with-the-most-least-diversified-economies/10852/

https://www.nature.com/articles/srep05393.pdf

Paul Romer

The Endogenous Growth Theory
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2015/06/what-is-endogenous-growth-theory/

Variation in standards of living across countries is clearly associated with different amounts of physical capital such as public infrastructure. So should we simply invest more in more roads and bridges to increase our standard of living?

The former Soviet Union tried this approach and failed.

The problem is that physical capital only explains about one-third of the variation in income per capita across countries. The other two-thirds are “explained” by a more nebulous concept that economists refer to as total factor productivity, or TFP for short. I have to put quotes around “explained” because we can only measure TFP as the residual component of income per capita not explained by capital.

The point is that massive investment in infrastructure would only ever get even the poorest country one-third of the way to catching up with rich countries. Worse yet, capital accumulation is subject to diminishing returns for all countries.

Yes, income per capita would increase with the amount of machinery and equipment per worker, but nowhere near proportionately. Rather than an easy path to prosperity, capital accumulation quickly becomes a lot like squeezing blood from a stone.

The prediction of diminishing returns to capital was the main insight of the Solow-Swan “neoclassical” theory of economic growth that undergraduate students in macroeconomics have been struggling with for decades – and one that politicians looking for growth elixirs in the form of public or private infrastructure have ignored at their peril.


Economist Paul Romer has developed a theory of economic growth with “endogenous” technological change — that is, it can depend on population growth and capital accumulation. His endogenous growth theory ties the development of new ideas to the number of people working in the knowledge sector (think of this as effort devoted to R&D). These new ideas make everyone else producing regular goods and services more productive – that is, ideas increase TFP.

There are many variants of endogenous growth theory, but a robust prediction is that an increase in population or an increase in the share of people working in the knowledge sector will increase economic growth.

This theory is quite radical for two reasons.

First, the prediction of higher economic growth for a larger population suggests that neoclassical growth theory, not to mention even more pessimistic economic theories of population going back to Thomas Malthus, got things completely wrong.

Evidently, China’s single-child policy was a mistake, not just for social reasons, but also for economic reasons. According to endogenous growth theory, China and the rest of the world could have had more growth because China would have produced more new ideas with an even larger population.

Second, because ideas are what economists label as “non-rival” (meaning that my use of an idea, like a recipe or a mathematical formula, doesn’t prevent your use of it), there will only be an economic incentive for more people to work in the knowledge sector if there are intellectual property rights such as patents and copyright. Thus, it is necessary to restrict competition in the knowledge sector in order to stimulate growth, even though this leads to other distortions and disparities in the economy.

Understanding Romer
http://www.reed.edu/economics/parker/s12/314/Coursebook/Ch_05.pdf
https://www.brown.edu/Departments/Economics/Faculty/Peter_Howitt/publication/endogenous.pdf
http://economia.unipv.it/pagp/pagine_personali/lorenza.rossi/LECTURES_ENDO_GROWTH.pdf

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e0AqbVVODFw

Endogenous Technological Change (1990)

Y = AF(K,L)
- Solow treats A, ideas, as a public good.
- Growth in ideas is exogenous (outside the model)
- Growth is about new ideas and most R&D produced by for-profit firms.
- Ideas are non-rivalrous and cannot be sold in competitive markets becasue marginal cost is zero.
- Ideas create spillovers
- Romer created a model of growth based on ideas, privately produced by for-profit firms in monopolistically competitive markets with spillovers. 

Ideas
- Patents/intellectual property
- Universities
- Capital markets
- Human capital in research
- Idea transmission
- Trade and Market Size
- Types of ideas (technologies, rules)
- Cities/agglomeration/density

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2010/07/the-politically-incorrect-guide-to-ending-poverty/308134/

However simple-seeming his ideas, Romer is no lightweight. Starting in the late 1980s, he produced a series of papers that changed the way his profession thinks about economic growth; his most celebrated contribution, published in 1990, “was one of the best papers in economics in 25 or 30 years,” in the estimation of Charles I. Jones, a colleague of Romer’s at Stanford. Before the Romer revolution, theorists had explained an economy’s growing output by looking at the obvious inputs—the number of hours worked, the skills of the workforce, the quantity of machinery and other physical capital.

But Romer stressed a fourth driver of growth, which he termed simply “ideas,” a category that encompassed everything from the formula for a new drug to the most efficient sequence for stitching 19 pieces of material into a sneaker. In statistical tests, the traditional inputs appeared to account for only half the differences in countries’ output per person, suggesting that ideas might account for the remaining half—and that leaving them out of a growth theory was like leaving the prince out of Hamlet. And whereas the old models had predicted that growth would slow as population expansion put stress on resources, and as new investment in skills and capital yielded diminishing returns, Romer’s New Growth Theory opened the window onto a sunnier worldview: a larger number of affluent people means more ideas, so prosperity and population expansion might cause growth to speed up.

Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Len Nichols & Health Policy

About 30 percent of insurance payments are wasted.

Image result for rothschild stiglitz model

http://scholar.harvard.edu/files/hendren/files/addl_lecture_2_-_equilibriums_in_insurance_markets.pdf

https://www.princeton.edu/~dixitak/Teaching/EconomicsOfUncertainty/Precepts/Precept10.pdf

http://www.landsburg.com/select.pdf

Social Determinants of Health
Housing, Transportation, Hunger. Preventative measures before people get sick!

Conclusion.
- Change in $/ Change in Population Health as metric
- Creative uses of reference/Bundled Pricing and governmental plus private market power
- SDOH investment as local quasi-public good with local collaborative but market-based solutions.

Monday, October 16, 2017

Amazon 2nd HQ

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/09/09/upshot/where-should-amazon-new-headquarters-be.html?_r=0

It’s hard to imagine where the Boston region would find the room for a company that will ultimately want up to eight million square feet of office space (the Pentagon, for comparison, has 6.6 million). Mayor Marty Walsh also said on Thursday that Boston is “not going to get into a bidding war with another city over something like this.” And it’s pretty clear that a bidding war is what Amazon wants.

The company has asked for very specific information on all the state, regional and local incentives communities are willing to offer, and the timelines for how long it would take to approve them. Amazon concludes its proposal by stressing that this a “competitive project.” So let the competition among cities begin!

Denver and Washington, including their suburbs, have already raised their hands. Mayor Michael Hancock of Denver has said he’s excited about this “megaprospect” and has begun talking to the economic development partners the region would need to make an offer. Officials in Washington and suburban Loudoun County sound eager, too. But land in the District of Columbia is expensive and increasingly hard to come by. And a far-flung suburban campus, like those many government contractors have in Northern Virginia, seems unlikely for a company that has grown out of a proudly urban home in downtown Seattle.

So Denver it is. The city’s lifestyle and affordability, coupled with the supply of tech talent from nearby universities, has already helped build a thriving start-up scene in Denver and Boulder, 40 minutes away. Big tech companies, including Google, Twitter, Oracle and I.B.M., have offices in the two cities. Denver has been attracting college graduates at an even faster rate than the largest cities. The region has the benefits of places like San Francisco and Seattle — outdoor recreation, microbreweries, diversity and a culture of inclusion (specifically cited by Amazon) — but the cost of living is still low enough to make it affordable, and lots of big-city refugees have been moving there for this reason. Amazon would be smart to follow them.

https://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/20/upshot/where-young-college-graduates-are-choosing-to-live.html?mcubz=3



Where the Population of College Graduates Is Growing

As metropolitan areas vie for these residents, some are attracting them at a higher rate than the national average. The rate over the last dozen years does not necessarily reflect the current percentage. For example, Denver’s percentage in this age group is 7.5, higher than Houston’s and more than the national average of 5.2 percent, but lower than that of Washington, the Bay Area and Boston.   
Percent change in the number of college graduates aged 25 to 34, from 2000 to 2012 
Houston
Nashville
Denver
Austin
Portland
Washington
Buffalo
Baltimore
Los Angeles
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
New York
Top 51 metro areas, average
Minneapolis
Chicago
Boston
San Francisco
Memphis
Providence
Atlanta
Cleveland
Detroit
50%
48%
47%
44%
37%
36%
34%
32%
30%
29%
26%
25%
25%
21%
17%
12%
11%
10%
6%
3%
1%
-10%
“There is a very strong track record of places that attract talent becoming places of long-term success,” said Edward Glaeser, an economist at Harvard and author of “Triumph of the City.” “The most successful economic development policy is to attract and retain smart people and then get out of their way.”

Continue reading the main story

Saturday, October 14, 2017

SEZs

Clean Notes (2015) and incorporate to the essay
Contact RUSSEZ
Ichiro IWASAKI and Keiko SUGANUMA
Figure out how to make maps on Russia
Look into business information databases

Investigate if Yellow page data can be matched.
Look into staff of WB and EBRD working on Russia's regional or firm-level data.
[My guess is region is as narrow they can get]



For questions about SEZs
Mr. Igor Kosov CEO + 7 (495) 645 27 15 igor.kosov@oao-oez.ru
Mr. Alexander Temkin Deputy CEO +7 (495) 645 27 11 atemkin@oao-oez.ru


Differentiate loan, FDI, and other
FDI by country of origin
Population growth and migrant worker growth

Shenzen was attractive to Hong Kong investors due to i). geographic proximity ii). Supply of migrant workers
(so was St. Pete to Europe; so was Kaluga to Moscow; so is Russia to Europe for fraction of labor cost).

Deconstructing clusters: chaotic concept of policy panacea
Ron Martin and Peter Sunley

http://www.investinrussia.ru/sez --> most up to date SEZs brief

Look into World Bank's Enterprise Surveys in Russia
BEEPS Survey (EBRD)

Ask SEZ staff if I can find out about the bidded regions
Where to get data on # of refrigerators produced


Urgent compile the list of SEZ initiation. 
It appears that all of them have different initiation years. 




- Information on size of SEZ (hectares)

- Tatarstan car SEZ

- SEZ info general about Russia, the emerging market.
- Between 1989 and 2000 a total of 18 free economic zone. first try.
- 2004 Yukos Affair; 2008 financial crash (MICEX)



Russia's WTO Accession in 2012
- With its entry into the WTO, the country will cut its average import tariff by 5.9%, making those imports cheaper.
- "I already have a negative attitude towards our (Russian) cars," said Tarakanov, who was buying a Renault. "I doubt that they can win the preference of the modern buyer." Because state-subsidized industries proved such a pivotal issue in Russia's WTO negotiations, financial aid to struggling sectors will be gradually phased out, rather than abruptly cut off, over the course of seven years. "The industry will not collapse immediately, (major Russian car-maker) AvtoVaz is going to continue steadily producing its 700,000 cars per year," said Ovanes Oganisyan, an analyst at the Moscow-based investment bank Troika Dialog. "But eventually there's going to be more competition, and if AvtoVaz doesn't change in seven years it will have to go out of business." In addition to the challenges faced by unreformed industries, the Russian government expects to take a short-term financial hit from the loss of income from import duties and taxes. But the government emphasizes long-term gains, and the World Bank has estimated that WTO membership could increase Russia's GDP by an extra 3.3 percentage points a year in the next three years.

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