EconomistPunter
EconomistPunter t1_ja0z9ta wrote
Reply to comment by GivenAllTheFucksSry in Cannabidiol (CBD) Supports the Honeybee Worker Organism by Activating the Antioxidant System by GivenAllTheFucksSry
MDPI?
Just because something is linked in the National Library doesn’t make it non-dubious…
EconomistPunter t1_ja0ysq5 wrote
Reply to Cannabidiol (CBD) Supports the Honeybee Worker Organism by Activating the Antioxidant System by GivenAllTheFucksSry
I was mentioning yesterday the low quality, dubious nature of too many cannabis studies. And here’s another one…
EconomistPunter t1_j9znjxy wrote
Reply to comment by LairdPopkin in For marginal occupations licensed by U.S. states, the welfare costs of licensing exceeds the benefits, as workers have to expend resources to obtain the license and consumers pay higher prices. [The study looks at professions that require license in some states but not others]. by smurfyjenkins
And, unfortunately, the existence of unintended consequences to laws, as well as ineffective language, means that implementation often falls short of intention.
This is an important study.
Edit: your mindset would have derided follow up studies to Brown versus Board of Education, which almost uniformly found less than expected Black economic progress, because equal access did not imply equal resources. It’s a terrible mindset.
EconomistPunter t1_j9wo77z wrote
Reply to For marginal occupations licensed by U.S. states, the welfare costs of licensing exceeds the benefits, as workers have to expend resources to obtain the license and consumers pay higher prices. [The study looks at professions that require license in some states but not others]. by smurfyjenkins
Cool study. Does suggest that using a signal to impute quality for consumers can have sizable losses, for those who wouldn’t get a license but would work, and for consumers.
The distributional impact is also important, as higher prices may preclude lower income Americans from performing needed repairs.
Note that this welfare loss does not take into account quality measures of work performed, which would mitigate the losses.
EconomistPunter t1_j9wnuf2 wrote
Reply to comment by phdoofus in For marginal occupations licensed by U.S. states, the welfare costs of licensing exceeds the benefits, as workers have to expend resources to obtain the license and consumers pay higher prices. [The study looks at professions that require license in some states but not others]. by smurfyjenkins
The point is that licensing imputing quality signals can and does have a net welfare loss before you take into account changes in quality.
EconomistPunter t1_j9vkov0 wrote
Reply to comment by PEVEI in Daily use of marijuana raises risk of heart disease, study finds by TheDodoBird
And some of the early marijuana laws specifically targeted a substitution relationship between opioids and marijuana, which have largely evaporated in more recent studies. That’s certainly harm understatement.
Marijuana research suffers from both attenuation bias and bias that increases the magnitude of results. It’s a glorious mess in the sphere.
EconomistPunter t1_j9vj0ib wrote
Reply to comment by PEVEI in Daily use of marijuana raises risk of heart disease, study finds by TheDodoBird
Again, early studies on this suffered from data limitations. We don’t really know much. This research sphere is filled with dubious claims.
EconomistPunter t1_j9vin4b wrote
Reply to comment by PEVEI in Daily use of marijuana raises risk of heart disease, study finds by TheDodoBird
They didn’t prove harm. Even the language of the author “may cause” suggests they understand it’s a correlation that could be more.
EconomistPunter t1_j9vi8jr wrote
Reply to comment by PPQue6 in Daily use of marijuana raises risk of heart disease, study finds by TheDodoBird
The growing lit suggests many of the benefits of marijuana are overstated, or that they disappear when correctly accounting for trends. It’s not some anti-cannabis conspiracy; it’s growth in an area with significant research limitations until recently…
EconomistPunter t1_j9vgn54 wrote
Most of the findings for marijuana (both benefits and costs) are correlary, rather than causal. This sphere is filled with terrible studies pushing agendas.
EconomistPunter t1_j9kq7q2 wrote
Reply to comment by ChokeOnTheCorn in A study found that "people with cannabis purchases after legalization reduced significantly and persistently their cash spending and electronic transfers, indicating a shift from the black to the legal cannabis market." by OregonTripleBeam
AEL is for very short publications.
DiD is the methodology they use, which requires some pretty intricate statistical relationships.
EconomistPunter t1_j9koppl wrote
Reply to A study found that "people with cannabis purchases after legalization reduced significantly and persistently their cash spending and electronic transfers, indicating a shift from the black to the legal cannabis market." by OregonTripleBeam
No way you can determine this in AEL. Especially using a DiD methodology.
EconomistPunter t1_j9fljwg wrote
Reply to comment by MightyH20 in Russia's economy shrinks by less than expected by SnooPaintings5866
There are things called multiplier effects…
EconomistPunter t1_j9d5p8o wrote
Reply to comment by Dropped-pie in Russia's economy shrinks by less than expected by SnooPaintings5866
Which is why I think this is much more devastating than death. Especially for men who would be living in high mortality rural areas (or the convicts).
EconomistPunter t1_j9c6yu3 wrote
Reply to comment by RobinsShaman in Russia's economy shrinks by less than expected by SnooPaintings5866
The mental, social, and physical healthcare costs of disability are astronomical. Caregiving further depletes additional labor from the market.
EconomistPunter t1_j9c12yg wrote
Reply to comment by ResponsibilityOne224 in Russia's economy shrinks by less than expected by SnooPaintings5866
Death is an issue for the families, but disability imposes a much larger economic cost on society.
EconomistPunter t1_j9bzrls wrote
Short term GDP numbers mean nothing. The brain drain, the hollowing out of the middle class, and the long term disability consequences of soldiers are going to devastate Russia for decades.
EconomistPunter t1_j6lethi wrote
Cannabis and the impact on opioids is one of the more consistent substance use disorder findings from the lit (maybe the one true impact).
Unfortunately, it doesn’t really translate into meaningful reductions (or consistently found reductions) in overdose death rates from opioids. Or admissions to the hospital with opioids detected as a primary substance.
The bigger question is the links between other SUD’s and cannabis, most of which rely on shoddy, preclinical studies.
EconomistPunter t1_j4t15ay wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in A study found that "about 30% of the sample was able to discontinue the use of prescription medications because of cannabis." by OregonTripleBeam
A PhD and active research in the space?
EconomistPunter t1_j4qvw8h wrote
Reply to A study found that "about 30% of the sample was able to discontinue the use of prescription medications because of cannabis." by OregonTripleBeam
There is consistent evidence that cannabis (marijuana and CBD) substitutes for opioids.
But the impacts are much smaller in magnitude than this survey.
Edit: these numbers are implausibly high for extrapolation to the general public.
EconomistPunter t1_j0cf90i wrote
Reply to US CPI reports with corrected time scales. It's helpful to see how out of date the reported numbers are. [OC] by gatogetaway
Month-over-month numbers get revisions.
Not eliminating seasonality also means that your month-over-month numbers have an additional bias.
EconomistPunter t1_iydfsww wrote
Reply to comment by Swarzsinne in During the covid pandemic lots of medical scientific articles got published and then retracted due to errors, frauds and misconducts. In this study the authors explore what went wrong in the scientific path to publication and peer review process by AromaticChimpanzee
True. The joys of figuring out the peer review process.
EconomistPunter t1_iydf25r wrote
Reply to comment by Swarzsinne in During the covid pandemic lots of medical scientific articles got published and then retracted due to errors, frauds and misconducts. In this study the authors explore what went wrong in the scientific path to publication and peer review process by AromaticChimpanzee
Shouldn't be; it corresponds with a lot of the literature on the effectiveness of COVID shutdown policies to COVID cases (reduced it) and deaths (minimal impact).
EconomistPunter t1_iyd5dw8 wrote
Reply to During the covid pandemic lots of medical scientific articles got published and then retracted due to errors, frauds and misconducts. In this study the authors explore what went wrong in the scientific path to publication and peer review process by AromaticChimpanzee
Such a weird dichotomy. I have 2 COVID era papers; one was published after 8 months with a 21 page revision. Another is still under review at its 3rd journal.
I would imagine name recognition plays some role (if you couldn’t figure it out I don’t have it) but my experience certainly wasn’t of a faster process. Instead, it was more thorough than regular review.
EconomistPunter t1_ja0zcc9 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Cannabidiol (CBD) Supports the Honeybee Worker Organism by Activating the Antioxidant System by GivenAllTheFucksSry
Yes. I wonder how impact factor can be gamed…
The Scimago impact factor is 1. Know what that suggests?