Professor
Emeritus
2145
Faculty/Administration Building
Wayne State
University, Detroit, MI 48202
(313)
577-3345
NeptuneStardust
email: allen.goodman@wayne.edu
COVID-19 Blog
not
physicians or bench scientists, we can provide economic analysis that can
inform
both
WSU and the larger community about economic aspects of this deadly pandemic.
In
the initial posting, Allen Goodman characterizes the COVID-19 virus as a
massive tax
and
he offers some policy guidance on dealing with it. A compendium of all
of the
posts
is available with a click at C-19-Blog.
COVID-19 - Like a
Massive Tax (
Public Health,
Epidemics, and Economics - 10 out of 10? (
Test Everybody? (
Martin
Arrowsmith in 2020 - Dealing with Plagues (
Coronavirus Resource
Center -
Forget the Great
Recession - Think the Great Depression (
Back by Easter? Marginal
Benefits and Marginal Costs (
Testing 2 - Finding the
Denominator, Finding the Location (
Manufacturing
Through COVID-19 - Serious Problems (March 28, 2020)
The Pharmaceutical Industry -
Watch What You Listen For (
Numbers Matter - Death Estimates and False
Negatives (
How Many Ventilators
is Enough? (
Together and Apart -
Economies of Scale and COVID-19 (
Economic Models of COVID-19:
Taxes and Cigars (
in
Contexts,
The Wisconsin
Poll Tax (
Who Can Re-Open -
COVID-19 Cap and Trade (
What Is It About
Epidemics that Business Leaders Do not Understand?
(
How Should We Re-Open?
(
How Should We Reopen? Part 2 - Lessons
from the Film Industry (
COVID-19 and the Cities
(
Distributing
Vaccines - The Economics are Simple (
Re-Opening
Universities (
The Shape of the Economy
(
Prioritizing
Testing and Workplace Re-opening Under COVID-19
Risk and Uncertainty - What
We Have is Uncertainty (
The Health Externality (
Aggregate Demand Again (May 9,
2020)
We Need a Cost-Effective Vaccine (
Flattening the Curve, and then Watching It Spike
(
Race to the Top, or Race to the Bottom (
Clark Clifford in 2020 (
Memorial Day - 2020 (
Say’s Law and the Macroeconomics of 2020 in the Era
of COVID-19 (
Searching for the Number (
COVID-19 Three Months In: Random Thoughts (
How Should We Reopen? Round 3 - The Health ID Card (
The Distributional Aspects of COVID-19 (June
19, 2020)
The Right Amount of Care (June 25, 2020)
All it Took
Was One Packed Bar (June 28, 2020)
Underinvestment in Education - The
COVID-19 Story (July 2, 2020)
How Should We Re-Open? July 4 Edition
(July 4, 2020)
COVID-19 is a Tax - and a Big One (July 11, 2020)
The States and the Great Lockdown (July
17, 2020)
Opening Schools (July 25, 2020)
Forget the Great Recession: Redux
(August 1, 2020)
Despite the Uptick, Michigan Drops (August 4,
2020)
Surprises in the Year of COVID-19 (August 9,
2020)
College Football? (August 11, 2020)
Deaths Above Normal (August 14, 2020)
Somewhat Misleading Statistics - The COVID-19
Tax (August 17, 2020)
Three Cheers for Michigan State (August 20,
2020)
Bad Incentives (August 24, 2020)
Labor Day Weekend 2020 (September 4,
2020)
The ULINE Catalog of Everything (September 5,
2020). Guest blog by Max Goldstein.
He Knew (September 10, 2020)
The Empire Struck Back (September 16, 2020)
200,000 Deaths (September 22, 2020)
Believing Science (September 25, 2020)
The President is Infected (October 2, 2020)
Seatbelts and Masks (October 5, 2020)
The Failed Coup in Michigan (October 12, 2020)
The Great Barrington Mistake (October 14, 2020)
The COVID-19 Tax: A View from Michigan (October
26, 2020)
Hopeful News on a Vaccine (November 10, 2020)
Thanksgiving Day - Stopping COVID-19 Pollution
(November 21, 2020)
COVID-19 Pollution and Growth (November 26, 2020)
The Moon and the Ghetto - After 50 Years (December
2, 2020)
College - End of Fall Term 2020 (December 14,
2020)
How to Allocate the Vaccine (December 20, 2020)
Capital Losses and a Domestic Marshall Plan
(December 25, 2020)
The Economy in the New Year (January 1, 2021)
The Vaccination Mess - and a Proposed Solution
(January 10, 2021)
A COVID-19 Report Card (January 19, 2021)
The Federalized
Vaccine (January
23, 2021)
How About Rent Vouchers
- Big Time This Time? (February 3, 2021)
Happy Valentines Day (February 10, 2021)
Allocation When Markets
Cannot Be Used (February 20, 2021)
The Right Amount of Care,
Revisited (February 22, 2021)
The New Revisionism on
In-Class Education During COVID-19 (March 3, 2021)
Time to Remain Patient
(March 8, 2021)
Nursing Homes and COVID-19
(March 13, 2021)
Second Dose (March 18,
2021)
The Benefits of Vaccine
Passports Far Outweigh the Costs (March 25, 2021)
Michigan is Spiking Again
(April 1, 2021)
Wave 4 in Michigan (April 8,
2021)
Trying to Stop a Runaway
Train (April 16, 2021)
How Much Longer Will We
Need Masks? (April 22, 2021)
The Shape of the Economy - One
Year Later (April 30, 2021)
It’s the Aerosols, Stupid
(May 9, 2021)
Strange CDC Decisions on
Vaccine and Mask Mandates (May 16, 2021)
Slouching Toward a Market
Vaccination Solution (May 23, 2021)
Reckoning (May 31, 2021)
Easy and Hard Numbers
(June 6, 2021)
U.S. Life Expectancies Plummeted
in 2020 (June 27, 2021)
Normalcy (July 5, 2021)
Trillions Greater Than
Billions (July 15, 2021)
Why Payments Are Better than
Lotteries (July 25, 2021)
The Elusive Herd Immunity
(August 4, 2021)
The COVID-19 Economics of
Community (August 12, 2021)
Dangerous Behavior
(August 21, 2021)
Governor Whitmer Wants to
Win Reelection (August 25, 2021)
Negotiating the Next Stage
of COVID-19 (August 30, 2021)
Social Security and COVID-19
(September 1, 2021)
Controlled and Natural
Experiments (September 5, 2021), with Sara Goodman MPH.
Simchot Again (September 17, 2021)
Convention-2021
(September 29, 2021)
Supply Chain Woes (October 9,
2021)
How Good Are the Vaccines?
(October 20, 2021)
Rising Prices Do Not
Necessarily Mean Inflation (October 27, 2021)
Professional Conferences
During a Pandemic (November 1, 2021), Guest blog by Sara Goodman MPH.
COVID-19 Era Education:
Long-Term Impacts (November 7, 2021)
The Pandemic as a War
(November 14, 2021)
Lockdowns Again:
Legislating COVID (November 21, 2021)
Nursing Homes Open Doors Wide to
Visitors (November 28, 2021)
Post-COVID Syndrome (December
7, 2021)
News of the Week (December 14,
2021)
Fully Vaccinated? (December
30, 2021)
Delta, and then Omicron
(January 9, 2022)
The Nursing Shortage During
COVID-19 (January 24, 2022)
Finishing the Second Year
(February 2, 2022)
Rewriting Pandemic Economics
(February 11, 2022)
Is it Over? (February 24,
2022)
Two Years of Pandemic: An
Accounting (March 13, 2022)
One Million Deaths
(March 23, 2022)
Risk and Uncertainty Once
Again (April 18, 2022)
This is the Way the COVID Ends
(May 3, 2022)
Is This Time Different?
(May 14, 2022)
Deaths of the Elderly
(May 20, 2022)
A Pause, for Now (June 4,
2022)
Now, It’s Personal (June
23, 2022)
*****
I conduct research in health and housing
economics.
My research interests, papers,
and presentations, are located here.
My
current research, funded by the Michigan Health Endowment Foundation starting April
1, 2017, seeks to improve care in Skilled
Nursing
Facilities (SNFs) through improved information systems for
residents/caregivers/administrators. Contact me for more details.
and Miron Stano), with Instructor’s Guide and Study Questions. Together with Shooshan Danagoulian,
we are preparing the 9th
edition, to come out in 2023.
As of July 2019, we are proud to
participate in the City of Detroit University
Economic Analysis Partnership:
University of Michigan (Gabriel Ehrlich
PI); Wayne State University (Allen C. Goodman PI); Michigan State University
(Eric Scorsone PI)
This unique five-year collaboration will
provide economic consulting and forecasting services to the City of Detroit.
*****
Policy and Research Presentations
March 10, 2004 Detroit News Op-Ed piece Detroit
Housing Rebound Needs Safe Streets, Good Schools.
January 15, 2008 participation in a
podcast on the BBC regarding the
Healthcare System in Detroit and the U.S.
A policy proposal - Fixing Part of the
Mortgage Meltdown,
Michigan Stem Cell Economics
Study, August 2008
A
“The
Economics of Health Care Reform”, presented October 25, 2011 at the Adult
Learning Institute.
Is there an S in Urban Housing Supply …
or What on Earth Happened in
Goodman, Goodman, Goodman, and Goodman
“A Few Goodmen” (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QktKLTLyLIM) – presented at 2015 AEA Meetings
Interview
with Stephen Henderson on WDET, April 6, 2016, about Differential Taxation
for Public Services in
*****
Graduate Studies at
*****
Jeopardy! and Trivia
RIP
Alex Trebek, November 8, 2020.
On
June 13, 2008. I was a contestant on Jeopardy! Others have written blogs
about their adventures.
I
decided to do something else! I hope you like it.
On
October 1, 2014, my daughter Sara also appeared. She did better than Dad.
Sara
and I are currently Llamas in the Sequoia League of Learned League.
*** Peace Corps
***
Sara started a Peace Corps career in
Burkina Faso in June 2011, returning in August 2013.
Her experiences were exciting and
unusual. She has continued her blog during her return.
Sara received her
currently studying for a PhD in public health at The University of California – Irvine.
Classes
(Syllabus / Course Material) |
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State and Local Public Finance, Cr. 4 Prerequisites:
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Prerequisites: |
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Public/Urban Economics Cr. 4 Prerequisites:
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Prerequisites: This advanced course on the allocation
of health care resources concentrates on demand and supply of health care. It
looks at the roles of hospitals, physicians, and health insurance; market
imperfections, government policies, and their role in economics of health
care. |
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Dissertation Candidacy (Graduate) Open only to Departmental Dissertation
Candidates |
To contact me
via e-mail click allen.goodman@wayne.edu
updated June 4, 2020
NeptuneStardust