Skip to main content
Skip to content
Case File
kaggle-ho-011017House Oversight

Economic commentary on investment theory with no concrete leads

Economic commentary on investment theory with no concrete leads The passage is a speculative discussion of macroeconomic models and does not mention any individuals, transactions, dates, or actionable information linking powerful actors to misconduct. It offers no investigative leads. Key insights: Discusses Harrod and Solow growth models; Claims optimal investment equals depreciation recovery; Speculates on converting vodka distilleries to orange juice plants

Date
Unknown
Source
House Oversight
Reference
kaggle-ho-011017
Pages
1
Persons
4
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

Economic commentary on investment theory with no concrete leads The passage is a speculative discussion of macroeconomic models and does not mention any individuals, transactions, dates, or actionable information linking powerful actors to misconduct. It offers no investigative leads. Key insights: Discusses Harrod and Solow growth models; Claims optimal investment equals depreciation recovery; Speculates on converting vodka distilleries to orange juice plants

Tags

kagglehouse-oversighteconomicsinvestment-theorymacro-theory

Ask AI About This Document

0Share
PostReddit
Review This Document

Extracted Text (OCR)

EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
What exactly do IJ picture as this capital reserve? Is it vodka distilleries that might be converted to orange juice plants in a pinch? I don’t really know. Human capital itself is versatile. Some retirees could unretire, and vodka plant workers might convert with not much retraining. I will explore some of this idea later. Harrod’s Knife Edge Solow’s neoclassical growth model developed from ideas published a decade earlier by Roy Harrod. Harrod had described a “warranted growth path” given by the pace of technological innovation. He reasoned correctly that any effort to push investment faster must soon founder in the diminishing returns foreseen by Malthus, Ricardo and West in 1815. But how could we get investment exactly right? There was a critical “knife edge” with little margin for error. He was right to stress the dangers of overinvestment. I do the same. But free growth theory, and the overwhelming evidence that it is right, bring a new perspective. What Solow and other economists teach today , judging from the textbooks I read, is more or less Harrod without the knife edge. We are taught to figure out the warranted growth path, meaning the rate of technological growth, and then invest just enough, ex ante, to exceed depreciation by that margin. But my charts and tables show that any investment beyond depreciation recovery is deadweight loss. There is no need to know the warranted growth path because optimum investment is nota function of whatever it might be. Depreciation investment captures the whole of technological growth, and further investment adds no more. It is money left on the table. Optimum ex ante investment, at the collective scale, is depreciation investment. Ex post results will reveal the warranted growth path. What about Underinvestment? One indication in the charts and tables might leave us puzzled. It is easy to understand the futility of ex ante investment (consumption restraint) beyond Chapter 4 Mill’s Idea 1/11/16 26

Related Documents (6)

House OversightSep 5, 2012

Conference schedule and bios of high‑profile cultural and scientific figures

Conference schedule and bios of high‑profile cultural and scientific figures The document lists participants, their biographies, and a conference agenda. It contains no specific allegations, financial transactions, or actionable leads linking powerful individuals to wrongdoing. The only potential investigative angle is the mention of a private, un‑streamed recording and a future app that will host curated personal content, which could raise privacy concerns, but no concrete evidence of misconduct is presented. Key insights: Extensive list of influential participants (e.g., Yo‑Yo Ma, Jeff Katzenberg, Norman Lear, etc.); Details of a private, un‑edited video recording and a planned app to distribute personal biographies and curated content; Mentions of sponsors and production partners (Esri, @radical.media, Scrollmotion, etc.)

1p
House OversightFinancial RecordNov 11, 2025

Gordon Getty memoir draft reveals personal history, economic theories, and family legal disputes

The document is a personal memoir and economic treatise by Gordon Getty. It provides anecdotal recollections of his family, Getty Oil, and past lawsuits, but contains no new, unverified allegations of Describes a 1960s house arrest incident in Saudi Arabia involving Getty Oil staff. Mentions a lawsuit between Gordon Getty and his father over a stock dividend, settled without hard f Outlines Getty

228p
House OversightFeb 26, 2019

Cowen CBD Market Outlook Report – No Evident Investigative Leads

Cowen CBD Market Outlook Report – No Evident Investigative Leads The document is a commercial research note on CBD market size and analyst ratings, containing no references to political figures, financial misconduct, or intelligence activities. It offers no actionable investigative leads. Key insights: Provides market size estimate for U.S. CBD ($16 bn by 2025).; Cites a proprietary survey showing 7% adult usage.; Mentions analyst ratings for WEED, TLRY, TPB.

1p
House OversightFinancial RecordNov 11, 2025

Cowen Equity Research Report on U.S. CBD Market Opportunities (Feb 2019)

The document is a commercial equity research briefing that outlines market size estimates, consumer survey data, and company‑level pricing for CBD products. It contains no specific allegations, undisc Proprietary survey of ~2,500 U.S. adults shows ~7% using CBD as a supplement. Cowen projects a $16 bn U.S. CBD market by 2025, with nutraceuticals, topicals, and beverages as maj Lists of public and

130p
House OversightApr 28, 2015

Book blurb on Alan Turing, free will, and James Tagg's bio

Book blurb on Alan Turing, free will, and James Tagg's bio The document contains no actionable investigative leads, no mention of powerful officials, financial transactions, or wrongdoing. It is a promotional text about historical topics and an entrepreneur’s background, offering no novel or controversial information. Key insights: Discusses Alan Turing’s historical contributions; Poses philosophical questions about AI and free will; Provides a brief biography of James Tagg, a tech entrepreneur

1p
House OversightMay 10, 2016

Gordon Getty memoir draft reveals personal history, economic theories, and family legal disputes

Gordon Getty memoir draft reveals personal history, economic theories, and family legal disputes The document is a personal memoir and economic treatise by Gordon Getty. It provides anecdotal recollections of his family, Getty Oil, and past lawsuits, but contains no new, unverified allegations of wrongdoing, financial misconduct, or links to powerful actors that would merit immediate investigative follow‑up. Key insights: Describes a 1960s house arrest incident in Saudi Arabia involving Getty Oil staff.; Mentions a lawsuit between Gordon Getty and his father over a stock dividend, settled without hard feelings.; Outlines Getty family trust structure and board composition after J. Paul Getty’s death.

1p

Forum Discussions

This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,500+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.

Support This ProjectSupported by 1,550+ people worldwide
Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.