We are pleased to announce that Scott Sumner will be continuing with EconLog for the coming year and is moving from a guest blogger role to being a regular blogger alongside Bryan Caplan and David Henderson.
Scott’s background in macroeconomics and microeconomics, in public visibility and classroom teaching, and in influencing the ideas of others while also engaging in personal introspection have all made him a popular choice for our readers. We welcome him and we hope you look forward to his upcoming posts.
A complete list of Scott’s EconLog posts is available here.
— Lauren Landsburg, Econlib Editor
READER COMMENTS
Nodnarb the Nasty
Jan 1 2015 at 9:54am
Yesssss!
*Double fist pump*
Michael Byrnes
Jan 1 2015 at 10:07am
Congratulations! That’s a great way to kick off the new year!
Norman Carton
Jan 1 2015 at 10:41am
Scott’s posts need editing. They are too long. They should be about half as long as they are.
Kevin V
Jan 1 2015 at 10:45am
Hallelujah!
Clare Zempel
Jan 1 2015 at 10:58am
Bravo.
Toby
Jan 1 2015 at 11:17am
Great news. does this mean that Scott’s blog will over time be merged with Econlog?
The Coase theorem tells me that you could also be twice as patient that or bargain ;-).
Thaomas
Jan 1 2015 at 1:01pm
Bravo!
Jim Glass
Jan 1 2015 at 3:32pm
Yea, Scott Sumner!
eccentric-opinion
Jan 1 2015 at 3:47pm
Excellent! This is great news.
Ricardo Cruz
Jan 1 2015 at 6:38pm
Scott Summer got tenure over econlog ! 😛
Seriously, very cool. 🙂 By the way, please ask someone to develop a cool CSS theme for econlog, with mobile phone support.
Lowertaxeswork
Jan 1 2015 at 6:52pm
I was hoping Econlog would add an economist that specializes in finance. I enjoyed Arnold Kling’s finance postings.
Kaushal Desai
Jan 2 2015 at 4:17am
Invaluable lesson learned: don’t ignore EconLog, even if you’re badly hungover on Jan 1.
Some announcements are not to be missed.
Floccina
Jan 2 2015 at 1:18pm
Yeah!
Comments are closed.