15
(unnecessarily in Villager’s
mind) on an actual reading
of what Richard Tol said, in
this case in his horrible ESRI
paper about feckless unem-
ployed people. Unlike Tol,
they are all labour econo-
mists. They’re also very mean
about Tol’s methodology:
“The basic approach of the
paper [authored by Tol and
others] is as follows: it uses
Household Budget Survey
(HBS) data to examine the
consumption patterns of
different types of house-
holds. HBS data is collected
at the household, rather
than the individual level so
the analysis distinguishes
between households whose
chief earner is employed and
those whose chief earner is
not employed. In particular,
it examines the consump-
tion patterns of these two
household types under
four headings: transport,
childcare, heat & light, and
takeaway food. To the extent
that the amount spent by
these households differ, the
difference is designated a
cost of working.
Without going any further, the problems with
this approach are clear. Households headed by
earners would have higher expenditure than
households headed by unemployed people even
if the earners incurred zero costs of working, sim-
ply because they have higher incomes. If you have
a higher income, you are more likely to go for a
spin in the car at the weekend, to buy a takeaway
on Friday night, to employ a nanny rather than use
the local childminder, and to leave the heating on
if it’s chilly. It is therefore very important to take
this income eff ect – which is going to be substan-
tial – into account before labelling the difference
in expenditures as working costs.
This is actually very tricky to do at all, and even
trickier to do well. However the approach adopted
by Tol et al is not statistically valid”.
Not statistically Valid. Sorry Tol: Wrong Again.
And Villager again has avoided having to read what
the peripatetic attention-lover actually said.
In the Middle of our Street
After 14 years of campaigning, the people of
Ireland finally have the same environmental
human rights as the rest of Europe now that
the final ratification process for the Aarhus
(pronounced Our House) Convention has been
completed with the deposition of Irish ratifica-
tion papers at the United Nations in New York
yesterday.
Irish citizens will now have access to environ-
mental information possessed by any government
agency, and many private bodies, made available
at a ‘reasonable’ charge, and generally within one
month of receiving the request.
These bodies must proactively provide envi-
ronmental information to the public and also
inform them what information they hold, and how
to access it. In emergency situations, such as a day
of unusually bad air pollution, or a flood, authori-
ties must immediately distribute all information
in their possession that could help the public take
preventative measures or reduce harm.
The right to participate in decision-making
gives citizens the opportunity to express their
concerns and opinions when authorities make
plans that could affect the environment in the
knowledge that the authorities must take their
inputs into account, and give reasoned arguments
for the decisions arrived at.
Finally, it places importance on environmental
justice - a crucial factor in the drive to empower
people to seek a good quality of life. Access to jus-
tice must be easy, inexpensive, timely, and provide
effective remedies.
Faughnan’s Hegemony
Villager’s mailbox has just filled with Joe Higgins’
travel expenses for the first half of 2012. It’s
impressively dull and thankfully shows a prefer-
ence for train over car but what’s this? The fuel
claims are based on the AA ‘fuel cost reckoner’.
How humourless, how bourgeois, how Dort. If
the AA and all they stand for is not comprador
latifundism, Villager does not know what is.
Pariahs
Niall Collins, of the partisan FF ‘don’t burst the
party apart’ Collinses, now spokesperson on the
environment has done extensive research prov-
ing that the er nonsense on local authorities,
Forsey and all that, is the responsibility of FG
and Labour, who have dominated them since the
2009 elections.
Thing is, no media want to publish his research.
That’s because it’s tainted, Niall.
Everyone deserves a holiday
As Villager battles in the raging sleet to churn out
his essential miscellany, he wishes well to Ireland’s
elite across the holiday hotspots of the globe. To
Mick Wallace, Seanie Fitzpatrick (how DID you
get the assignee in bankruptcy to release your
passport?) and Denis O’Brien in Poznan and at
every major international sporting beano he says
“Olé” and he bids Martin Cullen well in his new life
operating an art gallery in Florida, with a new love.
Enjoy the sun on your face and all that taxpayer-
funded leafiness, Martin, you deserve it.
Roadwatch - everywhere