Name Yoram Bauman | Role Economist | |
Books The Cartoon Introduction to Economics: Volume Two: Macroeconomics Education |
Comedy economics and carbon taxes yoram bauman at tedxtheevergreenstatecollege
Yoram Keyes Bauman (born November 19, 1973) is an American economist and stand-up comedian.
Contents
- Comedy economics and carbon taxes yoram bauman at tedxtheevergreenstatecollege
- Mankiw s ten principles of economics translated by yoram bauman ph d ep 27
- History
- Political Activism
- Selected publications
- References
Mankiw s ten principles of economics translated by yoram bauman ph d ep 27
History
Bauman grew up in San Francisco where he received an undergraduate degree in mathematics at Reed College in Portland, Oregon. In 2003, Bauman attended graduate school at the University of Washington in Seattle, Washington, Where he obtained a Ph.D. in Economics.
Bauman is an environmental economist. He works as a professor at the University of Washington, in the Program on the Environment, Bainbridge Graduate School, and Lakeside School. He is the co-author of the 1998 book Tax Shift which advocates switching taxation from income and property to resource consumption.
Bauman bills himself as the "world's first and only stand-up economist." His video Principles of Economics, translated has more than 1 million views on YouTube.
Political Activism
Bauman is a strong supporter of a carbon tax, in particular, a revenue-neutral carbon tax. He started an organization called CarbonWA which gathered signatures for to put a revenue-neutral carbon tax on the ballot for the Washington elections, 2016. This initiative, known as Washington Initiative 732, would impose a steadily increasing tax on emissions of carbon dioxide, and use that revenue to offset other taxes. Washington relies on a sales tax for much of its revenue, making its state tax code one of the most regressive tax codes in the nation. If it passes, Initiative 732 supporters assert that it will decrease the sales tax, eliminate the business and occupation tax on manufacturing, and expand the state's earned-income tax credit for low-income households.