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Salonen and the CSO plays Debussy, and the art of Bundling

Images for Orchestra L. 122 and La Mer. Chicago audience are warm, welcoming. We give a lot of standing ovations: Salonen conducts CSO for Debussy’s La mer. De ja vu: NY Phil opens Shanghai Summer Music Festival with French Impressionism Works See the post here Fun facts: Debussy, Turner, and Impressionism We also know that Debussy greatly admired Turner’s work [the English painter]. His richly atmospheric seascapes recorded the daily weather, the time of day, and even the most fleeting effects of wind and light in ways utterly new to painting, and they spoke directly to Debussy. (In 1902, when Debussy went to London, where he saw a number of Turner’s paintings, he enjoyed the trip but hated actually crossing the channel.) The name Debussy finally gave to the first section of La mer, From Dawn to Noon on the Sea, might easily be that of a painting by Turner made sixty years earlier, for the two shared not only a love of subject but also of long, specific, evocative titles. ...

February 6, 2026

Supply Side Structural Change in Macroeconomics

Motivation Baumol (1967): Differential productivity growth across sectors drives “uneven growth” and structural transformation. As sectors experience different rates of technological progress, this causes relative prices to change and labor to reallocate. Question: Can this supply-side mechanism generate structural change while maintaining balanced growth (Kaldor facts)? Model Household utility: $$ \begin{align*} & \int_0^\infty \exp(-\rho t) \frac{c(t)^{1-\theta} - 1}{1-\theta} dt\cr &s.t. \ \dot K(t) = r(t)K(t) - w(t)\bar L -\sum_{i \in \lbrace A, M, S\rbrace}p^iC^i(t) \ \cr & \text{where, }c(t) = \left(\sum_{i \in {A,S,M}} \eta^i C^i(t)^{(\sigma-1)/\sigma}\right)^{\sigma/(\sigma-1)}. \end{align*} $$ Note that $\sigma$ represents elasticity of substitution (constant across sectors) ...

February 5, 2026

Trade and Structural Change

Motivation Paradox: Standard productivity-based theories (see Supply Side Structural Change in Macroeconomics) predict that sectors with higher productivity growth should have declining employment shares. This is counter-intuitive, and false in reality: Japan (1960-1990): Rapid manufacturing productivity growth → increased manufacturing GDP share A lot of empirical evidence (common knowledge
) shows, countries with faster manufacturing TFP growth did not experience faster manufacturing employment decline. And cross-country data shows no negative correlation between manufacturing productivity and manufacturing employment. [Source pending] ...

February 4, 2026

Mendelssohn

Late January and early Feburary is an intriguing time for birthdays
 There’s Mozart (Jan 27 1756 - Dec 5 1791), Schubert (Jan 31 1797 - Nov 19 1828) and Felix Mendelssohn (Feb 3 1809 - Nov 4 1847) I had the fortune of playing the Midsummer Night’s Dream Overture when I was even too young to understand the beauty before internalizing it (16). But the spirit lives on. Happy birthday to one of my favorite composers! ...

February 3, 2026

Three Econometric Footnotes | Hidden LLN, KL Divergence in MLE, and what is Machine Learning?

The Hidden Weight of GMM Consistency Conditions Consider estimating parameter $\theta\in \Theta$ from data $\lbrace w_i\rbrace_{i \in [N]}$ Assume: Parameter space $\Theta\in \R^K$ is compact. The criterion function of GMM $$ s_N(\theta) = s(\vec w; \theta) $$ is continuous in $\theta$ $\forall, \vec w$. $s_N(\cdot)$ well behaves: $$ \sup_{\theta\in \Theta}|s_N(\theta) - s_\infty(\theta) \xrightarrow{p}0. $$ $s_\infty(\theta)$ has a unique minimum at $\theta_0$. Then $\hat \theta_{GMM} \xrightarrow{p}\theta$. The proof is essentially a topological argument — uniform convergence of continuous functions on a compact set, plus a unique minimum, pins down the limit of the minimizers. It is clean, elegant, and almost suspiciously general. ...

February 2, 2026

Implicit vs Explicit Updates

In heterogeneous agent macroeconomics models, the way to compute (solve) a steady state equilibrium of the market is quite interesting. Consider a unit mass of agents, whose utility functions are the same $u:\R \to \R$. In a continuous time world, at each ifinisimmo time point they receive (stochastic) income and capital rents from their historial savings, consume and save more (sometimes saved capital are also called as ‘assets’ that generate returns, but per the no-arbitrage principle, the return of assets and captial rents net capital depreciation should be the same). So it’s being abstracted as a stochastic continuous time markov system, the state is the asset that the agent hold, action is consumption, plus random income shocks. ...

February 1, 2026

Rite of Winter

“Don’t try, just be.” — E Pahud comment on playing Schubert. Franz Schubert was born today 229 years ago. He composed more than 1500 works in his short career (He died 1828, aged 31) Courtesy of Wikipedia. I don’t own copyright! Some of my favourites include Die Forelle, and the Impromptus (No. 3 in G Flat Major). Schubert’s foremost contribution is his Lieders (art songs). The Winterreise was composed just one year before his pass away. Listen to Thomas Quasthoff & Daniel Barenboim performing Gute Nacht. ...

January 31, 2026

Does supply side or demand side structural change drive growth?

Our macroeconomic class introduced and discussed this paper, in the middle of a series of discussion on growth studied under the framework of neoclassical growth model. Standard approaches to structural change (the shift from agriculture to manufacturing to services as economies develop) have relied on two main mechanisms: Supply-side stories: Differential productivity growth across sectors changes relative prices, causing reallocation Demand-side stories (Stone-Geary preferences): As income rises, people shift spending toward “luxury” sectors Both mechanism’s intuition feels right. But the demand-side’s Stone-Geary preferences have income effects that vanish as income grows. It becomes negligible for rich countries. This is empirically problematic—we observe strong income effects on sectoral composition even at high income levels. So, when the theory tells you one thing but the reality tells you another we need a better model to solve the problem: ...

January 30, 2026

Salonen & Trifonov & CSO presents Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 2

I sat through a 66-minute Bruckner Symphony (No. 4)—twice. Salonen, Trifonov & Beethoven 2026 January Week 4: Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday https://cso.org/performances/25-26/cso-classical/salonen-trifonov-beethoven/ Program: Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 2 + Bruckner Symphony No. 4 (Romantic) I went to both the Thursday and Friday concerts. The Bruckner is full of moments where the entire brass section erupts into relentless fortississimo, practically blasting your head open—and I was seated on the terrace behind the stage. Bless me. ...

January 29, 2026

Implicit Updating of HJB deja-vu de Newton's Method

Interestingly, when using implicit updating to solve a continuous time system (of a certain structure), it coincide with Newton’s Method Setup Consider a household with state $(a, z) \in \mathcal{A} \times \mathcal{Z}$, where $a$ denotes assets and $z$ follows a Poisson process with intensity matrix $\Lambda$. Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman Equation: $$ \rho v(a,z) = \max_c \left \lbrace u(c) + \partial_a v(a,z) \cdot s(a,z) + \sum_{z’} \lambda_{zz’} v(a,z’) \right\rbrace $$ where savings $s(a,z) = ra + wz - c(a,z)$. ...

January 28, 2026