If I had my way, we’d require students to write 800-word essays, just for writing and reasoning practice.I have been doing this for years now. It forces students to develop well-focused arguments. There is also one other huge benefit: it minimizes the possibility of Bullshit. (Come to think of it, we need to impose such word restrictions whenever faculty speak or write anywhere, anytime! editor: does that include you? Awshutup!)
Anyway, back to Krugman:
It’s really, really hard to say something meaningful in a limited space. And yet, that constraint has its virtues: it forces you to be concise, to figure out what you really need to say and skip the rest, to find turns of phrase that are shorter and usually plainer. And my experience is that the process of doing all that almost always makes the thing read better.Yep. While my columns do not have the importance or reach that Krugman's have, I am always aiming for a length of between 675 and 725 words. Unless the newspaper restricts me to 500 words or less.
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