Wednesday , May 14 2025
Home / Mike Norman Economics (page 1245)

Mike Norman Economics

Popular Resistance — Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega to Telesur: ‘The Coup Was Defeated’

Ortega says that the country has experienced extreme violence over the past several months at the hands of the “extreme right” of Nicaragua and U.S. elected officials who have always opposed the Sandinista revolution since it emerged in the 1980s. The president went on to say that the violence is the fruit of U.S. officials who are working with poor paramilitaries within the country who want to knock down the Sandinistas. Popular ResistanceNicaragua’s Daniel Ortega to Telesur: ‘The Coup...

Read More »

Liz Alderman – Portugal Dared to Cast Aside Austerity. It’s Having a Major Revival.

It seems that the socialists do better capitalism than the conservatives do, well at least in Portugal. Businesses are now flourishing. You see, conservative parties, like the British Conservative Party and New labour, are only interested in serving the elite. KV LISBON — Ramón Rivera had barely gotten his olive oil business started in the sun-swept Alentejo region of Portugal when Europe’s debt crisis struck. The economy crumbled, wages were cut, and unemployment doubled. The government...

Read More »

Tyler Cowen — Which happiness results are robust?

Tyler Cowen comments on a paper, and Barkley Rosser, who is not an author of the paper but is interested in the issues, responds in the comments. (Ignore the trolls in the comments.) I agree with Barkley Rosser. Social phenomena are difficult to measure and subjectivity greatly complicates this. However, it doesn't invalidate all models any more than similar issues invalidate modeling in economics. Where problems arise lies not so much in modeling and modeling decisions as in...

Read More »

Sarah Berger – 4-day workweek is a success, New Zealand experiment finds

There's no two ways about, humans are cooperative creatures who like to help each other. KVIf productivity is plummeting in the workplace, the solution might be simple: Make the work week shorter. One company did just that by experimenting with a four-day workweek. The trial was so successful, management is seeking to make the change permanent. It also found an increased level of teamwork and collaboration (“employees describe how they felt a mutual willingness to ‘help each other out,’”...

Read More »

On the Economy — How Innovative Is China?

A few years ago, China overtook the U.S. and other innovative countries in terms of patent applications. More recently, it also became the leader in patent grants. But does this mean China is now the world leader in innovation? A recent Economic Synopsesessay explores this idea.... Short and informative.FBRSL — On the EconomyHow Innovative Is China?

Read More »

Timothy Taylor — The Need for Generalists

One of the many political cliches that makes me die a little bit inside is when someone claims that all we need to address a certain problem (health care, poverty, transportation, the Middle East, whatever) is to bring together a group of experts who will provide the common-sense solution that we have all been ignoring. But while bringing together a group of specialist experts can provide a great deal of information and insight, they are often not especially good at melding their specific...

Read More »

Tithi Bhattacharya and Susan Ferguson — Deepening our Understanding of Social Reproduction Theory

Probably not of interest to all but worth posting for those interested in a contemporary Marxian approach. When we embarked on our project to explore Social Reproduction Theory (SRT), at the back of our mind was the phrase from the Marx and Engels’ German Ideology, ‘[human beings] must be in a position to live in order to be able to ‘make history’’. In class societies, since there lies between ‘living’ and ‘making history’ webs of social relations that enable and inhibit life, Marxism has...

Read More »

Duncan Green — Why is Latin America Going Backwards?

Increasingly, however, academics and development practitioners are looking at a less visible and tangible obstacle – the capture of the State by economic and political elites. The extreme concentration of economic and political power reinforces the ability to unduly co-opt, corrupt and divert the democratic process, and influence the role of the State, perpetuating measures that reinforce privilege on the one hand and inequality and exclusion on the other. This elite capture is manifested...

Read More »

Philip Giraldi — Is Bill Browder the Most Dangerous Man in the World?

The darling of the war party needs to answer some questions Update: The link to the film exposing Browder provided in this article has been taken down.Unz ReviewIs Bill Browder the Most Dangerous Man in the World? Philip Giraldi, former CIA counter-terrorism specialist and military intelligence officer, now Executive Director of the Council for the National Interest and founding member of the Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity

Read More »