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Mike Norman Economics

The American Working Class Dilemma — Joel Kotkin

Written from a conservative angle but raises important issues and questions of concern to all, especially politicians that have to respond to them in the coming election cycle. This presents dilemmas for both parties in the US presidential election campaign that is now underway.New geographyThe American Working Class Dilemma Joel Kotkin is the R.C. Hobbs Presidential Fellow in Urban Futures at Chapman University in Orange and executive director of the Houston-based Center for Opportunity...

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A Market Correction in the Humanities—What Are You Going to Do with That? — Leigh Claire La Berge

The GI Bill marked a pivotal moment in higher education. But such a bill should be seen as more broadly reflective of the country’s Keynesian moment: roughly, the late 1940s through the early 1970s, in which art, public culture, and, yes, education, were funded directly by both state and federal governments. In the 1950s and ’60s, as Sharon Zukin notes, public expenditure in arts through universities “opened art as a second career for people who had not yet been integrated into the labor...

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Zero Hedge — US Slaps New Tariffs On China; One Minute Later China Retaliates

Trade war escalating tit for tat. Who blinks first? And what happens if neither side blinks? ...with no trade deal in sight, at 12:00am on Sunday, the Trump administration slapped tariffs on $112 billion in Chinese imports, the latest escalation in a trade war that’s ground the global economy to a halt, sent Germany into a recession, and given the market an alibi to keep rising because, wait for it, "a trade deal is imminent." Only, it isn't, and 1 minute later, at 12:01am EDT, China...

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RIP Immanuel Wallerstein — “This is the end; this is the beginning” — Oleg Komlik

Wallerstein lived a deep commitment to justice, scholarship and change. He has written dozens of remarkable and award-winning books, hundreds of influential papers, thousands of shrewd commentaries. His superb, eye-opening and insightful World‑Systems Analysis (culminated in four-volume masterpiece: 1974, 1980, 1989 and 2011) has transformed the way we understand history, capitalism, colonialism, social sciences, and the present turbulent times. Wallerstein was one of those rare academics...

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Prebuttal: Fiscal Policy Can Be Effective — Menzie Chinn

Let’s hope we don’t go through the next recession debating in the same way whether fiscal policy can affect GDP, particularly during periods of economic slack and accommodative monetary policy (e.g., Fama, Mulligan, etc.).… If we do, I foresee social unrest.Menzie Chinn lays out an empirical case against neoclassical argument based on non-empirical assumptions like Ricardian equivalence, for example, that also turn out to be contradicted by data-based evidence.EconbrowserPrebuttal: Fiscal...

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Going to extremes — Diane Coyle

Review of Extreme Economies: from Akita in Japan to Santiago in Chile, from Glasgow to Kinshasa by Richard Davies. Davies picks this up in the conclusion: “The biggest gap in economics is the way it completely ignores social capital.” This is why our Bennett Institute Wealth Economy team is exploring the measurement of social capital. Economics doesn’t entirely ignore it – it gets lables such as ‘institutions’ or ‘goodwill’ – but is treated as a black box at best. So I agree with the...

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Anya Parampil – Hausmann hypocrisy: Guaido coup official raked in dollars from dictators and banking behemoths while promoting ‘democracy’ for Venezuela

Ricardo Hausmann slammed banks for doing business with Venezuela’s elected government. But financial disclosure forms filed with Harvard show the putsch-plotting economist earned fees from kings, dictators, and military occupiers. There is no democracy, the world is run by oligarchs. Behind the scenes this goes on.  Hausmann was compensated for speeches and consulting services he performed for governments around the globe, from Peru (2012) to Brazil (2015) to Kazakhstan (2014 and...

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Film “Official Secrets” Points to a Mammoth Iceberg — Sam Husseini

Review. Two-time Oscar nominee Keira Knightley is known for being in "period pieces" such as Pride and Prejudice, so her playing the lead in the new film Official Secrets, scheduled to be release in the U.S. this Friday, may seem odd at first. That is until one considers that the time span being depicted-- the early 2003 run-up to the invasion of Iraq-- is one of the most dramatic and consequential periods of modern human history. It is also one of the most poorly understood, in part...

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Links — Are the natives getting restless? 1968 redux?

Defend Democracy PressYellow Vests Gather for 42nd Week of Protests in Paris‘Stop the Coup, Defend Democracy’, Thousands Shout in the UKSecond ‘yellow vests’ protest in Geneva draws several hundred SI‘Stop the Coup Coup Kachoo!’: Glasgow Protesters Rally Against ProrogationProtests Over PM Johnson's Move to Suspend Parliament Take Place in Glasgow - Video Reuters Hong Kong commercial centers paralyzed as protesters, police exchange petrol bombs and tear gas TASSAbout 750 protesters...

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Justin Fox – Most Canadians Are Now Better Off Than Most Americans

Middle-class people in the U.S. are losing ground to their peers in other rich countries.  U.S capitalism is falling the middle and lower classes. Trickle down is not working. Our income estimates may actually underestimate the economic well-being of Canadians relative to Americans. Indeed, Canadians usually receive more in-kind benefits from their governments, including notably in health care (as noted also by Wolfson and Murphy, 1998). Had these benefits been included in the estimates,...

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