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Tag: June 2017

Decisions, Decisions

30/06/201713/07/2019 - Leave a Comment

Lamy: the possibilities of digital simulation struck “a visceral chord.” Artificial intelligence could guide decisions from the political to the personal, if people would seize the opportunities on offer. The Mint talks to Dahlia Lamy, who says the …

Decisions, Decisions Read More

Your word is your bond

30/06/201704/07/2019 - Leave a Comment

Blott: “I didn’t choose glue so much as it chose me.” Tony Blott runs a glue supply company having directed an NHS trust. He sees little difference in many ways …

Your word is your bond Read More

London is too far from Singapore

30/06/201702/01/2022 - Leave a Comment

The UK government’s post Brexit aspiration for the City to challenge Singapore’s growth in offshore finance is flawed and ill-matched to growing global hostility to tax havens. John Christensen explains. …

London is too far from Singapore Read More

It ain’t what you think it’s the way that you think it

30/06/201703/07/2020 - Leave a Comment

Mandela: transformed a “them and us” culture to one based on common ground. The global economic and political quandary we face today will not go away if we fail to …

It ain’t what you think it’s the way that you think it Read More

Brexit: the good, the bad and the ugly

30/06/201702/01/2022 - Leave a Comment

Economists and others gathered to compare notes on Brexit. Deborah Hawkes was there. Before the election, The Mint invited members of the public to join three economists to discuss Brexit, …

Brexit: the good, the bad and the ugly Read More

The only way is ethics

30/06/201726/09/2019 - Leave a Comment

Pettifor: “Private authority can’t fully be trusted to uphold contracts.” Trust and compliance with regulation are not familiar virtues in the world of global finance according to Ann Pettifor. She …

The only way is ethics Read More

He who pays the piper

30/06/201714/07/2019 - Leave a Comment

Baker: his message struggles to be heard because a lot of money goes into calling the other tune. Dean Baker explains how calls for a new type of market – …

He who pays the piper Read More

Red and expert – an insight into studying economics in China

30/06/201703/07/2020 - Leave a Comment

The drag in dragon: lectures on Chinese socialism are more mind numbing than brainwashing. China’s universities revere Western economists. But the students still battle to stay awake through lectures on …

Red and expert – an insight into studying economics in China Read More

Land locked

30/06/201702/01/2022 - Leave a Comment

Money for nothing: Neoclassical economics leaves windfalls from land ownership largely overlooked. As the value of land swells, generations in the UK who didn’t catch the tide of house ownership …

Land locked Read More

Why Minsky Matters: An Introduction to the Work of a Maverick Economist

30/06/201704/07/2019 - Leave a Comment

by L. Randall Wray (2016) Princeton University Press. Ever since the global financial crisis struck, the concept of “a Minsky moment” – a tipping-point at which a euphoric and highly-leveraged …

Why Minsky Matters: An Introduction to the Work of a Maverick Economist Read More

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