Setting the economic agenda Wayne McMillan Economic and financial commentators, central bank gurus, policy research spokespeople and treasury boffins use a language that could be…
The post Setting the economic agenda first appeared on Economic Reform Australia.Reading
- by Psyche Film
- by Amanda J Wright
In January, the U.S. and Israel conducted the largest joint military exercise in history.
The post Pentagon Developed Contingency Plan for War With Iran appeared first on The Intercept.
- by Peter Fraenkel
Monetary and fiscal policy frameworks for Australia part 2 John Haly This is a continuation of my October 2022 submissions in accordance with the review…
The post Monetary and fiscal policy frameworks for Australia part 2 first appeared on Economic Reform Australia.Homelessness study report and competitive neutrality Colin Cook The critique of the Productivity Commission’s ‘Review Study Report on the Housing and Homelessness Agreement’ by Profs…
The post Homelessness study report and competitive neutrality first appeared on Economic Reform Australia.Ecological reasoning demands perspectives that mainstream economics is designed to obliterate Gregory Daneke “Given the numerous disasters exhibited of late involving Mainstream Economics, various heterodox…
The post Ecological reasoning demands perspectives that mainstream economics is designed to obliterate first appeared on Economic Reform Australia.General Paulo Sérgio alegou "falta de condições" para aterrissagem de helicópteros durante crise humanitária dos indígenas em Roraima.
The post Documentos contradizem versão de ministro da Defesa de Bolsonaro para negar apoio aos Yanomami appeared first on The Intercept.
The transition to a steady-state economy: reply to Michael Keating [1] Mark Diesendorf This article is a response to a previous article by Michael Keating…
The post The transition to a steady-state economy: reply to Michael Keating [1] first appeared on Economic Reform Australia.Seems to be what most of us thought it was before the war ever started: try to replicate Afghanistan in the 80s. Keep Russia tied down till Russia collapses, supplying weapons and letting masses of Ukrainians die, avoiding US casualties. The country will be in ruins and not recover for decades if ever.
There are a few problems with this.
Russia is not the USSR. In many ways the USSR was stronger, but Russia is far more resilient. The USSR had a food deficit, while Russia is a net food exporter: one of the world’s largest. They still have a vast market for hydrocarbons and for their weapons. There is nothing the West can sanction that they must have. This is especially the case because while China and India have pretended to go along with the sanctions, both countries are moving into Russia in a big way to replace the Western businesses which left.
The debt ceiling limit is destructive, duplicative and dumb Stephanie Kelton In a previous issue of ERA Review we drew attention to the regular saga…
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The money multiplier – neat, plausible, and utterly wrong Lars Syll The mainstream textbook concept of money multiplier assumes that banks automatically expand the credit…
The post The money multiplier – neat, plausible, and utterly wrong first appeared on Economic Reform Australia.