Boris Johnson finally resigned as UK PM, after his own ministers started resigning, in protest for Johnson’s constant scandals and lies.
The reaction in the UK?
A presentation to the Building bridges around David Graeber’s legacy conference, Paris, Friday July 7, 2022 It may seem strange to invite an economist to give a keynote speech to a conference of the social sciences. Economists have been characterized as autistic and anti-social in the popular press for good reason. They are trained to Continue Reading
The post From Junk Economics to a False View of History: Where Western Civilization Took a Wrong Turn first appeared on Michael Hudson.A persistent regime of low wages may determine very negative long-term consequences on the economy.
Stagnating real wages may have contributed to the slowdown of US productivity
In much of the advanced world, we have witnessed at least three decades of stagnating real wages and massive reductions in the labor share in income. Many analyses have documented these trends, reflecting on their causes and effects from very different standpoints. In the US economy, where the trend toward wage stagnation seems to be particularly strong, it goes together, according to Temin (2015), Storm (2017), and Taylor and Ömer (2020), with a ‘dualistic’ tendency of the economy, with growing polarization between a limited number of high-wage and high-productivity sectors and a growing mass of workers employed in low-productivity and low-wage sectors. Wage stagnation, Taylor and Ömer (2020) note, is also the basis of the growing inequality in personal and family incomes recorded in the USA as well as in many other societies.
The post Slamasaurus appeared first on The Perry Bible Fellowship.
We are in the midst of another global transformation, but this time we might have the tools to get it right.
Self-education can help with personal finance knowledge deficits, which can be more pronounced for women, Economic Education Officer Mary Suiter says in an opinion piece.
Order Keef’s new collection here!
My latest for the Boston Globe.
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Ratner and Sim’s “Who Killed the Phillips Curve – A Murder Mystery”
Publisher: Dragon Moon Press
Written By: J.V. Hilliard
RRP: £12.82 / $19.95 (Paperback) | £3.77 / $4.63 (Kindle)
Reviewed by: Sebastian J. Brook
Few persons, even legal scholars, realize that sovereign bankruptcy has a long history. Far from a pie-in-the-sky scheme conceived in the 1980s by international lawyers such as Christopher Oeschli and economists such as Jeffrey Sachs that later inspired the failed IMF Krueger proposal for a sovereign debt restructuring mechanism, the concept of sovereign debt bankruptcy and discharge (write-off) has an ancient and little known history. My new INET working paper sets out this history for the first time.
Expertise is broken. Trust is eroding. Enough is enough.
While helping at his family’s restaurant, author Ray Boshara has gotten to know the workers and has ideas that speak to their financial aspirations and struggles.