Chaos Theory, Shocks, and Fragility, Australia and Elsewhere
Australia and other countries had the opportunity to reduce financial fragility. They may soon discover the cost of doing too little.
Read more...Australia and other countries had the opportunity to reduce financial fragility. They may soon discover the cost of doing too little.
Read more...A troubling internal cable signed by a host of U.S. diplomats blames Obama for not striking Syria earlier.
Read more...The TPP threatens to undermine public health just as the world is on the verge of major health crises.
Read more...Germany is determined to teach the UK a costly lesson if it dares to defy its hegemony via a Brexit.
Read more...Student debt isn’t just a millstone around young people’s necks; it’s weighing down the economy.
Read more...Lender demands in China as a sign of credit stress.
Read more...Spain demonstrates some of the costs and dislocations created by negative interest rate policies.
Read more...The ruling classes in the UK will be highly motivated to try to get the Brexit genie back in the bottle.
Read more...Investors got a big dose of bad news about the economy and geopolitics and reacted accordingly.
Read more...Banks have had it with negative interest rates and are starting to push back.
Read more...The substitution of human labour by artificial intelligence and robots is a keenly debated topic. Some claim that a substantial share of jobs is at risk, while others argue that computers and robots will lead to product innovations and hence to unimaginable new occupations. This column uses a survey of Japanese firms to examine the impact of AI-related technologies on business and employment. Overall, firms expect a positive impact on business but a negative impact on employment. Firms with a highly skilled workforce, however, have a more optimistic view than firms with lower skilled employees.
Read more...Trump as a symbol of an America morphing into a visibly less democratic fading empire.
Read more...A debate on sustainable growth versus degrowth.
Read more...Steve Keen’s macroeconomic model allows him to identify zombies-in-the-making. It’s not pretty.
Read more...Economists bemoan the lack of aggressive fiscal spending after the crisis. Funny how few of them were willing to advocate it when it mattered.
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