by
Nick Cohen / August 13, 2012
Britain may look confident to the eyes of the Olympics spectators, but its
leaders are clueless. The Games are going rather well, but a small incident
illuminates the wider malaise. Once, Britain’s
future seemed clear. It would abandon manufacturing and embrace services.
However, the 2008 crash crushed old illusions and paralyzed the British
political class. The City could never return to the wild days of the bubble.
The “normal” is over and gone. The Olympic opening ceremony revealed that Britain
had had a glorious millennium but that its future would be clueless, as the
ceremony failed to show anything worth mentioning.2012年9月16日日曜日
2012年7月22日日曜日
Greek Lessons in East Germany by Peter Gumbel
Could the restructuring of the former GDR show the way?
There are two analogies concerning the economic recovery of Greece. One is found in Argentina, which experienced an economic rebound. The other is the comparison with the former East Germany. Argentina’s recovery was led by exports of commodities. However, this does not apply to Greek because Greece does not have commodities. The GDR way—patience and rigor eventually pay off. German Chancellor Anglela Merkel’s dogged insistence will recover Greek economy if Greece is willing to accept top-to-bottom institutional reform in such points as a new tax code, propriety rights, and legal, social, and financial structures. Slashing labor costs is also needed to boost competitiveness. 104 words
2012年6月30日土曜日
Fiddling While Rome Burns
Written by Stephan Faris (TIME May 14,2012)
Italy’s failed politicians cling to power even as the country’s woes linger.
An Italian comedian Beppe Grillo is
organizing nationwide protests against governmental corruption called “Go F
Yourself” days. Italy’s politics has stagnated. Political parties change
frequently through splits and mergers. Corruption scandals are competing for
column inches. Public confidence in the political class is in the single
digits. 11.6% of the workforce had given up looking for work. The official
unemployment rate is 9.8%. However, maverick mayoral candidates in Milan and
Florence have challenged their party hierarchies and won. The message should
not be “button down,” but “open up.” 100 words
2012年5月26日土曜日
THE SAVIOR OF EUROPE
WORLDVIEW (March 5, 2012) by Fareed Zakaria
The Savior of Europe. Mario Draghi just bought his continent—and
the rest of the world—some breathing room.
Because Draghi, the head of the European Central Bank,
printed about $600 billion so that Europe’s banks would be able to borrow as
much money as they wanted at the rate of 1%. Thanks to the printing, European
stocks had their best January in nearly 15 years. Draghi’s action is not a new
model because the Federal Reserve in U.S. did the same four years ago although
it was criticized by many. Japan’s central bank also printed trillions of yen
to stabilize the economy after the Great Tsunami in March. The fear of inflation
is justified, but it will not happen at a time when unemployment is sky-high.
If the lenders of last resort had not done it, we would be discussing how to
get out of a global Great Depression. (148 words)
IS HUGO CHAVEZ IN TERMINAL DECLINE?
ESSAY (March 19, 2012) by Jorge Castaneda
Venezuela’s influential President could lose re-election if voters believe he is dying. Although the Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez underwent cancer surgery in Cuba, he is campaigning for the upcoming presidential election. We do not know what sort of cancer he is suffering from, but we do now know it is grave and recurrent. If he is seriously ill, the electorate may not believe he is capable of governing for another six years. This matters for the following three reasons: (1) Chaves’s role in relation to Cuba is crucial for Cuba because Cuba depends on Venezuelan oil and subsidies. (2) Chaves’s departure from the Latin American political scene would weaken pro-Chavez governments like Bolivia, Ecuador, and Nicaragua. (3) If Chavez is no longer president, Cuba, Iran, and Syria will lose a valuable and irreplaceable ally. (134 words)
Venezuela’s influential President could lose re-election if voters believe he is dying. Although the Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez underwent cancer surgery in Cuba, he is campaigning for the upcoming presidential election. We do not know what sort of cancer he is suffering from, but we do now know it is grave and recurrent. If he is seriously ill, the electorate may not believe he is capable of governing for another six years. This matters for the following three reasons: (1) Chaves’s role in relation to Cuba is crucial for Cuba because Cuba depends on Venezuelan oil and subsidies. (2) Chaves’s departure from the Latin American political scene would weaken pro-Chavez governments like Bolivia, Ecuador, and Nicaragua. (3) If Chavez is no longer president, Cuba, Iran, and Syria will lose a valuable and irreplaceable ally. (134 words)
2011年11月21日月曜日
THE CURISOU CAPITALIST
When the Dismal Science Was Brilliant
by Rona Foroohar
Sylvia Nasar explains the history of economic genius. We could sure use some.
The 20 century economists have done a good job, but their theories do not apply in today's post financial crisis. The writer says in conclusion, "As we enter an era of rising inequality and powere shifts that promises to be just as unsettling as the Industrial Revolution was, it's clear that economic genius is needed now more than ever.
I did not know that Charles Dickens's "A Chrismas Carol" called for new and more generous economic thinking. Now I understand how Scrooge helped the Cratchit and his family in the end of the story.
by Rona Foroohar
Sylvia Nasar explains the history of economic genius. We could sure use some.
The 20 century economists have done a good job, but their theories do not apply in today's post financial crisis. The writer says in conclusion, "As we enter an era of rising inequality and powere shifts that promises to be just as unsettling as the Industrial Revolution was, it's clear that economic genius is needed now more than ever.
I did not know that Charles Dickens's "A Chrismas Carol" called for new and more generous economic thinking. Now I understand how Scrooge helped the Cratchit and his family in the end of the story.
2011年7月30日土曜日
America's Nitwit Anglophiles by Joe Queenan
Why are they so oblivious to the things that really make Britian great?
Americans’ Anglophiles believe Americans are loud, rude and afflicted with poor taste and despise their compatriots, but 20,000 drunks, lechers, sluts and gangsters hang around London’s Leicester Square. Anglophiles get all weak in the knees at the very mention of Beatrix Potter and Peter Pan. Their admiration of the royal wedding is an act of demented form of cultural fetishism. Anglophiles do not admire the wonderful things the English have given the U.S.—legal system, King Lear, Jane Eyre, and the Protestant Reformation, but their attention is madly directed at the things like bowler hats, Harrods, people with names like Bonham-Carter. Isn't something wrong with Anglophilia? (105 words)
Question: Why do Anglophiles admire people with names like Bonham-Carter? What lies in the name, Bonham-Carter? Please, anyone reading this blog, give me the answer.
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