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12 votes
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David Graeber has died
16 votes -
The value of extended families
6 votes -
The economics of a nuclear reactor
7 votes -
The stock market looks like the Bitcoin economy, and that’s not a good thing
9 votes -
Home ownership is the West’s biggest economic-policy mistake. It is an obsession that undermines growth, fairness and public faith in capitalism leaders
23 votes -
How is the stock market at an all time high?
8 votes -
Theorizing racial capitalism
4 votes -
Norway's wealth fund loses £16bn in first half of 2020 after Covid panic – state support has restored investor confidence but fund expects more market turmoil
7 votes -
The recession is over for the rich, but the working class is far from recovered
7 votes -
In praise of idleness
11 votes -
Millennials slammed by second financial crisis fall even further behind
15 votes -
How not to lose the lockdown generation
9 votes -
Sweatpants forever
13 votes -
"Harbinger households" : Neighborhoods that consistently buy products that get discontinued, buy real-estate that underperforms, and donate to losing political candidates
12 votes -
Angrynomics: How reform of capitalism in the last twenty years reflects a failure of ideas
8 votes -
For the people who want capitalism to be replaced by some form of socialism, why?
(Yes, I know "socialism" and "capitalism" are vague terms, hence why you should probably very much clarify what type of "socialist" system you want, since "socialism" can be anything from market...
(Yes, I know "socialism" and "capitalism" are vague terms, hence why you should
probablyvery much clarify what type of "socialist" system you want, since "socialism" can be anything from market socialism, Marxism-Leninism, Syndicalism, democratic socialism, Trotskyism, anarcho-socialism, anarcho-communism, Luxemburgism, etc. Also, I'm a far cry from informed in this, so please correct me when needed.)So anyway, if you call yourself a socialist or at least want to abolish capitalism, why?
So for the best reasons I have seen are:
- Capitalism is inherently hierarchical and incompatible with democracy, which is egalitarian.
Obviously not all types of socialism (I.E, most types of socialism that have been tried for more than a few years because they weren't overthrown or voted out) are egalitarian however and many of these systems are completely centralized.
- Big companies will naturally use the state to their own advantage, as capitalism is driven by self interest instead of any vague marker of "competition".
The main argument against this is that you definitely regulate capitalism to be more competitive with stuff like antitrust without abolishing the whole thing.
18 votes -
The United States has abruptly ordered China to close its consulate in Houston, accusing diplomats of aiding economic espionage and the attempted theft of scientific research
7 votes -
The lights go out on Lebanon’s economy as financial collapse accelerates
13 votes -
You are now leaving FantasyLand: The losses will be taken by somebody
4 votes -
Does increasing the minimum wage lead to higher prices?
6 votes -
Britain should not quake before Xi Jinping: China has already peaked and faces economic stagnation
7 votes -
Poorer, angrier, riskier -- modelling the crunch with Surplus Energy Economics
4 votes -
Goodhart's Law - How systems are shaped by the metrics you chase
9 votes -
Full employment
9 votes -
Amid wide unemployment during Covid-19, basic income schemes have gained fresh relevance. A successful Canadian scheme that's over four decades old could provide a road map for others
6 votes -
Inside China’s race to beat poverty
6 votes -
What economists fear most during this recovery
8 votes -
Overconsumption and growth economy key drivers of environmental crises
7 votes -
Blizzard has suspended or closed over 74,000 accounts in the last month, as bots have upended the game's economy
9 votes -
The economics of nuclear energy
7 votes -
Will all this fiscal and monetary stimulus lead to excessive inflation? (No.)
5 votes -
US Labor Department employment report shows unexpected improvement, but recovery could still take years
7 votes -
David Willetts discusses how baby boomers have become the biggest and richest generation in British history at the expense of younger generations
8 votes -
How Germany saved its workforce from unemployment while spending less per person than the US
12 votes -
Farming and selling gold in RuneScape is helping Venezuelans survive their country's economic crisis
7 votes -
Under cover of capital gains, the hyper-rich have been getting richer than we thought: the earnings of the top 0.1% grew 50% more from 1996 to 2018 than previously measured
20 votes -
America’s deadly obsession with intellectual property: Privatizing life-saving technology like vaccines and clean energy is bad both for the coronavirus and the climate crisis
9 votes -
People are worried about BlackRock
7 votes -
America’s only public bank, the Bank of North Dakota, is number one in saving small businesses
10 votes -
United States seeks to change the rules for mining the Moon
6 votes -
After the crisis, big business could get even bigger: the pandemic and its response thus far are perfectly designed to concentrate corporate power--but we don’t have to accept that
6 votes -
What will it take to prevent a new Great Depression in the USA? Around $10,000,000,000,000 (ten trillion dollars)
9 votes -
The lessons of the Great Depression
8 votes -
Nearly a third of small, independent farmers are facing bankruptcy by the end of 2020, new survey says
6 votes -
Merkel and Macron make a stunning coronavirus proposal on EU pandemic fund
10 votes -
Amazon eliminates pay raises for workers as COVID-19 toll mounts
5 votes -
Making life cheap: Population control, herd immunity, and other anti-humanist fables
6 votes -
The president’s job is to manage risk. But Donald Trump is the risk: Donald Trump was a gamble. It’s not paying off.
4 votes -
Non-glamorous gains: The Pennsylvania land tax experiment
7 votes