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7 votes
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Guyana is trying to keep its oil blessing from becoming a curse
16 votes -
(Former Morgan Stanley chair) Stephen Roach: It pains me to say Hong Kong is over
17 votes -
Why do Americans think the economy is bad?
29 votes -
US jobs growth of 353,000 far outstrips estimates
29 votes -
Half of recent US inflation due to high corporate profits, report finds
35 votes -
Why Germany is rich but Germans are poor and angry
35 votes -
A theory of grift
8 votes -
Economist Gabriel Zucman investigates the wealth stored in tax havens (2019)
22 votes -
Why does Germany continue to self-destruct?
7 votes -
The McDonald's theory of why everyone thinks the economy sucks
48 votes -
The region at the heart of Germany’s economic stagnation
6 votes -
Europe's single currency, used daily by about 350 million people, has become a hot topic in an unlikely place – Sweden
12 votes -
Something is golden in the state of Denmark – can Novo Nordisk's success really be a problem for the Danish economy?
8 votes -
It’s official: The era of China’s global dominance is over
22 votes -
Costco capitalism
23 votes -
Rising long-term interest rates are posing the latest threat to a US economic ‘soft landing’
24 votes -
With Novo Nordisk, Denmark wants to avoid the Nokia trap
14 votes -
Norway wealth tax pushes the rich to move to Switzerland – millionaire prime minister has embarked on a push to tax the wealthiest for social justice
41 votes -
The GDP gap between Europe and the United States is now 80%
37 votes -
Diamond prices are in free fall in one key corner of the market
31 votes -
How were modern companies allowed to get so big in spite of antitrust laws? The mythology of horizontal merger efficiencies
20 votes -
Novo Nordisk, the Danish company behind two popular obesity medications, is reaping huge profits and is now responsible for most of the country's economic growth
6 votes -
Towards a New Socialism
41 votes -
Rice prices soar, fanning fears of food inflation spike in Asia
17 votes -
How universal basic income became the pessimist’s utopia
46 votes -
America's obsession with weight-loss drugs is affecting the economy of Denmark – Novo Nordisk's market capitalization has matched the GDP of its home country
17 votes -
China's property crisis deepens with developer Country Garden at risk of default
13 votes -
Analysis - Financial Times article - Lex in depth: how investors are underpricing climate risks
10 votes -
What a green monetary policy could look like
8 votes -
Fitch downgrades US credit rating from AAA to AA+
65 votes -
What US recession? It's a summer of splurging, profits and girl power
19 votes -
Southeast Asia moves closer to economic unity with new regional payments system using local currencies
10 votes -
Portugal’s bid to attract foreign money backfires as rental market goes ‘crazy’
45 votes -
Every generator is a policy failure
21 votes -
Autoenshittification: How the computer killed capitalism
83 votes -
US GDP grew at a 2.4% pace in the second quarter, topping expectations despite recession calls
31 votes -
US auto loan rejections hit record high as consumer credit standards tighten
29 votes -
If futures contracts/exchanges were outlawed, would anything of value be lost in the global economy?
Like other derivatives, futures seem like they are basically gambling for the wealthy more than real investment. What am I missing?
22 votes -
Pay raises in the US are finally beating inflation after two years of falling behind
13 votes -
Why does market fundamentalism have so much clout in economics?
There's a couple of other words that describe what I'm talking about - neoliberalism, lassez-faire capitalism, and in a more general sense, the Chicago school of economics - but I chose market...
There's a couple of other words that describe what I'm talking about - neoliberalism, lassez-faire capitalism, and in a more general sense, the Chicago school of economics - but I chose market fundamentalism because it seemed to best describe precisely what I'm talking about. I mean the belief that the market is capable of self-regulation and that governmental intervention will cause damage to the economy.
I'm asking this because there's still a lot about economics that I don't know about and so I was hoping someone with a background in the subject who would be able to better answer the question. But I realize it's probably also a political question. I wonder if it's more of an issue of our politicians pressing these views than economists and academics.
Personally, with my life's experience, it seems almost obviously wrong. I've lived through several market downturns and even a crash, and looking through history it seems like every market crash can be attributed to the market failing to correct itself.
21 votes -
US June CPI comes in at 0.2% MoM and 3% YoY, below the 3.1% forecast
30 votes -
Centre for Economic Policy Research - The impact of Brexit on the UK economy - reviewing evidence
10 votes -
How are y'all dealing with inflation?
Everywhere I turn everything is more expensive. I'm spending less and less every month on non-necessities, buying more basic foods, never eating out, spending less on entertainment, etc but...
Everywhere I turn everything is more expensive.
I'm spending less and less every month on non-necessities, buying more basic foods, never eating out, spending less on entertainment, etc but everything else just keeps going up and up.
Electricity just went up 12%, my gas bill is up 20%, rent has gone up 10% year after year, water is somehow 30% more expensive than it used to be, my groceries are more expensive than ever even though I'm buying in bulk and not buying anything fancy, I've stopped eating luxuries I used to enjoy like steak and fancy cheese because they've just gotten outrageous.
I have a good job that pays decently but my raises have been less than 3% a year and I feel like I'm getting squeezed out of everything I once had. There's no light at the end of the tunnel is there?
101 votes -
Does the "inflation due to wage growth" narrative hold water?
I've started to notice this narrative in my news feeds. The argument is high wage growth is contributing to stubborn inflation. So cooling wage growth is seen as positive. It'll help central banks...
I've started to notice this narrative in my news feeds. The argument is high wage growth is contributing to stubborn inflation. So cooling wage growth is seen as positive. It'll help central banks pause the hike cycle sooner.
My knee jerk reaction is if wage growth is contributing to inflation it's minuscule; just enough to print the headline. I can't help but feel this narrative is a way to distract from the earlier price gouging narrative and to help employers scapegoat out of raises.
But I'll admit, I haven't looked into this topic deeply. So I'm happy to be schooled.
52 votes -
Minneapolis and Honolulu see local inflation levels fall below national goal
20 votes -
Report - The increasing return of legal child labor to the US economy
Child labor is making a comeback with a vengeance. A striking number of lawmakers are undertaking concerted efforts to weaken or repeal statutes that have long prevented (or at least seriously...
Child labor is making a comeback with a vengeance. A striking number of lawmakers are undertaking concerted efforts to weaken or repeal statutes that have long prevented (or at least seriously inhibited) the possibility of exploiting children.
Take a breath and consider this: the number of kids at work in the U.S. increased by 37% between 2015 and 2022. During the last two years, 14 states have either introduced or enacted legislation rolling back regulations that governed the number of hours children can be employed, lowered the restrictions on dangerous work, and legalized subminimum wages for youths.
Iowa now allows those as young as 14 to work in industrial laundries. At age 16, they can take jobs in roofing, construction, excavation, and demolition and can operate power-driven machinery. Fourteen-year-olds can now even work night shifts and once they hit 15 can join assembly lines. All of this was, of course, prohibited not so long ago.
Legislators offer fatuous justifications for such incursions into long-settled practice. Working, they tell us, will get kids off their computers or video games or away from the TV. Or it will strip the government of the power to dictate what children can and can’t do, leaving parents in control — a claim already transformed into fantasy by efforts to strip away protective legislation and permit 14-year-old kids to work without formal parental permission.
In 2014, the Cato Institute, a right-wing think tank, published “A Case Against Child Labor Prohibitions,” arguing that such laws stifled opportunity for poor — and especially Black — children. The Foundation for Government Accountability, a think tank funded by a range of wealthy conservative donors including the DeVos family, has spearheaded efforts to weaken child-labor laws, and Americans for Prosperity, the billionaire Koch brothers’ foundation, has joined in.
Here is a Robert Frost poem related to the subject of the article. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/53087/out-out
I'm GenX and I worked as a teen, but my earliest jobs were babysitting, not industrial labor.
54 votes -
Gini global inequality at lowest level in nearly 150 years
13 votes -
Shifting sands: US inflation’s changing dynamics
17 votes -
Real wage growth in the USA at the individual level in 2022
15 votes