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17 votes
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No, raising the minimum wage does not hurt US fast-food workers
29 votes -
The Ukrainian economy at war (2024) - Defence production, energy and endurance
6 votes -
Dutch will spend $2.7 billion on improving infrastructure to keep ASML
7 votes -
How a start-up utopia became a nightmare for Honduras: US investors are suing Honduras over special economic zones, and the dispute could bankrupt the country
22 votes -
Monopoly round-up: Price gouging vs price fixing vs price controls
13 votes -
Why scrapping VAT on sunscreen and public EV charging would be an expensive waste of money
13 votes -
Scott Galloway - "The Algebra of Wealth"
15 votes -
US appeals court blocks all of Joe Biden's SAVE student debt relief plan
45 votes -
Does market failure justify government intervention? (with Michael Munger)
5 votes -
Sweden paying grandparents to babysit
26 votes -
Denver gave people experiencing homelessness $1,000 a month. A year later, nearly half of participants had housing.
37 votes -
International scheme to tax billionaires’ wealth technically feasible, study [by Gabriel Zucman] finds
30 votes -
Giorgia Meloni accused of splitting Italy over law to let richer regions keep taxes. Critics say differentiated autonomy bill, sought by wealthier areas, will increase poverty in south.
9 votes -
US President Joe Biden raises tariffs on $18 billion of Chinese imports: EVs, solar panels, batteries and more
23 votes -
Seattle’s law mandating higher pay for food delivery workers is a case study in backfire economics
18 votes -
Sweden has a global reputation for championing high taxes and social equality, but it has become a European hotspot for the super rich
19 votes -
Spending cuts are often false economies that end up costing society dearly
16 votes -
Venezuela to accelerate cryptocurrency shift as oil sanctions return
8 votes -
Inflation in times of overlapping emergencies: Systemically significant prices from an input–output perspective
7 votes -
Norway unveiled plans to remove a loophole used by the Nordic nation's richest – government attempts to drag more tax revenue out of the fleeing billionaires
15 votes -
Finland's proposed labour reforms risk doing more harm than good
8 votes -
US Federal Trade Commission head Lina Khan is fighting for an anti-monopoly America. Some say Khan – who’s gone after Kroger, Amazon, and Nvidia – has redefined the US antitrust landscape.
36 votes -
Abolishing inheritance tax sent Stockholm's startup ecosystem soaring – tax cut could revive Britain's flagging economy
9 votes -
Leasing like a state, or: public housing is development policy
7 votes -
Finnish unions have called for industrial action to protest government proposals on labour law reforms which they say would adversely impact low-wage earners
10 votes -
Greedflation accounts for fifty-three cents of every US dollar of inflation in past six months
62 votes -
Palm Springs capped Airbnb rentals. Now some home prices are in free-fall.
49 votes -
HomeVestors (the “We Buy Ugly Houses” company) overhauls policies in the wake of ProPublica investigation
19 votes -
Global minimum tax on multinationals goes live to raise up to $220bn
28 votes -
Why the US never saves money on health care
25 votes -
Canadian federal government considering new caps on payday lending and high risk lending
12 votes -
Europe's single currency, used daily by about 350 million people, has become a hot topic in an unlikely place – Sweden
12 votes -
Detroit wants to be the first big American city to tax land value
33 votes -
Africa is dogged by debt
10 votes -
Rising long-term interest rates are posing the latest threat to a US economic ‘soft landing’
24 votes -
Poverty, not the poor - a systematic analysis of the relatively high stable rate of US poverty using multinational data
21 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 -
A huge threat to the US budget has receded. No one is sure why (A decade of Medicare spending growth and projections)
18 votes -
Poland cuts tax for first-time homebuyers and raises it for those buying multiple properties
29 votes -
US Education Department readies latest tranche of student debt relief but faces new legal challenges to the program
18 votes -
We need to raise a lot more in tax from the wealthy but that does not convince me that we need a wealth tax
39 votes -
What a green monetary policy could look like
8 votes -
Portugal’s bid to attract foreign money backfires as rental market goes ‘crazy’
45 votes -
Mastercard move at cannabis shops intensifies call for US decriminalization
42 votes -
What the data says about food stamps in the US
10 votes -
Turkey is heading for a classic currency crisis. All of its reserves and then some are borrowed.
28 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 -
China curbs exports of key computer chip materials
5 votes -
US Supreme Court strikes down President Biden's student loan forgiveness: Now what?
117 votes