Tumgik
Link
Since the Santa Fe-based art collective Meow Wolf opened its permanent installation, the House of Eternal Return, in March 2016, the project has been an unmitigated success in terms of viewership and profits. Housed in a 20,000-square-foot former bowling alley, the sprawling interactive artwork welcomed 400,000 visitors in its first year—nearly four times as many as expected—and brought in $6 million in revenue for the collective’s more than 100 members.
0 notes
Quote
Microcredit and social business - Big Ideas - ABC Radio National (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
0 notes
Quote
very student learns about Magna Carta, the ancient scroll that enshrined the rights of barons against the arbitrary authority of England’s monarchs. But most have never heard of its arguably more important twin, the Charter of the Forest, issued two years later in 1217. This short but powerful document guaranteed the rights of commoners to common lands, which they could use for farming, grazing, water and wood. It gave official recognition to a right that humans nearly everywhere had long just presupposed: that no one should be debarred from the resources necessary for livelihood.
Basic income isn’t just a nice idea. It's a birthright | Global Development Professionals Network | The Guardian
1 note · View note
Quote
The study of economics is dominated by men. There has been one woman winner of the Nobel Prize for Economics and in Australia one third of economics graduates are women and in the UK only one quarter of economics students are women. Why is it that women are not embracing economics? Could it be that the prevailing models of economics are in themselves sexist making the study of them less attractive to women. And who is homo economicus?
Does homo economicus need a sex change? - Late Night Live - ABC Radio National (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
0 notes
Quote
The first rule of Finance Capital is: You do not talk about Finance Capital. The second rule of Finance Capital is: You do not talk about Finance Capital. Third rule of Finance Capital: Someone yells stop, goes broke, is bailed out, the trade is over. Fourth rule: only two guys to a trade. Fifth rule: one trade at a time, fellas. Sixth rule: neat shirts, neat shoes. Seventh rule: Trading will go on as long as it has to. And the eighth and final rule: If this is your first day at Finance Capital, you have to trade.
ROAR Magazine
0 notes
Text
First They Jailed the Bankers, Now Every Icelander to Get Paid in Bank Sale
Because Icelanders took control of their government, they effectively own the banks. Benediktsson believes this will bring foreign capital into the country and ultimately fuel the economy — which, incidentally, remains the only European nation to recover fully from the 2008 crisis. Iceland even managed to pay its outstanding debt to the IMF in full — in advance of the due date.
(via First They Jailed the Bankers, Now Every Icelander to Get Paid in Bank Sale)
0 notes
Link
Most of us don't want to pay more tax even if we think the country needs the money.Multinational corporations feel the same way but are more adept at paying less through a series of accounting and legal loopholes, one of which is known as the Double Irish Dutch Sandwich.
0 notes
Quote
I've given up on fixing the economy. The economy is not broken. It's simply unjust. There's a difference.
Fork the Economy - Shareable
0 notes
Quote
We cannot go on running a deficit to finance current government spending, and therefore the government should raise taxes – a carbon tax, an inheritance tax, a tax on family trusts, and reform of capital gains and superannuation taxes as starters. Taxes with minor immediate impact but which slowly build up to collect more revenue would be ideal, in that they would not dampen our present need for fiscal stimulus while giving reassurance that we are serious about responsible financial management. At the same time, we could provide a strong fiscal stimulus with an ambitious capital works program. After decades of neglect of government capital investment there are plenty of opportunities for productive investment – proper broadband, urban public transport, interstate highways and railroads, protection against climate-change related storm damage to name a few. (Treasurer Morrison is right, we need investment, but he seems to be incapable of understanding that well-directed public investment can be even more productive than private investment.) That way money could be directed to real investment rather than being cycled through the real-estate market, strengthening our public balance sheet and, to borrow a slogan, providing “jobs and growth”.
Australia’s Economy Is Drifting Towards Disaster While No One Is At The Wheel - New Matilda
0 notes
Quote
The looming test case, alleging breaches of the Fair Work Act, will be the first in Australia to contest the legality of contracting arrangements in the so-called "sharing economy", where companies use self-employed workers rather than having them on the payroll.
Delivery services Foodora and Deliveroo face claims of exploitation, underpayment
0 notes
Quote
"For instance, no-one seems to think it a problem that the chairman of the Sydney Theatre Company is Ian Narev, the CEO of a major bank," he says. "What does a banker know about theatre? "In a neo-liberal world, business know-how is transferable to any cultural endeavour. But would an actor ever be appointed chair of the Commonwealth Bank?" He says it is improbable that an artist or festival director would be asked by government to lead an inquiry into the banking sector.
Australia Council, Waleed Aly accused of failing to stand up for arts funding
0 notes
Link
0 notes
Video
youtube
(via Yanis Varoufakis All the good stuff that cannot be measured - YouTube)
0 notes
Video
vimeo
(via degrowth on Vimeo)
0 notes
Video
youtube
(via Hans Rosling and the magic washing machine (2010) - YouTube)
0 notes
Quote
What would we do with 100% clean energy? Exactly what we’re doing with fossil fuels Let’s imagine, just for argument’s sake, that we are able to get off fossil fuels and switch to 100% clean energy. There is no question this would be a vital step in the right direction, but even this best-case scenario wouldn’t be enough to avert climate catastrophe. Why? Well, first, the burning of fossil fuels only accounts for about 70% of all anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions. The other 30% comes from a number of causes, including deforestation, and industrial livestock farming, which produces 90m tonnes of methane per year and most of the world’s anthropogenic nitrous oxide. Both of these gases are vastly more potent than CO2 when it comes to global warming. Livestock farming alone contributes more to global warming than all the cars, trains, planes and ships in the world. There are also a number of industrial processes that contribute significantly, and then there are our landfills, which pump out huge amounts of methane – 16% of the world’s total.
Clean energy won’t save us – only a new economic system can do that | Global Development Professionals Network | The Guardian
0 notes
Link
0 notes