Posts Tagged ‘market’
On the State and Future of the Conservative Movement
The Becker & Posner Blog:
Is the Conservative Movement Losing Steam? Richard Posner
The Serious Conflict in the Modern Conservative Movement. Gary Becker
*
WORLD VIEW: Fareed Zakaria
The End of Conservatism
Conservative slogans sound anachronistic in the context of today’s problems, like an old TV show from the 1970s.
From the magazine issue dated Feb 25, 2008 / NEWSWEEK
*
Op-Ed Columnist
The Republican Collapse
by DAVID BROOKS
Published: October 5, 2007 NYT
Modern conservatism begins with Edmund Burke. What Burke articulated was not an ideology or a creed, but a disposition, a reverence for tradition, a suspicion of radical change. …>>
C.Rose: An hour with Timothy Geithner
An hour with Timothy Geithner, U.S. Treasury Secretary / Charlie Rose / in Current Affairs / on Wednesday, May 6, 2009
C.Rose: Conversations about the economy
A conversation about the economy with Bill Ackman, major investor and hedge fund manager of Pershing Square Capital Management LP, Kate Kelly of The Wall Street Journal, Andrew Ross Sorkin of The New York Times and Joseph Stiglitz, economist and a member of Columbia University faculty
in Current Affairs / on Friday, April 24, 2009
*
A conversation with Lionel Barber, editor of the “Financial Times”
in Current Affairs, Business / on Friday, April 24, 2009
TNR Live: Debating The Relevance Of Liberalism Today
26.04.2009 The New Republic, tnr.com
TNRtv: Wolfe, Dionne, Douthat on “The Future of Liberalism”
by E.J. Dionne, Jr., Ross Douthat, William Galston, and Alan Wolfe
At the Brookings Institution, TNR contributing editor Alan Wolfe discussed his new book, The Future of Liberalism, with TNR writer and senior Brookings fellow William Galston, Washington Post columnist and frequent TNR contributor E.J. Dionne, Jr., and senior editor of The Atlantic Ross Douthat. The first part of the discussion addressed the modern significance, enemies, and shortcomings of liberalism: …>> (video)
The Economist: Twenty years of capitalism: was it worth it?
The World in 2009
Europe
Twenty years of capitalism: was it worth it?
Nov 19th 2008
From The World in 2009 print edition
By Laza Kekic
Yes—but it’s not so simple
“I had imagined liberalism slightly differently”
Adam Smith talking to Peter Ulrich
Ulrich, Peter: “I had imagined liberalism slightly differently”, CEO — The Magazine for Integrated Management (ed. by PricewaterhouseCoopers), September 2000, pp. 14-17. In this fictitious conversation Adam Smith (1723-90), who founded the science of political economy, talks to business ethics professor Peter Ulrich through the key passages of his work that his neoliberal interpreters are so fond of (not) quoting.
Adam Smith im Gespräch mit Peter Ulrich (fiktives Interview)
Ulrich, Peter: “Ich hatte mir den Liberalismus anders vorgestellt”, CEO — Das Magazin für integrierte Unternehmensführung (hrsg. von PricewaterhouseCoopers), September 2000, S. 14-17. Adam Smith (1723-1790), der Begründer der modernen Nationalökonomie, spricht mit dem Wirtschaftsethiker Peter Ulrich durch jene Schlüsselstellen seines Werks, die seine neoliberalen Interpreten mit Vorliebe (nicht) zitieren. Ein amüsantes fiktives Interview!
P.S. Apie prof. Peter Ulrich prie progos bus daugiau.
Becker & Posner on the efficiency of stock markets
The Becker-Posner Blog / April 13, 2009