India Awakes with Johan Norberg – Full Video
30 Jul 2016 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in development economics, economics, growth disasters, growth miracles Tags: economics of socialism, India
What role socialism in The Great Escape? @BernieSanders @JeremyCorbyn @JohnMcDonnellMP #feelthebern
26 Apr 2016 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in applied price theory, development economics, economic history, growth disasters, growth miracles, Public Choice, rentseeking Tags: anti-market bias, economics of socialism, rational irrationality, The Great Escape, The Great Fact
A new World Bank study shows the dramatic reductions in global poverty and inequality as a result of the spread of market institutions and freer trade.
Source: Capitalism, Global Trade, and the Reduction in Poverty and Inequality | Cato @ Liberty
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Poverty in #India under the Permit Raj and then the dead hand of #neoliberalism
24 Apr 2016 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in applied welfare economics, constitutional political economy, development economics, growth disasters, growth miracles, Marxist economics Tags: antiforeign bias, antimarket buyers, economics of socialism, India, permit raj, rational irrationality
Source: Revisiting poverty reduction in India with 60 years of data | VOX, CEPR’s Policy Portal
60 years of #poverty reduction in #India: A look at the data @voxeu https://t.co/1pGROsbhSk pic.twitter.com/iI6I7RxGWR
— World Bank Poverty (@WBG_Poverty) April 6, 2016
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The enormous costs of socialism in Eastern European @BernieSanders @jeremycorbyn @johnmcdonnellMP
09 Apr 2016 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in applied price theory, applied welfare economics, development economics, economic history, growth disasters, growth miracles, law and economics, Marxist economics Tags: 2016 presidential election, British politics, collapse of communism, economics of socialism, Leftover Left
The enormous (and, as of 2016, strangely downplayed) costs of Socialism: pic.twitter.com/VSP9UE4Ziz
— Jan Zilinsky (@janzilinsky) April 4, 2016
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Watch Milton Friedman visit the Berlin Wall @NaomiAKlein
26 Oct 2015 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in applied price theory, applied welfare economics, comparative institutional analysis, constitutional political economy, development economics, economic history, economics of bureaucracy, Marxist economics, Milton Friedman, Public Choice Tags: Berlin, Berlin wall, British politics, East Germany, economics of socialism, fall of communism, for the Berlin Wall, Leftover Left, Twitter left, West Germany
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Is this how @jeremycorbyn will win the middle-class vote?
13 Sep 2015 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in economic history, managerial economics, Marxist economics, Public Choice Tags: British politics, economics of advertising, economics of socialism, expressive voting, Leftover Left, rational ignorance, rational rationality
Here's when Labour knew how to appeal to the white collar vote. 1945 poster. Managerial socialism. http://t.co/Yq1jSxUqvl—
paulkirby (@paul1kirby) September 13, 2015
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The Great Fact in China and India, 2001 and 2011 compared
27 Jul 2015 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in development economics, economic history, entrepreneurship, growth disasters, growth miracles, Marxist economics Tags: China, collapse of communism, economics of socialism, India, The Great Escape, The Great Fact, The Permit Raj, transitional economies
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Should economic reform have been slower in the transitional economies?
03 Jun 2015 1 Comment
by Jim Rose in comparative institutional analysis, constitutional political economy, development economics, economics of bureaucracy, growth disasters, growth miracles, Marxist economics, Public Choice, rentseeking Tags: collapse of communism, economics of socialism, economics of transition, former USSR, Russia
Hayek on socialists and economics
13 Apr 2015 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in applied price theory, F.A. Hayek Tags: central planning, economics of socialism, offsetting behaviour, rational ignorance, rational rationality, The fatal conceit, The pretence to knowledge
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Millennials Don’t Know What “Socialism” Means
11 Feb 2015 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in comparative institutional analysis, constitutional political economy, economics of media and culture, Marxist economics, politics - USA Tags: economics of socialism, rational ignorance, rational irrationality




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