推動花蓮的合作經濟體系政府花很多錢在推動地方創生,並且希望發展地方亮點。然而,如何才能真正的治本而非只有治標,就得回到「經濟模式」來看。...
the deliberate weakening of social protections has produced greater financial and economic insecurity
Joseph E. Stiglitz considers what 40 years of anti-government, low-tax, deregulatory advocacy have wrought around the world.
people suffering from precarity, which means existing without predictability or security, affecting material or psychological welfare ... lack of job security
In sociology and economics, the precariat (/prɪˈkɛəriət/) is a neologism for a social class formed by people suffering from precarity, which means existing without predictability or security, affecting material or psychological welfare. The term is a portmanteau merging precarious with proletariat.[1] Unlike the proletariat class of...
蒲公英族(英語:precariat;/prɪˈkɛəriət/),或譯作「流眾」[1]、「不穩定無產者」[2]、「殆危族」、「飄零族」[3][4]等,在社会学和经济学中,是由飽受不稳定之苦的人组成的階級。蒲公英族是不稳定(precarious)与无产阶级(proletariat)的混成词。 [5][6]...
領導人堅定信念貫徹始終與重視傳承,團隊的經營與群策群力才能走得長久
社經地位不高、人民剽悍,曾經是……一個化外之地
為什麼台灣政府相關單位仍故步自封?……政府在口頭上鼓勵山村發展微型經濟之餘,是否也能在法規上實際給予支持…協調,修訂出跟得上民間[小型創新企業]腳步的合理政策……?
地方創生最重要的在『人』,這個『人』代表的也是政府官員的思維
社區解說員很多原本可能生活沒有目標,但在接受訓練後整個人都變得有自信
臺灣最缺願意做事的人,談到做事,大家都會說好,「好、好、好!」「你去做就好!」但多年的社區經驗讓他發現,只要參與者覺得透過這樣的工作自己會有所成長,大多數的人還是會繼續再來參與。
台灣的品牌廠大部分失敗於和消費者的溝通上
Debt measures typically ignore most assets – notably, the public sector’s real commercial assets – and some significant liabilities, including the present discounted value of public-sector pension entitlements
only New Zealand uses the IPSAS [International Public Sector Accounting Standards] as the basis for its financial-management system...
view the matter from the perspective of “future generations.” What value do we place on our children? ... If we value them as much as we value ourselves..., we must account for how damage done to the environment today would affect their well-being
balanced budget multiplier: an increase in government spending will inject more demand into the economy than will be withdrawn by an equal increase in taxation, since some of the money taken by the tax would have been saved, not spent
SALZBURG — In 2009, while the world economy was still reeling from the global financial crisis, Nobel laureate economist Robert Lucas observed that “everyone is a Keynesian in the foxhole”. The implication was that, when an economy is faced with a severe economic shock, conventional fiscal policy norms must take a backseat to stabilization.
economic shocks of the past two decades were not freak occurrences but rather the product of a profoundly flawed and corrupt system
In my view, consciousness may be the most important blind spot in economic theory today. Consciousness concerns the inner place from which actors operate. Conventional economic theory operates on assumed given preferences – that is, a set of interior conditions from which people act. each actor and each social system has not one but multiple interior conditions that they can choose to operate from. Which set of inner conditions stakeholders choose (say, egosystem or ecosystem awareness) has a profound impact on the outcome – and is largely dependent on the context conditions (the“container”) that leadership is able to create
27 October 2022 -
"How can I invest my capital to generate sound risk-adjusted returns over the long to very long term, while simultaneously reducing environmental and ecological risks and creating a stronger, fairer society?" Moreover, note that these investments need not generate any cash return in the near term, as this would just add to the pile of surplus capital. In theory, answering this question will require a fundamental change in both mindset and methods, as traditional investment appraisal methods artificially emphasise short-term returns and ignore both longer-term risk and reward...the necessary projects are not profitable from a private-sector investor's point of view, at least not until the state has paid for the original development of the necessary technology and, in many cases, subsidised its initial deployment...Second, both owners and workers in incumbent businesses in the fossil fuel sector (and the many businesses in their supply chains) will naturally resist the rapid elimination of their jobs and profit streams, irrespective of other economic, environmental or social logic. This is fully understandable and underscores the importance of governments investing to retrain the workforce, providing unemployment benefits that make the transition bearable and stimulating the creation of new businesses and new-economy employment opportunities. With the right approach, these communities will then be able to look forward to a thriving future, rather than a slow and painful decline.In short, our environmental, ecological and socio-economic problems cannot be solved through voluntary action by individuals or the unregulated market alone. Collective (i.e. governmental) action is essential
30 May 2022 -