Some of My Best Friends Are Germs (20th May 2013) Contributed by Abhay Bhagat
I can tell you the exact date that I began to think of myself in the first-person plural — as a superorganism, that is, rather than a plain old individual human being. It happened on March 7. That’s when I opened my e-mail to find a huge, processor-choking file of charts and raw data from a laboratory located at the BioFrontiers Institute at the University of Colorado, Boulder.
Calm before the storm by James Grant (20th May 2013) Contributed by Abhay Bhagat
Meet the career con man who made a fortune selling illegal pharmaceuticals online—and pulled off a federal sting that forced Google to pay $500 million. (20th May 2013) Contributed by Abhay Bhagat
A then 34-year-old career con man named David Anthony Whitaker left the Wyatt Detention Facility in Central Falls, Rhode Island, and slid into the backseat of an unmarked government car. He was dressed in traditional prison garb—khaki pants, brown shirt, handcuffs, leg irons. A federal agent sat beside him.
Oil markets fall under the suspicion of price-fixing on a global scale (20th May 2013) Contributed by Arjun Ashar
IT IS a lesson of the past five years that benchmarks in unregulated markets can fall victim to the incentives they create. Subprime mortgages bundled into securities often won high scores from ratings agencies that stood to profit in a busy market. The London Interbank Offered Rate, LIBOR, was sometimes underestimated by banks which were cast in a healthier light by lower interest rates. Has something similar been going on in energy?
Rajat Gupta’s Lust for Zeros (20th May 2013) Contributed by Arjun Ashar
When Rajat Gupta first joined McKinsey, in 1973, it wasn’t unusual for consultants to make as much as investment bankers. But that began changing in the 1980s, when bankers started to sell an array of new products, like junk bonds, to corporate clients. By the ’90s, Wall Street analysts were pulling in millions each year.
Socialist residue (20th May 2013) Contributed by Arjun Ashar
In the drawing rooms of Lahore last week I met old friends who told me that I had become a hate object in the eyes of the ‘liberals’ they knew in India. I took this as a compliment since I know that many of these liberals are crypto-communists in disguise and I despise communists. Just as I despise Nehruvian socialism because I believe that it is entirely because of it that India remains mired in poverty, illiteracy and squalour to this day.
The New Science of Giving (20th May 2013) Contributed by Arjun Ashar
A young Houston couple is planning to give away $4 billion—but only to projects that prove they are worth it. Can they redefine the world of philanthropy?
Regulating Banks the Austrian Way (20th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Most people — from young to old and from all ends of the political spectrum — are united by a common bond. The idea that banks are deserving of taxpayer support is viewed as morally repugnant to them. Business owners see bank bailouts as an unfair advantage that is not extended to all businesses. Those typically on the political left see it as support for the establishment, and a slap in the faces of the little people. Those more at home on the political right see it as just another form of welfare: wealth redistribution from the hard working segment of the population to the reckless gambling class of banksters.
The Song of the Gallic Rooster (20th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
As another example of the complex relation of mineral depletion, the economy, and the tendency of grabbing what is left, one way or another, this article by Antonio Turiel sheds plenty of light on the difficulties that the nuclear industry has in obtaining a steady supply of uranium.
A Grotesque Economic Experiment (20th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The newspapers and TV channels reported the Dow 15,000 story last week as though it were just a stepping stone on the way to 16,000… or 20,000… or 30,000.Heck, the sky’s the limit!
The City of London is resisting EU regulatory moves but can the UK – in or out of Europe – stop them? (20th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The City of London faces two huge challenges from the European Union. One is what is famously referred to as a Tobin tax which would see a levy on financial transactions not directly in the UK but with huge implications for it. Another is a regulatory move to limit bankers’ bonuses by the increasingly tough EU regulators.
Harnessing the Remittance Boom (20th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
For more than a decade, Asia’s economies have been on the move – and so have its people. The scale of migration from rural to urban areas and across international borders is historically unprecedented, and twenty-first-century Asia is its focal point.
Giving Teachers What They Deserve-Video (20th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Bill Gates was curious. How many teachers get useful coaching? The answer blew his mind.
How Benjamin Graham revolutionized activism (20th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Today, Benjamin Graham is known primarily as Warren Buffett’s investing mentor and the author of multiple classics about value investing. Toward the end of his life, in the 1973 edition of “The Intelligent Investor,” Graham wrote, “Ever since 1934 we have argued in our writings for a more intelligent and energetic attitude by stockholders toward their managements”.
Tepper says stocks are cheap based on the Fed model. How predictive is the Fed model? (20th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
[Tepper] said the post showed “when the equity risk premium is high historically, you get better returns after that.” He continued, “So we’re at one of the highest all-time risk premiums in history.”
Fear, Happiness, and Sadness Share Common Neural Building Blocks (20th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Previous research has focused on each emotion resulting from specialized and distinct brain circuitry. Psychological scientist Christine Wilson-Mendenhall of Northeastern University and colleagues wanted to investigate the brain regions in common among all the emotions.
All Japan, All the Time (20th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The evils of this deluge of paper money are not to be removed until our citizens are generally and radically instructed in their cause and consequences, and silence by their authority the interested clamors and sophistry of speculating, shaving, and banking institutions.
The Bermuda Triangle of Economics (20th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The mystique of the Bermuda Triangle has caught the imagination and interest of generations. In much the same way it has also caught my attention and I feel that now there is a Bermuda Triangle of economics - a space where everything tends to disappear without radar contact, a black hole in which rationality and science is replaced by hope, superstition and nonsense pundits like myself pretending to understand the real drivers of the economy.
Iron Man 3 proves its box-office mettle after passing $1bn mark (18th May 2013) Contributed by Arjun Ashar
Iron Man 3 has passed the $1bn mark at the global box office, less than four weeks after it first hit cinemas.
Why JCP, Walmart and Others Fail at Changing Their Spots (18th May 2013) Contributed by Jitendra Gupta
What's the most difficult job in marketing? Change. And J.C. Penney is the latest example of how hard that is. In the year since now-departed Ron Johnson introduced his new strategy for the brand, sales were down 25%, the stock was down 66% and the company has lost $985 million.
Volcker: Government Makes Up 35% Of GDP, Mortgage Markets Are Now A State 'Subsidiary' (18th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker warned of the risks of an asset bubble forming given the incredible amount of liquidity the Bernanke Fed has injected into the market, even though he said banks are substantially stronger than before the crisis on Wednesday. Volcker also indicated that in the U.S. government makes up about 35% of GDP and that the financing of the residential mortgage market by the state has led to a dysfunctional financial system.
Open-Access Economics (18th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The brouhaha over Carmen Reinhart’s and Kenneth Rogoff’s article “Growth in a Time of Debt” may be the most conspicuous and incendiary scholarly controversy since 1974, when two earlier economists, Robert Fogel and Stanley Engerman, published a notorious book, Time on the Cross, defending the efficiency of American plantation slavery.
Nationalism, Madness, and Terrorism (18th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
If we want to understand what drove the Boston Marathon bombing suspects, Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, to terrorism, the answer almost certainly does not lie in Dagestan, where the brothers lived before moving to the United States, or in the two wars fought in Chechnya in the last 20 years. Instead, a key to the Tsarnaevs’ behavior may perhaps be found in developments in England 500 years ago.
Philip Roth — One Skill That Every Writer Needs (18th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
“Writing isn’t hard work, it’s a nightmare,” Roth said in 1987.
Just Add O: Pete Seeger’s Solution for Gender-Neutral Language (18th May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
“Building a new and livable world will necessitate thousands of little changes.”
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