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Zimbabwe: the Hollow State
 

By Gavin Chait, on 25 July 2007

Mugabe celebrates his triumph over the economy
Mugabe celebrates his triumph over the economy
Three weeks ago Tama Muru from the BBC asked me if I thought Zimbabwe would explode. At the time I said, "No." Was I wrong?

The situation three weeks ago was this:

  1. The Zimbabwe dollar was worth less than the paper it's printed on
  2. Zimbabwe is short of everything and produces virtually no food on some of the most productive farmland in the world
  3. 80% of the population depends on the informal sector for jobs and support
  4. Operation Murambatsvina shut down most of the informal sector, left 700 000 homeless and secured the Zimbabwe economy for the Chinese
  5. 3.5 million of Zimbabwe's most educated and productive citizens are in exile and working in the UK and South Africa
  6. 4 million people need food aid; the average life-expectancy of Zimbabweans is 37 for men, and 34 for women
  7. Official inflation is approaching 3 700% and informal inflation is around 11 000%
Keywords : Zimbabwe, hyperinflation, refugees, exile, restoration, Mugabe, business
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Science gone wrong: when self-delusion leads to death
 

By Gavin Chait, on 24 July 2007

I want to eat my cake and have it!
I want to eat my cake and have it!
It's popular to loathe mainstream pharmaceutical companies. Big Pharma has been accused of profiteering at the expense of the poor. Of not doing enough to find solutions to the diseases of the poor. And, when they do develop cures for the poorest, the patents are promptly stolen from them through compulsory licensing.

Some scientists are even opposed to the "power" of Big Pharma and are, like the characters in John le Carré's Constant Gardener, working to bring down vested interests. The heights of that hubris was reached by Dr Andrew Wakefield, a British medical scientist, in 1998 .

Mumps, measles and rubella are terrible diseases that have plagued humanity for generations. They are so common amongst children that they are normally abbreviated together as MMR. Parents all across the world have immunised their children using a variety of vaccines. In 1988 the UK introduced a combo-MMR drug that stopped the disease dead.

Keywords : medicine, free rider, anti-corporatism, self-destruction, investment, MMR, mumps, measles, rubella
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Everything is coming up Capitalism
 

By Gavin Chait, on 13 July 2007

Building it up, tearing it down
Building it up, tearing it down
At the tale-end of the Cold War, as the Berlin Wall fell, as Glasnost gave way to the crumbling of the USSR, Capitalists celebrated.

As the wall fell, as the unhealthy, drably dressed, survivors of the Soviet States emerged, driving clunky Communist-designed vehicles, in their lumpy Communist-designed shoes what could be a better advert for the joys of Capitalism?

Except, people forget. And, as in George Orwell's cerebral 1984 , there are Ministries of Information inventing new versions of Newspeak to obscure meaning and disguise intentions.

"Communism" has been entirely discredited. The word, that is, not the ideology. That has re-emerged. Now it is known as "new economics" or "anti-globalisation" or "people's economies".

The prevention of Newspeak

A new book by William J. Baumol, et al, "Good Capitalism, Bad Capitalism, and the Economics of Growth and Prosperity", is a healthy attempt to contextualise the different forms of market economics. It extends the theories espoused by Francis Fukuyama in his controversial "The end of history and the last man".

Capitalism, in many ways, is simply the ecology of markets. We can argue about different types of capitalism, and which is better than others, much as we do with ecologies. It, as with everything, depends on the context. Baumol identifies four types of Capitalism:

Keywords : capitalism, economics, wealth, power, neutrality, communism, newspeak
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