Peer2Politics
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Peer2Politics
on peer-to-peer dynamics in politics, the economy and organizations
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Premature deindustrialization: the new threat to global economic development | The new new economy

Premature deindustrialization: the new threat to global economic development | The new new economy | Peer2Politics | Scoop.it
How high-tech manufacturing could make it hard for poor countries to get rich.
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Robert Reich: America is winning the race to the bottom

Robert Reich: America is winning the race to the bottom | Peer2Politics | Scoop.it
The former secretary of labor on the rise of "independent contractors" and the threat they pose to our labor force
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The Myth of America’s Golden Age

The Myth of America’s Golden Age | Peer2Politics | Scoop.it

I hadn’t realized when I was growing up in Gary, Indiana, an industrial town on the southern shore of Lake Michigan plagued by discrimination, poverty and bouts of high unemployment, that I was living in the golden era of capitalism. It was a company town, named after the chairman of the board of U.S. Steel. It had the world’s largest integrated steel mill and a progressive school system designed to turn Gary into a melting pot fed by migrants from all over Europe. But by the time I was born in 1943, cracks in the pot were already appearing. To break strikes—to ensure that workers did not fully share in the productivity gains being driven by modern technology—the big steel companies brought African-American workers up from the South who lived in impoverished, separate neighborhoods.



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How Silicon Valley elites are driving California to a new feudalism

The gap between the oligarchic class and everyone else seems increasingly permanent. A critical component of assuring class mobility, California’s once widely admired public schools were recently ranked near the absolute bottom in the country. Think about this: despite the state’s huge tech sector, California eighth graders scored 47th out of the 51 states in science testing. No wonder Mark Zuckerberg and other oligarchs are so anxious to import “techno coolies” from abroad. As in medieval times, land ownership, particularly along the coast, has become increasingly difficult for those not in the upper class. In 2012, four California markets—San Jose, San Francisco, San Diego, and Los Angeles—ranked as the most unaffordable relative to income in the nation. The impact of these prices falls particularly on the poor.

 

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Socialism, American-Style

Socialism, American-Style | Peer2Politics | Scoop.it

THE great 20th-century conservative economist Joseph Schumpeter thought the left had overlooked a major selling point in pressing the case for public — i.e., government — control over productive capital. “One of the most significant titles to superiority,” he suggested, was that public ownership produced profits, which means not having to depend on taxes to raise money.

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US wealth inequality - top 0.1% worth as much as the bottom 90%

US wealth inequality - top 0.1% worth as much as the bottom 90% | Peer2Politics | Scoop.it
Not since the Great Depression has wealth inequality in the US been so acute, new in-depth study finds
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Two-Thirds Of Americans Can't Be Trusted | Zero Hedge

Trust has declined as the gap between the nation's rich and poor gapes ever wider, Uslaner says, and more and more Americans feel shut out. They've lost their sense of a shared fate. Tellingly, trust rises with wealth.

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