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Topic: Finding the best system of economy (Read 128846 times)
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Finding the best system of economy
From the article (book review) Innovation: The Government Was Crucial After All

Quote
“The great advances of civilization,” wrote Milton Friedman in Capitalism and Freedom, his influential best seller published in 1962, “whether in architecture or painting, in science or literature, in industry or agriculture, have never come from centralized government.” He did not say what he made of the state-sponsored art of Athens’s Periclean Age or the Medici family, who, as Europe’s dominant bankers but then as Florentine rulers, commissioned and financed so much Renaissance art. Or the Spanish court that gave us Velázquez. Or the many public universities that produced great scientists in our times. Or, even just before Friedman was writing, what could he have made of the Manhattan Project of the US government, which produced the atomic bomb? Or the National Institutes of Health, whose government-supported grants led to many of the most important pharmaceutical breakthroughs?

We could perhaps forgive Friedman’s ill-informed remarks as a burst of ideological enthusiasm if so many economists and business executives didn’t accept this myth as largely true.


Re: Finding the best system of economy

Reply #125
Lunch vouchers or coupons were a thing in Soviet Union. I understand that in Western Europe they have been in place in some form probably ever since the world war(s). In re-indepent capitalist Estonia they have not been a thing for a second - except that there's a boufet for the parliament politicians and all sorts of compensations for them for other costs that they dream up.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UByf0yW50mc

Re: Finding the best system of economy

Reply #126
Prior discussion at https://dndsanctuary.eu/index.php?topic=63.msg88132#msg88132

I believe that in the Netherlands there's no such system.

A two-hour lunch break sounds rather long to my ears. Sure, you don't want to be forced to eat lunch in 10 minutes American style, but a two-hour lunch break basically just means you have to work until an hour later.