Beta Registration

The CEO game introduction

Your Name (required)

Your Email (required)

Your Country

Additional notes

Enter the text in the image

captcha

On Facebook

The CEO Game on Facebook

RSS and Twitter

  • 10Nov

    Things are looking up for the uninsured in America this week. Not so up that the approximately 46 million uninsured Americans should start relaxing about their perilous well-being, given that it was known all along that the bill would have a much harder time passing in the Senate than in the House of Representatives. Still, the passage of the health care reform bill in the House is a good sign for millions in need. But, is in a good sign for the American economy?

    Health Care Bill: How Will it Affect The Economy?

    Health Care Bill: How Will it Affect The Economy?

    Many people have discussed the economic repercussions of the reform on small business that are now mandated to provide health insurance for their employees (not so great), or for the health care industry (perhaps not zero, in the end) and even gays (who won out in this bill). But no one has discussed the effect of universal health insurance on the ethos of innovation in this country.

    It has been posited by many political theorists that there are two different types of capitalist system. One is oftentimes called “liberal”–this is the system at work in Anglo-Saxon countries, including the US. The other is usually referred to as “socialist”, though these days it is far from pure socialist. This system is found in continental Europe. Liberal regimes are guided by a faith in the market and a belief in the importance of the individual. They therefore are characterized by residualism, mean-tested assistance, and stigmatized relief. Socialist regimes have universal entitlements at middle-class standards.

    Firms act differently in the different systems. A liberal market economy is made up of firms that coordinate via hierarchies and markets. Socialist or coordinated market economics are comprised of firms that depend on non-market relationships to conduct their business. Importantly, in these economies, production strategies rely on highly skilled labor, which requires industrial relations institutions that equalize wages and skill level across an industry as well as specialized education and training systems. Furthermore, the internal structure of the firm reinforces the networks that facilitate that information sharing, through a bias towards consensus making and incentives.

    In liberal market economies, on the other hand, the educational and training systems of emphasize general skills that can be applicable in many ways in a fluid labor market. Inter-company relations are based on standard market relationships and formal contracts.

    The coordinated economies have a health care system that looks out for its workers, because workers stay in a specific industry for all of their lives. In liberal economies, the market lets everyone sink or swim, with only meager assistance to those that seem to be sinking.

    Political theories have posited that the liberal economies, such as the US, have a comparative institutional advantage in radical innovation, while coordinated market economies have the advantage in incremental innovation. As the United State’s system changes and the market loses its all-encompassing power, with this competitive advantage in radical innovation be lost? Will workers stay at ease in firms longer, no longer needing to come up with the next brilliant idea to maintain their position? Will firms become more cooperative as market signals cease to be the only determinant of their behavior?

    I am not suggesting that the US doesn’t need universalized health care — of course it does. But it is worth asking what this really fundamental change in our very economic ethos will have on the country. Will America lose its best edge — the sharp minds that think out of the box and innovative wildly? Only time will tell.

    Tamar.

    The CEO Game.

    VN:F [1.8.6_1065]
    Rating: 10.0/10 (4 votes cast)
    VN:F [1.8.6_1065]
    Rating: +2 (from 2 votes)
    • Share/Bookmark

    Tags: , , , ,

  • 03Nov

    Though the open war between Fox and the Obama administration has come to an end (one can only guess, of course, as to what happened at that mysterious meeting on Wednesday), the conversation about what ensued between the two camps has not yet neared its close.

    Glenn Beck: Leading The War

    Glenn Beck: Leading The War

    One of the main (rational) complaints regarding the Obama administration’s behavior in this “war” is that it refused to acknowledge bias in other networks. I don’t think that the bias in any other network comes close to the propaganda, hate-mongering, racism, and anti-Americanism (yes, undermining the administration in every way possible while relying on aforementioned propaganda, racism, and very little fact is anti-American) going on at Fox. Who cares if MSNBC is left leaning? Has it gone to any of the extremes that Fox revels in? Has any other network compared anyone to a Nazi recently? Fox news has become enamored with comparing Obama to Hitler, which is not only downright ignorant, but extremely offensive not only to all Jews, but all those who have suffered and whose families suffered through genocide. “We are really truly stepping beyond socialism and starting to look at fascism”, says Glenn Beck. Or take the recent comparisons to Stalin’s suppression of the media during the Cold War. Really, socialized healthcare is comparable to purging millions of your own citizens? Let’s not forget that Beck has also compared President Jimmy Carter’s suggestion that Representative Joe Wilson’s comments might be racism a tactic akin to suicide bombing, or Beck’s comparison of progressives to tyrants and slave owners.

    No other news source has such a blatant, extremist, and offensive bias. This is because Fox isn’t behaving like a news source of any kind. Whether or not Glenn Beck is actually part of Fox’s “news” programming, Fox gives him a platform to spew such hate (and inaccuracies). The Obama administration was completely justified in deciding to stop legitimizing it as a “traditional news organization”. After all, Obama pays no attention to my TV network! The White House always gets to choose what media outlets to respond to. A news organization loses that privilege when it stops functioning as one.

    When CNN starts comparing those Republicans that don’t want to extend healthcare to every American to the officials who turned a boatload of Jews away at the US border only to be sent back to their deaths in concentration camps in Germany, you’ll hear me complain. Or if MSNBC starts comparing those conservatives who deny gay marriage to the US representatives who decided that slaves were property and only amounted to three-fifths of a person, you’ll hear me complain about that as well. But until then, as other media outlets continue to show normal political leanings and Fox continues to irresponsibly spread hate, I support the “war”, and perhaps am a little sad it ended. Way to defend the integrity of the press, Obama administration. I am behind you.

    Tamar.

    The CEO Game.

    VN:F [1.8.6_1065]
    Rating: 10.0/10 (5 votes cast)
    VN:F [1.8.6_1065]
    Rating: +5 (from 5 votes)
    • Share/Bookmark

    Tags: , , , , , , , ,

   

Recent Comments

  • Pretty nice post. I just stumbled upon your blog and wanted ...
  • Does anyone have any idea when this game will actually be la...
  • found your site on del.icio.us today and really liked it.. i...
  • This is my earliest convenience life i visit here. I base so...
  • great post as usual!...