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  • 28May
    Economy, Web Comments Off

    The Pacman game that has taken over Google’s home page in the last few days has caused the loss of 4.8 million work hours that  are estimated to be worth 120 million dollars.

    These celebrations for the 30th birthday of Pacman, which Google celebrated last week, had cost many US firms dearly.

    Google published their own version of the original Pacman game, which was originally developed by the Japanese company Namco,  on their home page.  Google had reported that game was activated over a billion times in three days.

    Eating your money.

    Eating your money.

    According to research conducted by RescueTime, the average visitor had spent 36 extra seconds on the site to play the addicting game that Google had added for the special occasion. When summed up the time spent,  you get  a waste of 4.8 million work hours, which are worth around 120 million dollars.

    Ailon.

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  • 11Jan
    The US president responded to the latest unemployment stats and has begun to initiate green energy projects which will create thousands of jobs: “Building a robust clean energy sector is how we will create the jobs of the future, jobs that pay well and can’t be outsourced,” Obama said at the White House.


    Obama is a green thumb.

    Although the terror incident (an attempt to blow up a Delta Airlines plane approaching US soil) in Christmas changed his agenda, US president Barak Obama has returned to focus on American economy and promoted a new initiative to create thousand of jobs in the clean energy sector. This comes after the new government’s report on the unemployment rate, which doubts the financial recovery.

    Obama announced on the awarding of $2.3 billion in tax credits to companies that manufacture wind turbines, solar panels, cutting edge batteries and other green technologies. The money will come from last year’s $787 billion stimulus program. With this tax relief he will create 17 thousand green jobs. According to him, more than 180 projects in 40 different states will receive the the tax relief.

    “The jobs numbers are reminder that the road to recovery is never straight,” the president said, adding that the overall trend was improving. It was only the fact that many workers went out of the American job market’s statistics the prevented the unemployment rate to cross the 10% line in December, according to economists. If the size of the market wouldn’t have shrunk in 661 thousand workers last month, the unemployment rate would have been 10.4% the experts explained.

    Experts believe that the real unemployment rate is higher than official stats, since the economy surprisingly lost 85 thousand jobs in December, but the unemployment rate remained the same. Almost 1.7 million American went out of the labor force between July and December, a 1.1% descent which is the biggest half-annual drop since 1961.


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  • 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.

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