Archive for February, 2010

Yesterday spiked ran a critique by me of the campaign for a Robin Hood tax. Proceeds from the proposed levy on financial transactions would go to offset spending cuts in Britain, tackle climate change and help deal with global poverty.

This is my comment from this week’s Fund Strategy. The most amusing event of last week had to be Gordon Brown’s brief appearance on the BBC Newsnight programme. In the space of 30 seconds he found seven different ways of saying that helping to tackle the Greek crisis was not Britain’s responsibility. Given that Brown […]

I have argued for several years that one reason for the popular obsession with obesity is its symbolic value (see my 2005 essay on “Why people hate fat Americans” on the left hand bar). Human fat is the most visible manifestation of a society which the growth sceptics see as plagued by over-consumption. That in […]

An extract from my recent spiked review on growth scepticism was published today in the Washington Times.

Green police

In: Uncategorized

11 Feb 2010

This television commercial is meant to promote an Audi car but somehow ends up being a brilliant satire on the authoritarian consequences of environmentalism.

My recent spiked review on growth scepticism is featured on Arts & Letters Daily today.

This is my comment from this week’s Fund Strategy. It is easy to become so focused on someone else’s problems that you fail to grapple with your own. That is a lesson that the West’s leaders, fixated with China, would do well to learn. No doubt China has its faults. It is arguably keeping its […]

The global statistics on information and communication technology give some of the clearest indications of the benefits of economic growth for the mass of humanity. According to a flyer on The World in 2009 (PDF) from the International Telecommunications Union some 4.6 billion people, two-thirds of the world’s population, had a mobile phone by the […]

James Heartfield has an article on the newgeography website celebrating what he calls dispersed settlements and others deride as urban sprawl. He concludes that: “Far from being necessarily de-humanising, dispersed settlements are an opportunity for an enlargement of the human spirit. To imagine that there is anything in physical proximity that is essential to community […]

My news analysis from this week’s Fund Strategy attempts to grapple with the debate on economic policy in the run-up to Britain’s general election. It is rare for so much fuss to be made over anything so small. Yet the announcement of a 0.1% rise in Britain’s GDP in the final quarter of 2009 got […]