Mission Economy: a moonshot guide to changing capitalism | LSE Online Event
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- Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024
- Mariana Mazzucato outlines her new approach for governments to deal with inequality, disease and climate change.
🟡 This event is part of our Shaping the Post-COVID World initiative: #LSECOVID19
🔴 This event was streamed live on Facebook on 29 January 2021:
/ live
🔴 Find out about more of our upcoming events:
www.lse.ac.uk/E...
Speaker:
🔴 Professor Mariana Mazzucato
Chair:
🔴 Professor Alan Manning
ℹ️ More info:
www.lse.ac.uk/...
Mariana Mazzucato....amazingly insightful!
I get it. Replace the profit-mode of production with purpose driven economics. . . just don't call it communism or socialism or central planning or what have you. I know! Call it mission economics.
Branding is indeed stupidly important as you jokingly imply
Because language is so horribly polluted by the "consent industry" or propaganda that we will have to find new terminology to get out of this Establishment trap.
Igor Insanic
u.s. federal government spends 3 times more money (adjusted for inflation) per capita than during the sixties in which moon landing was accomplished. so governments spend much much more per capita but we do not see any moon landings or solutions to the environmental problems. why?
41:20 „it’s not about bigger government or money trees. It’s about smarter government”
P3s are not risk takers but focused on risk avoidance. And that notion seems to be more in the FIRE sector.
we should base recommendations on facts and not feelings (min:53,55) as mariana does. governments have, apart from creating more and more regulations, increased their spending and investments (including the investments on r&d) per capita over the last 30-40 years. mariana actually proposes "business as usual" - more regulations, more government.
it is the taxpayers, i.e. households and organisations in the private sector, who finance government R & D investments. they have already paid for whatever innovation comes from the government. governments cannot charge taxpayers twice for innovation in the public sector.
55:04 the best answer 😂