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Chaeconomica: Live Video Edition

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The one and only Mr Miller and I will be hosting a live video chat on magic and wealth strategy in 2016 next Tuesday. You can join, watch and participate by following this link:

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The event will be Tuesday 26th, at 11pm London time. Some of you have asked already but, as with basically all hangout videos, this will be available on YouTube immediately after we wrap-up. No need to watch it live unless you feel like participating or didn’t really have anything else going on on a Tuesday evening.

There’s be questions going on during the show, you can also drop them in the comments below, or email them or message me via the Facebook page. And in advance of a discussion about chasing meaning and prosperity in our crazy-ass age, have some updates from said age:

How profits work

Most of the remedies dangled by politicians to solve America’s economic woes would make things worse. Higher taxes would deter investment. Jumps in minimum wages would discourage hiring. Protectionism would give yet more shelter to dominant firms. Better to unleash a wave of competition.

Concerns about the expansion of red tape and of the regulatory state must be recognised as a problem, not dismissed as the mad rambling of anti-government Tea Partiers. The burden placed on small firms by laws like Obamacare has been material. The rules shackling banks have led them to cut back on serving less profitable smaller customers. The pernicious spread of occupational licensing has stifled startups. Some 29% of professions, including hairstylists and most medical workers, require permits, up from 5% in the 1950s.

A blast of competition would mean more disruption for some: firms in the S&P 500 employ about one in ten Americans. But it would create new jobs, encourage more investment and help lower prices. Above all, it would bring about a fairer kind of capitalism. [More.]

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How economic hitmen work

Perkins was recruited, he says, by the National Security Agency (NSA), but he worked for a private consulting company. His job as an undertrained, overpaid economist was to generate reports that justified lucrative contracts for U.S. corporations, while plunging vulnerable nations into debt. Countries that didn’t cooperate saw the screws tightened on their economies. In Chile, for example, President Richard Nixon famously called on the CIA to “make the economy scream” to undermine the prospects of the democratically elected president, Salvador Allende.

If economic pressure and threats didn’t work, Perkins says, the jackals were called to either overthrow or assassinate the noncompliant heads of state. That is, indeed, what happened to Allende, with the backing of the CIA.

Perkins has just reissued his book with major updates. The basic premise of the book remains the same, but the update shows how the economic hit man approach has evolved in the last 12 years. Among other things, U.S. cities are now on the target list. The combination of debt, enforced austerity, underinvestment, privatization, and the undermining of democratically elected governments is now happening here. [More.]

How capital flows work

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And finally, Max talking Saudis and corruption.


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