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Ismail Lagardien is a writer, columnist and political economist with extensive exposure and experience in global political economic affairs. He was educated at the London School of Economics, and holds a PhD in International Political Economy.
It is unimaginably difficult to look away as parts of South Africa are literally in flames. I woke up yesterday morning (Tuesday), looked at the news and was shaken (again, as I have been over the past six months) by the serious head trauma I suffered during protests last October. I ducked back deeper into bed and tried to ignore stories of the smouldering ruins of the hate that our former president and his family
Inequality and the Macron commission
Jul 12,2021 - Last updated at Jul 12,2021
By Dani Rodrik and Stefanie Stantcheva
CAMBRIDGE The advanced economies will bounce back more quickly from the COVID-19 pandemic than low-income countries. Still, they face an important and interconnected set of challenges in the years ahead: Climate change, inequality, new technologies, demographic ageing, and immigration. Business as usual will not do in any of these areas, and new approaches are required in each.
Just as the pandemic was gathering pace in early 2020, French President Emmanuel Macron set up an international commission of economists to assess these longer-term challenges and make policy proposals. Headed by the former International Monetary Fund chief economist Olivier Blanchard and the Nobel laureate economist Jean Tirole, the commission debated each of these issues over the course of several months. Interesting proposals emerged from the three reports produced by a subgroup of a
Biden s tax plans risk bursting Ireland s bubble
After years of luring the world s biggest firms with the promise of low tax, the Irish economy will soon be heading for uncharted territory
If there’s one number that matters above any other to the Irish economy, it’s 12.5pc.
“The 12.5pc tax rate never has been and never will be up for discussion. The 12.5pc tax rate is settled policy. It will not change.” So said Michael Noonon, then the Irish finance minister, in his 2014 budget speech to the Dáil in Dublin.
Ireland s corporate tax rate has become a beacon for multinationals – particularly from the United States – that have learned how to shop around the global marketplace for the best tax loopholes and rates, and treated Ireland as a gateway to European markets.
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