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Topic: The Economist's future history of ending 20th c politicians
bottom-up races to end village poverty- and not just top-down politicaian's strategies? how on earth could eu miss the simplest crisis geo-map of the last 25 years? Future History of privatisation, 1992 - 2022 The Economist 21st December 1991 Norman Macrae looks forward to the end of politicians. IT is possible that the word "privatisation" first appeared in print in The Economist, just over 30 years ago, It was suggested by somebody now dead, who may have subconsciously pinched it from some-thing published earlier somewhere else. For those who used it in these columns, the word then seemed part of a hopeless crusade. In the 1960s it was hard to persuade even sensible people how wrong were those like J.K. Galbraith, who told eager politicians that the interests of the poor could be served best by spending much more of GDP through politician-dictated monopolies in-stead of market-leading common sense. Actually, in the 1960s rich countries were achieving marvellously greater equalisation in almost everything provided by private enterprise, but the underclass became further downtrodden in America's and Europe's inner cities whenever services were instead provided from the public purse. For the first time in history, millionaires and welfare mothers were spending their leisure hours in the same way: watching the same television programmes, from armchairs of the same comfort in similarly heated rooms, while other consumer durables spread to the living rooms, kitchens, bathrooms and (in some countries) parking spaces even of the few unemployed. So did opportunities for holidays in the sun and purchases of clothes; remember that in 1945 the average Englishman had owned only one pair of trousers. Supermarkets spread from the suburbs to the slums, and found similar expenditure per consumer there. There was no such equalisation between suburb and inner city in things where public servants spent increasingly more of the taxpayers' money. This was especially true on the worst public-housing estates, from which 90% of an area's crime might emanate; where it became unsafe to walk down graffiti-desecrated corridors, because anything that belonged to the community was deemed to belong to nobody; where life deteriorated into drugs, hopelessness, squalor. The great divide The luckiest young Londoners returning from the war in 1945 were those whose applications for flats in these great new tower blocks overlooking the Thames were, to their fury, turned down. They had to buy, for perhaps £1,500 in 1950, supposedly shoddier homes built by "speculative" builders several decades before, with weekly mortgage payments at about thrice a favoured council tenant's rent. Forty years later they had a capital asset worth perhaps £150,000, while the "favoured" tenant had something worth nothing, except a vicious circle of hell. In the inner cities, police protection, state education, safeguarding of poorer people's life environment grew steadily and - for both taxpayer and customer - ever more expensively worse. After vast inpouring of public money, people in poor areas had to send their children to more modernly-built but much nastier and less parent-selected schools, where their kids had a growing prospect of being turned into drug-addicted delinquents. After quadrupled spending police protection in the Bronx, the prospect of a mugger being apprehended there fell to under 2%, so mugging became an attractive way of teenage life. In Lyndon Johnson's presidency, 1963-69, America created a huge welfare state, which proceeded to cripple instead of aid its clients. All of the forward indices of misery (illegitimacy, welfare dependency, lack of neighbourliness, crime, drugs, riot so as to loot) grew worse. In Britain the "commanding heights of the economy" had been nationalised originally on the argument that it would be too easy to make vast profits in these great monopoly industries (like coal, rail, steel, ship-building, public utilities). As soon as the state took over these industries, they plunged into vast losses instead. They were operated in the interest of their unions, instead of their customers, and without any innovative spark. If a middle manager in a private company thinks his boss is making a horlicks of his job, he can set up another firm in competition. If he is in a state firm, he writes a memorandum which says the boss is making a horlicks; and loses all chance of promotion. In Russia he got shot. The inefficiency of state spending in rich countries was shown further when the mighty United States began to lose a war to slightly ridiculous North Vietnam, despite spending 1,000 times more money on its arms and soldiers than did Hanoi. Nobody listened, then everybody did. At the time I was doing some moonlighting work with an American management consultant. Together we tried to invent new Greek-derived words, distinguishing between activities which were wholly driven by customers' demand (and were generally succeeding), and those driven by expenditure of taxpayers' or sometimes private money (whose productivity declined with each extra zillion pumped in). None of these Greek words caught on. In The Economist we tried terms like recompetitioning and privatisation. Privatisation was meant to signify the return to profitable private motivation of anything that had declined through unprofitable state intervention, in Europe usually through state ownership, in America usually through excessive regulation (including what Herman Kahn called "health and safety fascism"). The clear advantage of privatisation was that everybody working in private businesses, from the entrepreneurs to the often non-unionised workforce, got more money if their new ways of doing things succeeded (a success they sometimes overhyped). If they did not attract more customers, they went bust. People in public activities soon learnt that they got more money if their settled ways of doing things failed, because then they could wail that governments must pump still more money to them. One school in south London produced 80% of the juvenile delinquents in its area; the educational authorities directed ever more money to its often absentee and strike-ridden staff; because so many of their pupils were truant (sometimes after a hard night mugging), they clearly faced "special problems". Today's Soviet Disunion produces far more wheat, rye, potatoes, barley than the United States; yet Moscow faces bread riots because most of it fails to reach the shops. This is because the distribution system is socialist, so nobody has an incentive to move the stuff (as distinct from either staying away or turning up just to fill forms). That is also true in many town halls across the free world. Morale has naturally deteriorated in all the activities run in the failure-welcoming socialist way. Economic decline has correlated closely with the proportion of the workforce in public-sector jobs, from Merseyside (way above the British average) to Brezhnev's Omsk(100%). But during the 1970s those of us who appealed for reform via privatisation were still generally regarded as nuts. The word barely appeared in Margaret Thatcher's 1979 election campaign. Then it took off. In the past dozen years, 1979-91, privatisation has become a real policy in more than 70 countries. Although the lead was given by Thatcherdom, some of the most extensive privatisers have been Labour governments in Australia, Scandinavia and Spain. Privatisation is seen in all the ex-communist countries as a means through which industries and services long buried under dead socialism can bring some springtime to the frozen earth above. The policy has taken wing in Japan (telecoms and railways) and the Asian dragons. It stumbles forward in the third world. Less than a decade after the Falklands war, British merchant banks are drawing fees from a Peronist government for advising on privatisations to stop Argentine industries being mismanaged by Peronist colonels. No-body could have imagined this 12 years ago. Unfortunately, much of it is being done the wrong way. Fortunately, the scope for further privatisation is everywhere huge. The rest of this article sketches a plausible future history for privatisation. The suggested timetable will be wrong, but things will move this way. Parochially, in a viewspaper published in London, this future history will most often be told as it may develop in Britain. Other countries may move at a faster pace, but this blinkering will protect the article from being diffused. It will also help emphasise that party political changes will not slow the caravan. Kinnock privatises coal and rail Start with the two industries which the British Tories have promised to privatise if returned to office: coal and the railways. In our scenario these would be privatised even by a Kinnock Labour government in the 1990s, although for opposite reasons. The fudged three-year agreement, whereby privatised British electricity firms have to buy some uneconomic British coal, runs out in 1993-94. The European Commission will be bound to forbid continuance of this clearly anti-competitive arrangement. The number of viable deep British pits will then fall from today's 68 to about three. The Kinnock government would not want a nationalised coal company to fight the long strike with Arthur Scargill about this. It will therefore say that wicked Brussels has ordered coal privatisation (which it virtually will have done), and that the pits to remain open must be decided by the market. Some of the abandoned pits may have coal drawn from them by any teams of miners that find this economic, rather like anybody can go blackberrying. At first the attempted safety regulations will be tougher than potholing, but will then decay. In America the safety people were pilloried when they demanded the installation of a stretcher by the owner of a one-man mine. In the 1990s opencast mining, at present environmentally unpopular, will become environment-loved. The opencast machines rip off the topsoil, but are then required to replace it in the form that local people want which is no longer for agriculture, but as golf courses and pony-trekking land. This helps mitigate one of the worst drains on enterprise, which is that planning restrictions tend to forbid any land to be turned to alternative use. The railways will gain from the prejudice against changing land use. In the 1990s and 2000s crowded countries like Britain will sensibly turn to charging for occupying the roads. An electronic attachment on each vehicle, especially each lorry, will be activated whenever it enters an area where it adds to delay-causing traffic jams. The bill will be sent to the vehicle's owner, and be-come quite high. Coupled with technology that makes it much faster to load and unload containers at railhead, railways will be ripe for privatisation. As argued by Oliver Letwin (the Tory candidate standing against Glenda Jackson in Hampstead), a privatised railway system will become rather like an airport. A centralised body (which may not be privatised until the 2010s) will run the safety and signalling system. If anybody in the early 1950s had said how many thousandfold would rise the passenger miles flown on the airlines, and yet with a large drop in accidents, he would not have been believed. His surprise would be greater when told that efficiency would increase fastest when Ronald Reagan sacked all America's public-sector air-traffic controllers for going on strike. Today, incoming and take-off aircraft rarely run into each other, even though landing slots are being "chaotically" sold through private agents, even though all sizes and speeds of aircraft are taking off from and homing into the same narrow and some-times foggy runways. Thus it will become with the privatised railways. The opening of the Channel tunnel will allow new railway locomotives into Britain, which are half as expensive as British locomotives now and of much more varied design. Light railways (often driven by computers, sometimes by volunteer commuters) will run from exurbia to connect with rush-hour commuter trains, suddenly making profits again. Lush cruise trains will take rich Americans and Japanese through the cultural centres of Europe. The end of duty-free drinks at European airports in 1993 will be mitigated for international trains, the one form of transport where booze does no damage. Slightly more important, the railways will make money from the fibre-optic and other cables or the new-technology pipelines laid beside their tracks. Most important, property development will boom at stations and on other parts of the railways' ridiculously underused land. The world's richest billionaire in 1991 is a 55-year-old Japanese who spotted the money to be made from railway land in Japan. By the early 2000s the successful privatisation of British Rail will be followed by privatisation of the Bundesbahn, the trans-Siberian railway and every other railway on the Eurasian land mass. Other utilities will follow The success of railway privatisation will set the tone for the proper competitioning of other utilities. In electricity the grid should usually belong to a separate organisation, and entrepreneurs make money by feeding competitively into it. By the late 1990s the partial success of British electricity's privatisation will mean there is some sort of commodity price per kilowatt hour of electricity on the European grid. Suddenly scientists will manage, eg, to isolate hydrogen from something in which it abounds, like seawater, and feed it as a power source much more cheaply into that grid than electricity from coal or gas. This will be followed by the discovery of ever cheaper ways of releasing energy from storage in matter. All will come competitively into the grid. In the gas industry, British Gas will have lost its monopoly, because cheaper gas from Siberia will have to be allowed into its pipelines, after the 1996 free-trade agreement with the post-Gorbachev Soviet Union. During the brief 1991 Gulf War the Japanese invested in ways of bringing frozen natural gas from all round the Pacific. These will succeed. The near-bankrupt oil wells of the Middle East will have to follow, by exporting similarly cheap gas by all means to Europe and America. As energy prices fall, food prices will dramatically accompany them. After free trade with Russia, the EC's common agricultural cartel will collapse. Cheap food will pour in by rail from the black earth of Ukraine, as cruise trains to Samarkand pass them the other way. Telecommunications (whose grid is anyway disintegrating with mobile telephones) and television (recompetitioned by satellite) will also leave the public sector entirely. In tones similar to today's lessons about 19th-century child labour, sociologists will tell with horror of the exploiting classes' device named the BBC. A poll tax (called the licence fee) was levied on every family, even poor widows and pensioners in Hackney, in order to impose on them toffee-nosed programmes which only the upper middle classes (in the name of "culture") thought they wanted. Actually, as we will soon learn, the BBC's brief 74 years from 1922 to 1996 were when British culture rotted worst, because it was brought under duopoly control. Then everything, including the policy During the late 1990s the privatisation of the social services will gather worldwide pace. The first privatisations will take some disguised form of the "voucher" system discussed for decades. Everybody except the teachers' unions will see that schools should get money only if they attract pupils. Dreadful schools, which parents shun, should be closed. Each child will carry a voucher, paid for by the state, to the school of his choice. "Choice units" in each area will take parents round available schools, to show what is on offer. Many people will rightly say that children from disadvantaged backgrounds should have specially topped-up vouchers, so that schools should compete most keenly to attract them. At juvenile courts, orders will be made to increase the vouchers for offenders; some-times the parent will be ordered to pay the topping-up. Both the American and British health systems will gravitate towards a system of health maintenance organisations (HMOs, or bodies that compete to get your capitation fee, and then seek to provide all your health-care needs as economically as possible). In America the present fee-for-service system has proven quite uneconomic. Doctors make more money if they treat patients as expensively as possible after they become ill. The patients do not mind this money being spent, because it comes from insurance cover paid for under tax incentives by their employers. In its umpteenth attempt to stem the federal budget deficit, sometime in the 1990s, the American Congress will see that it can save tens of billions spent on hypochondriacs a year if it grants tax relief on employers' health insurance only up to the point where everybody can pay a basic HMO capitation fee. If anybody wants more expensive fee-for-service medicine, he must pay for it out of taxed income. Britain's NHS has always had something like an HMO system for its family doctors or general practitioners (GP's). But nearly 90% of British government NHS spending has gone to hospitals with hierarchies of state-salaried doctors, nurses and far too many trade-unionised workers (three times as many as in some of the better Japanese hospitals). The GP system, whereby Britons choose their family doctors and the government pays those doctors a capitation fee, has been reasonably successful. By any criterion of cost effectiveness, the NHS hospital system has not. In 1991, amid loud and sometimes mendacious political controversy, some seeds of reform have already been sown. Under the 1991 NHS reforms, budget-holding family doctors will compete to get patients into hospitals without waiting lists, and hospitals will get more money only if they thus attract patients. There are only minor and gradual steps from this reformed NHS system to a proper HMO system. Under any governments in Britain, those steps will occur. They will probably occur rather faster under a Labour government. Labour 1992-96 will have less public money to spend on the NHS than the Tories, because it has promised to spend so much more on other things, and (partly thereby) is bound to scare more money out of the country. Labour will have to try to spend the annual £30 billion or so on the NHS more effectively. The row about Tory reforms is that Tory "trust hospitals" then proceed to sack workers. Since British hospitals have long been overstaffed, that is what any reforms (including Labour's) will have to aim for. British prisons have long been a ridiculous public service, with negative gross production. They create recidivists, instead of cure criminals. A 20-year-old who is sent to prison is more likely to become a habitual criminal than one who narrowly escapes being sent there. America has moved towards some private-enterprise prisons, whose entrepreneurs will be paid more if their inmates do not recommit offences. In the decade 2000-10, governments will recognise that the same "recompetitioning" is also highly desirable for the police. Modern police forces have huge computer files of genetic fingerprints, ordinary fingerprints, case histories and behaviour patterns of particular villains and for particular crimes. These files are secret to everybody except the police, who (being a public-sector body) are PC Plods who are not innovative at using them. In the early 2000s the increased efficiency of hackers at breaking into secret files will bring scandal about the police into the media in many countries. There will be accusations that the police are deliberately not tracking down some big gangs of criminals, ostensibly because those criminals are paying them with information about other criminals, but really because they are paying them money. In Britain police will be found still concocting cases against black people, Irish people, long-haired youths, short-haired youths, other folk they dislike. The interesting question will explode: why should police files be kept secret? Some civil libertarians will say "the police have to keep secret the record of petty offender Joe Bloggs, because it would be wicked if all his neighbours know it." A compromise will be effected whereby each computer file, though thrown open to investigation by many competitors to the police, will have a number instead of proper name attached. After a certain stage in a criminal career, even that anonymity will be removed e.g., for the under 1% of people who commit over 50% of some crimes because, on release, they go straight back to offending and soon to prison again. Even in the early 1990s, each year spent by anybody in prison in Britain costs the state £25,000. Gradually, the whole unsuccessful police and justice system in most countries will be transformed, by recognising that it should be a modern open-to-everybody information industry. By 2000 the cost of lawyers will be falling fast. People will recognise that most of the work of lawyers can be done more quickly by telecommuting into programmes that interpret the statute law of England. Those programmes will answer the specific question you have posed via your personal computer. Cases in non-criminal law will then increasingly be settled by each side putting its case to the computer, and agreeing to accept its verdict. When a suspected criminal is arraigned before a court, the first question will at last rightly become "did he do it?" Until after about 2010, suspects will still be able, if they wish, to insist on submitting themselves to the present lottery system of adversarial lawyers, widely differing juries and erratic Lords Justice. But more and more criminals will agree to plea-bargain after seeing on computer file all the evidence against them, and the computer's judgment of how little chance they have of getting away with their defence. The courts will then usually go on to the next and civilised question, though preferably with the lightest punishment: "how best can we discourage you from doing this again?" There should be lots of competing organisations offering "if the state will pay us the £25,000 a year that it would otherwise cost to put this man in prison, we will try to reform him within the community in the following way. If he recommits an offence within a certain time, we lose our fee." Sometimes that will require electronic tagging of the man concerned. If so, he should have some choice of which regime he prefers. There will be an increase of "bobbies on the beat" (i.e., policemen within the community), but various competitive bodies will start submitting tenders for this job saying they will seek to simplify their tasks by, e.g., better street lighting near notorious trouble spots. Then, around 2010, local authorities will begin to change their way of providing municipal services. It is absurd that you should have to vote either Conservative or Labour when choosing who best can man-age your drains. Multinational corporations will appear On the ballot for local elections. They will say: "We will charge only this level of poll tax or property tax. We will promise by contract to reach the following targets for reduction in the crime rate, for environmental cleanliness, etc. If by the judgement of independent auditors we fail, we will have to remit some of your property tax to you. But we are confident we can fulfil this contract, and make a profit for our-selves at this level of property tax. Liverpool and New York city will be-come two of the first areas to elect commercial firms instead of politicians as their municipal authorities. The poor and the military By 2015 there will be only two main "public goods" left in the sense economists use the term (things best provided by government rather than markets). These two remaining public goods will be redistribution and military protection. These will then become competitivised. Some part of redistribution can be handled by insurance. "I want to make sure my income never falls below half the average income": for some people, that could be an insurable risk. Others, such as the handicapped, some elderly and a few children, need special help. This can best be provided competitively. Children in the care of local-authority homes in Britain have an appallingly higher delinquency rate than other children, including those from equally troubled families but foster-parented or in charitable institutions like Barnardos. "Public sector" means there is a trade-union row if employees are sacked for mere inadequacy, or for monstrous incompetence. In institutions on performance contracts, there can be a continuous search for methods that succeed. These performance contracts will eventually spread to tackle poverty. In the early 1990s the United States has 13% of its population below the officially defined poverty line, but an American has less than a 1% chance of staying long in poverty provided he or she does three things: completes high school, gets and stays married (not necessarily to the same person), stays a year in his first job even if at the minimum wage. People will start to bid for contracts to try to help "endangered people" thus to avoid being long in poverty, and some of the con-tracts will work. The future of defence can be seen from what happened in the Gulf war. Long-distance rockets can already be pinpointed down the bedroom ventilator of any dictator, or on to any of his lorries and tanks. More sophisticated weapons than that are not going to be needed any more. Idealists say that military operations should be put under the control of the United Nations. Since many of the nastiest dictators have votes in the UN, that would not work. But in the next two decades NATO will more or less join with the old Warsaw Pact, in what will become a rich man's club. NATO-Warsaw will keep a register of arms sent to any poorer countries, and will start to forbid any such sales. It will gradually assume a world policeman's role. It will equip itself at lowest price with stuff that actually works and will therefore probably buy much of its electronic hardware from the Japanese. It will recruit its soldiers in the cheapest high-quality markets: Gurkhas, Britain's SAS, Sons of old soldiers from various villages round the world with fighting in their blood. By the 2020s it will be recognised as absurd that only the Republican and Democratic parties should field serious candidates for (say) the 2024 election for president of the United States. A competing "contractual" candidacy will be emerging a cabinet team who say they will never raise income tax above 10% (watch their lips), but will contract to provide government of the following quality...…
Added by chris macrae at 6:23pm on July 21, 2014
Topic: Entrepreneur - Lost transcripts from 170 years of diaries at The Economist
ng nutrition and local food security. Are there other multi-trillion dollar markets that are putting the sustainability of our childrens children at risk?   Back in 1982, editors of Entrepreneurial Revolution at The Economist issued a report on the first 10 years of dialogues on the coming of the internet. This report concluded that the worst crisis of all would be compounded if biggest powers in education prevented a revolution in job creation.    Specifically pro-youth economists see the coming of the internet as the greatest opportunity to design a smart educational model whereas anti-youth economists see the internet as an extension if the television advertising age in controlling and dumbing down people.   Job creating educators are going to need the courage to give up 4 monopolies: number 1 what knowledge is researched number 2 what knowledge is distributed by their teaching number 3 what knowledge is examined number 4 what knowledge is acredited   In 2013,  the crisis of job creating education appears to be at a tipping point. For example, search MOOC and the celebrations around Salman Khan, Taddy Blecher and Muhammad Yunus hosted at the 10th Skoll world championships hosted at Oxord April 2013,   LINKIN IN A PORTAL OF FREE 10 MINUTE TRAINING MODULES The search is on for:  whose life experiences do millions of youth now need to interact around to create jobs and collaborate around the millennium's most exciting goals? .. Subject: valuation of economics= compounding the rules of 7 billion peoples lifetimes  http://www.youtube.com/yunuscentre  Do you accept the view of economics as:  a set of rules around which 7 billion peoples' future lifetimes are organised?  If you do, it seems important that economists have a particular type of profile - an open mindset, one that seeks out diversity, inclusion, integration. One that frees each market's most sustainable purpose for future generations? For those interested in transparently mapping economics- indeed what futures are possible for humans to create, we recommend looking at how the word entrepreneur first came into your mother tongue Entrepreneur is a French word. It was first used around 1800. It refers to the challenges that the peoples face when their nation's economy has come to a dead end because a small number of people were monopolising all the productive assets. A diary of the innovation challenges faced by entrepreneurs has been maintained for 170 years- it is called The Economist! Why is the 2010s turning out to be an extraordinary time for more and more people to need to take back their nation's economy? Answers are to be found in two surveys written in The Economist in the early 1970s online library of norman macrae .  Specifically The Next 40 Years written in 1972 and Entrepreneurial Revolution written in 1976. The hypothesis of these surveys is: the net generation will face the greatest simultaneous and worldwide innovation challenges ever known to our human race The 1972 survey "The Next 40 Years" catalogues rules economists had made during the 20th century which would be unsustainable as peoples became more connected than separated. The 1976 survey boldly goes where no economist had been before. It discusses how the biggest organisational typologies of the 20th C, be they corporate, government or non-government, are non-sustainable as far as the net generation are concerned. It went on say that the most exciting innovation and valuation challenges ever faced would be how to innovate these organisational typologies If you do decide to read these surveys, it is important to take a non-partisan view. This is essential to discussing how to reform economies, and was laid down by the founder of The Economist James Wilson in 1843, and was confirmed by such classic works as Keynes General Theory written in the 1930s Norman Macrae Foundation is searching for partners in a curriculum of economics for 11 year olds. We believe that one starting point will be to compete the sentence - Economies go wrong WHEN... We suggest a candidate for the top of this list will be: WHEN political parties and vested interests fight over economic truths instead of designing/mediating debates in which all of the people especially youth have an equal voice. May I observe that Internationalist Scots have a special reason for diarising entrepreneurship. Just after 1700 Scotland lost its economy with over half of the people's money being lost in an international banking scam. The consequence was that England took over Scotland in the so-called United Kingdom . In the next 150 years, Scots found that the policies out of London were unsustainable for them in terms of productive lifetimes. History shows that over half of Scots had to emigrate , becoming one of the first Diaspora nations, sailing the seven seas, trying to make a living all over the world. If you include this perspective when you read the writings of Adam Smith from 1758 you will find different sorts of clues in the reasoning of economics than if you fail to include this perspective -----------------------------------question how to converge other national contrinutions eg extracts fromm briefing for those wishing japan would engage youth entrepreneur dialogues worldwide: in asking ambassador (and sir fazle's family) for a meeting to continue dialogue a year ago around the consider japan genre in The Economist 1962-1980 - unfortunately I dont speak japanese so I dont know if there is a web where The Emperor's citations accompanying Orders of the Rising Sun are recorded- if so it will be found that The Emperors 1988 citation to my father read something like- for helping us to design a more joyful win-win view of world trade than we otherwise would have done; as RPRs note show  it was the Japanese view of economics 1960-1985 that dad preferred to be available to the whole net generation (and 1975-2075 as Asian Pacific worldwide century) not the terrifying externalisation one dismal chicago economists got Nobel prizes for - the point if issuing the brochure Consider Bangladesh at the end of 2008 was to linkin Japanese and Bangladesh bottom-up view of economics with youth as fast as humanly possible - it is a pity that Lamiya's circle repeatedly blocked such a dialogue given its extreme urgency in first quarter of 2009 for all whom needed to be connected on both sides of the Atlantic as well across the rival cultures in your hemisphere who needed to unite in poverty museum race an important east-west bridge Japan can make links in whole of MIT digital media sector currently orchestrated by the expatriate Japanese Joi Ito …
Added by chris macrae at 6:53am on May 30, 2013
Topic: Who's curriculum is applying Entrepreneurial Revolution the way Norman Macrae scripted - in The Economist (est 1972)
o all peoples lived in the dirt apart from Kings, their land barons and ruling professions/priests. For more source, see transcript of John Mackey conscious capitalism conference 2013. mackeycapitalismtranscript2000citizenmeetsanfran2013short.doc, 30 KB   As a mathematician it does matter to me that when a systems curricula is published openly, its do's and dont's are respected - at least by the people who claim to be helping share its knowhow, It might also matter to your children because this curriculum includes what not to do so that the entire edifice of global finance doesn't collapse - this topic was addressed first in The Next Forty Years in The Economist 1972 and BY alumni of Entrepreneurial Revolution at regular intervals faced by arrogant macroeconomists who have taken the world further and further into the abyss of organisational systems that are too big to exist, let alone fail ........ Fortunately now that we have MOOCs circulating the world, anyone who makes false claims to be an entrepreneurial revoltion alumni can be massively corrected by millions of youth. Norman Macrae Foundation welcomes all youth's help in mediating this google noisiest 10 of entrepreneurial revolution Babson Entrepreneurship Ecosystem Project | entrepreneurial-revolution.com/‎View shared post Why an Entrepreneurial Revolution? Ten Rules for Revolutionaries. About BEEP. Manizales Mas. Scale Up Milwaukee. Worthless, Impossible, and Stupid ... Entrepreneur Revolution Breakthrough Event | Gain the mindset ... entrerevolution.com/‎View shared post Entrepreneur Revolution Students Have Reported 6-Figure Revenue Gains In A Single 12-Month Period (documented and verifiable). Be prepared for a ... The Entrepreneur Revolution | Daniel Priestley danielpriestley.wordpress.com/about/‎View shared post The Entrepreneur Revolution is the idea that the rules that created commercial success in the past have radically changed. Doing what worked yesterday may ... Entrepreneur Revolution: How to develop your entrepreneurial ... www.amazon.com › ... › Entrepreneurship‎View shared post Entrepreneur Revolution: How to develop your entrepreneurial mindset and start a business that works [Daniel Priestley] on Amazon.com. *FREE* super saver ... ERworld.tv - entrepreneurial revolution maps for pro-youth ... erworld.tv/‎ Cached Similar Share View shared post simplest rules from ER's first 36 years of valuing world's most purposeful organisations ... year 37 of the economist's glossary/map of Entrepreneurial Revolution. You shared this The Big Idea: How to Start an Entrepreneurial Revolution - Harvard ... hbr.org/2010/06/the-big-idea-how-to-start-an-entrepreneurial-revolution/‎ Cached Share View shared post The big idea: Governments around the world are recognizing that entrepreneurship can transform their economies. But most of their efforts to spark venture ... The Entrepreneurial Revolution Remaking the Middle East - WNYC www.wnyc.org/.../16/entrepreneurial-revolution-remaking-middle-east/‎View shared post 5 days ago - In the midst of the political turmoil in the Middle East, Christopher Schroeder, a seasoned investor in emerging markets, says ... Daniel Isenberg - Leading an Entrepreneurial Revolution - Forbes www.forbes.com/sites/danisenberg/‎View shared post Daniel Isenberg's stories. Leading an Entrepreneurial Revolution: I create projects that enhance entrepreneurship ecosystems. Join the Creatively Entrepreneurial Revolution | Inc.com www.inc.com/marla.../join-the-creatively-entrepreneurial-revolution.htm...‎View shared post Apr 30, 2012 - All work and no play? You may be missing an opportunity to tap into your true genius. The Entrepreneur Revolution - Independent Banker www.independentbanker.org/tech/.../1082-the-entrepreneurial-revolutio...‎View shared post May 1, 2013 - No matter their age, experience or background, more people than ever are interested in starting their own business, entrepreneurial developers ...   ..who first contributed and desiccated the curriculum of entrepreneurial revolution from 1972. ....................................................peter drucker -norman and peter's collabration went back to Norman's teenage years- drucker was 10 years older and holding down his first job as a journalist in Moscow whose British Embassy Norman's father hosted  dinner parties at -drucker enjoyed entreperenurioal revolution so much that there were frequent competitions to invesnt the vocabulary - who first coined post-iindsutrail revolution, knowledge worker or co-worker, telecommuting, death of disatnace - nobody may ever be able to find out Romano rodi helped translate the Economst's 1976 survey of Entrepreneurial Revolutuion into various mother tongues includingItalian where he hided Norman for how diffeicult it was to find an intalian metaphor of 10green bottles and mr discolbols said oh wxyz we may never get down again - will we get don to community level economics in gtime to save peoples from all the errors of macroeconomics has become georhge soros life work; ever since 1976 irregular compilations of the 100 greatest errors that can destroy all huan futures have been chanted as ER nursery rhyme son - 10 green bottles hanging on the wall if one green bottle would accidentally fall there would be nine green bottles hanong on the wall  9 more ifs before the constequence of econosts errors is that the peoples have nothing left at all Some early americans to join in were Herman Khan. He was smar enough to be amused when his next century of America deviated from Norman's who believed that americans only needed to continue gaining I productivity whereas billiosn across the east needed to rise form sunbsistence to as smart as lives can be anywhere. Oddly Bill Drayton who taglineed social entrepreneur to his ashoka movement after reading enetreprenyrial revolution neither understood the main lesson from Gandhi that 25 years of norams father in laws work with Gandhi revealed nor the main poingt of designing systems round sustainable models of cash-hlow as well as trust-flow. In particular the ability of ashoka to ocus on who the world needed to elad open edcation's 10 time greatest economic possibilities has been next to non-existent - not even in India where ashoka started has ashoka linked in to to the greatest pro-youth ediucatios such as www.cmseducation.org hosted by the Gandhi family. J Gifford pinchots work on intrapreneurship has always been very precise but his movement doesn't seem to hae offered CEOs a valuation framework to justify maximal scaling of intrapreneurship - at elast not one that hs been able to keep up with the bawdill speadsheeted by global accounatnts The megatrends co-authors were kind enough to inveite norema to edit some of their English editions Most American people who have started up another adjectival entrepreneurial ,kove,ent haven't even read what the curricula of enetreprenurial revolution is about. Fortunately the Japanese have helped to celebrate all Asians as better searchers of what the genre is systematically about and what it isn't. …
Added by chris macrae at 12:20pm on August 20, 2013
Topic: moocwho
salman khan open education jack ma 100 million jobs for chaina starting with online micromarkets john mackey benchmarking whichceos want to lead their sectors greatest future purspoe with youth the ashden network - microenergy prize network the mit new media network - number 1 job creating alumn network in world   open mentor search for 7 community-rising wonders of 3 billion job creation banking (with or without cash) that values community job creating knowhow and local markets nutrition, food security, self-health, clean ag nursing mooc, emedic and health service open education and massive youth/investor collaboration around other open tech life changing apps trillion dollar auditing as peoples/youth most popular past-time and public service broadcasting duty clean energy and zero waste value chains future system designers accelerate return of politicians and professions to community service and ending compound risks at borders     Chris Macrae 8 minutes ago Jun 6, 2013 7:39am Who would you like millions of youth to MOOC with to create jobs or change the world. Massive Open Online Curriculum/Collaboration are biggest words in pro-youth economies wherever they free youth to interact knowhow that 20th c education monopoly prevented youth from innovating - green energy and community food security? nurses as information networkers of affordable healthcare everywhere? ...? Thanks for your feedback. You can Undo this action. Chris Macrae Tuesday via Amazon Healthcare is one of 7 online curricula I wish to see become pro-youth in line with my father's http://normanmacrae.ning.com/ lifetime work at The Economist on job creating purposes of markets and the net generation. Do you know any pro-youth curricula designers like carrie who is also leader of the global good fund investing in youth creating jobs I just bought: 'Sustainability for Healthcare Management: A Leadership Imperative' by Carrie R. Rich www.amazon.com Sustainability is not unique to health, but is a unique vehicle for promoting healthy values. This book challenges healthcare leaders to think through the implications of our decisions from fiscal, societal and environmental perspectives. It links health values with sustainability drivers in order to enlighten leadership about the value of sustainability as we move toward a new paradigm of health. The authors... Chris Macrae May 28 May 28, 2013 10:28am mirror mirror on the wall, in 2010s which is the biggest risk to us all? 3) the way big energy is blocking innovations in clean energy , 2) the way big food is blocking nutrition and local food security, or 1) the way big powers in education are blocking worldwide youth from free job creating education? with thanks to http://www.youtube.com/yunuscentre and http://saintjames.tv/ Chris Macrae May 27 May 27, 2013 2:21pm bac in 1843 the main goal of economists and media men was to help the peoples end hunger - how did these 2 professions get mission drift over the next 170 years and can we the peoples make an entrepreneurial revolution comeback -online education may be our last chance, and nutrition is one curriculum to ask khan acadey to do whole truth of asap Chris Macrae May 24 May 24, 2013 9:33am http://normanmacrae.ning.com/ Studies of youth testing digital newtorks in 1972 caused The Economist's pro-youth economist Norman Macrae to start debating Entrepreneurial Revolution. Over the next decade, alumni of The Economist prioritised...See More ....... 1 2 The Economist khanA 1 2 MoocYunus WSJ y10000edu                                                                       Carrie Rich globalgoodfund ,, healthbook Naila Chowdhury ,, women4empowerment ,, owner telecentres for good .. veteran of yunus grameenphone technology from get-go Zasheem Ahmed - 2008 conceptualizer of free nursing college - Bangaldesh-Scotland founding correspondent of Journal of Social Business …
Added by chris macrae at 9:02am on June 5, 2013
Topic: The Games & Book of World Record Job Creators
ust-in-time - see neumann.ning.com, and adamsmith.app how to vote for wrj creators - go to search of WRJ-input your jobs heroine/hero - if search is empty pls tell us about your addition - chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk - co-author 2025report.com 2019 fazle abed forever in the minds of girls and educators  innovation miracle- how half billion asian women ended dollar a day poverty of 1 billion people although maps of goal 1 ending poverty face many detailed challenges - if we could design a world in which every next girl/boy born has a g… Started by youLatest Reply the archives of fazle abed - collected by friends - have we missed a keynote lecture rsvp chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk Beyond%20power%20games.docx over last 40 years 1 billion Asians ended extreme poverty WHICH OF FAZLE ABED'S TOP 5 PARTNERS women empowering… Started by youLatest Reply STARSteacher who's who valuing future of 2020s sdsg youth most have you heard about wholly new youth world banking? poverty tedx and After 25 years as one of the west's3 great living servant public and global health, JIm Kim's inaugural year at world bank saw the creation of curriculum #2030now demanding young professionals transform any systemic non-sustainable monopolies embedded in old professions of global 1.0; by year end pope francis and jim kim were announcing the count on me partnership HAPPY 2015 Jim Kim 2030nowjimkim2transcripts.doc,  http://www.tedxwbg.com/ Sources for millennials Happy 2015 dialogues of pih on 1 Ebola 2 how to leverage technology to radically engage patients on health care; UN is 2015 year of all change to sustainability goals ============== 33rd year of tracking 1984's 2025 report- we've seen some bad slips- subprime decade was a waste; refugee decade of 2000s sad.. sad 2016-20 has america foresaken its own children as well as the world's? - while 2015 saw relaunch of 17 sustainability goals not one US university changed its leadership curricula in line with pope francis tour of usa let alone used moocs to offer nearly free training of world class Youth Sustainability; worse was to come with trump putting every sustainability connector in the wilderness- 4 years lost of the 15 to unite human race to sustainability -its almost incomprehensible that one man could lead 7.5 billion astray in this 21st century- and lets hope the virus is the low point for humans that we all lead forward to in 2021 back in 2012 we were drawing network maps like this celebrating how health networks were coming to the world bank with jim kim Trillion Dollar Audit Now: Global Social Value Health --- world bank tedx; lancet 2013 paper on global health's social valuation; 2003 Farmer biography Mountains beyond mountains; the seminal 2013 book Reimagining Global Health-an introduction by Farmer, Kim and about 12 other Partner in Health operational leaders in countries or critical disease communities PIH now operates out of;. 60 minute audio debriefing on West Africa Ebola by Kim and Framer 9 December 2014 soon to be published by www.pih.org 2013 dialogue between Kim and Pope Francis, #2030now... Kim et all paper of transforming value chain of global health,Lancet 2013 Map World Record Job Creators ... jim kim linkin top 40 better for the world social actions-networks; stars of who tedx who with jim kim . Jim Kim 2030nowjimkim2transcripts.doc, 40 KB how did villager networks around Sir Fazle build rural health service? build village education? build banking networks? build valuetrue maps of food , water and safe-for-children communities?  Africanidol.tv - Did Young africans launch most entrepreneurial summit ever? Why not launch a Young Continent Society for every continent on October 7 gamechanging maps of value chains fit for millenials     ...Unacknowledged ECONOMICS BREAKING NEWS -  World Bank 7 Oct- Jim Kim demands worldwide youth spread public service cultures of 1 Accountability, 2 Transparency 3 Collaboration. Demands African youth hold himself and elder generation urgently accountable for local impacts of global health systems. Cites his friend Sir Fazle Abed's village healthcare networking paradigm as critical in uniting all who value millennials' goals to celebrate #2030now #wbgyouthsummit  9 October Apple's Beats Ambassador Dbanj joins Jim Kim in the inaugural end poverty tedx (which is also a research space for world bank partners in transforming open education of #2030now and millennials as the heart of post 2015 goals. World Bank's opening week of year 2014-2015 rounds off with valuing China's jack Ma with relay passed to UN - Jim Kim internet laureate of the decade's bridge from pre 2015 mindsets to post 2015   ... .... Jim Kim  45 posts  ... wb live update  Youth Summit 2014_Concept Note (External).pdf, 327 KB rsvp chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk if you find next update on world bank youth summit - date 7 october- this update 9 july 2014 Open Learning Campus launched by world bank aug 2014- missing curricula rehearsals 1 RISK summer 2014; climate spring2014 Urgent question from Bottom Billion: Can you help identify the greatest Bottom-Up and youth professionals networks ever mobilised -stories of "small beautiful, open planetwide scale absolutely essential" old jottings follow - we suggest moving forward unless you want to trace snakes and ladders of our diary SEARCH: Top 10 Jobs Co-Creators With NETGEN 10 Yunus  -BEST NEWSCASTER EVER just in last 6 years diaries 1000 life changing concepts yunus has connected  since jan 2008 which youth might otherwise never have been aware of- his valuetrue role plays the opposite to the ad agencies that spend half a trillion dollars a year rehearsing concepts that are marginal improvements at best and are failed bankers value chains, job-losers and dirty 20th century's  at worst- how about you? BU inventions - Financial adviser, builder, energy-adviser, mobile telecoms for every 60 poorest mothers 9Sir Fazle Abed - BEST VILLAGE ENGINEER EVER -nobody in The Economist's (first 43 years of searching) both's engineers and audits the 3E's of microfranchsing with such relentless love (empowring self-confidence of all involved) as sir fazle abed and the world's largest and most collaborative grassroots networks BRAC. BU Inventions include - para-health, legal adviser, literacy and jobs educator for every village ... 8 Ingrid Munro -JB1  JB2   -Empowering Africa's Slumdog Billionnaire Partners Alternative nomination - Noah Samara- Africa's satellite for education 7 Taddy Blecher  summary of maharishi uni.doc, 556 KB -Missing Jobs Curricula of Open Education Youth Valiues Most (Branson, Mandela Elders, Google, Gov) 6 Gandhi family lucknow or Sal Khan Missing platforms of open education's most urgent apprenticeships 5 George Soros Missing Microeconomics and Open Society Search(Gorbachev 4 Jim Kim 2030nowjimkim2transcripts.doc, 40 KB  #2030now    1  2 Healthy Cheerleader of net generation's social movements and value chain transformations (Farmer ... ) ; world bank lives;  Cool Koreans Free UN's valuation of youth - and UN youth envoy 3 W4E/F4D - videos 1  2  3 2Akira Japan or Ali Baba Jack Ma China's next 100 Million SME Jobs connector Ending Digital Divides of last great nation before borderless world youth's dreams-be-true 1 WWW YouthLabs everywhere open source can reach, and Berners Lee (MIT, San Fran ) - Negrpronte, Joi Ito ... ....whats fun is anyone can nominate their own top 10 job creators   but to improve that list dont choose 10 who open the same doors   eg maybe yunus can talk about "celebrate" the 1000 concepts that most excite youth   but he's not jim kim a healthcare servant sitting on top of the most resourced organisations who could help adopt some of these ideas - see eg jim kim's next summit october 7 an please note this is a rehearsal for spring 2015 the final deadline kim and ba ki-moon have set for reviewing worldwide millennial entries  http://live.worldbank.org/millennials-endpoverty-2030   nor is yunus - sir fazle abed who started building a real university 15 years ago to ensure sucession/ sustainability of the world's largest and most collaborative bottom-up ngo    nor are any of the three of these leading open education platforms  though world bank as course partner could feature all the missing curricula milennials most want to job create and redesign vlue chains around as #2030now .... nor directly in the middle of the most youth open tech wizards -the way maybe the director of mit media lab is able to connect usa and asia and africa   nor does he own the satellite that can choose what the whole of africa and asia learns for virtually free   so if you like to improve the game rules - find a top 10 or top 5 descriptions of what could be win-wins- you dont have to name the personal gatekeeper straight away   then share your nominations in some sort of friendly wiki space-or even this email - note one persons view isnt correct or wrong it depends what your localities most urgent production needs sustaining youth are which is clearly different where each os us sits and which millennials vote for open source replicating /apping jobs   chris dc 301 881 1655 chrismacraedc www.womenuni.com linking missing jobs- curricula of open edu I would like my daughter to be free to access ........ Top 3 Recently passed Mandela links to Popes, alumni of Gandhi, whole truth of every communty ubuntu and cross-cultural celebration; potential link across all Us Africa movements including Luther king and Value chain models across twin sister cities Borlaug - one of the most influential crop science for bottom up agriculture value chain mapping -connections to Nippon Institute and eg BRAC Bangladesh; inspiration for making value chain central debate at usaid under obama and (indirectly) to acceleration of this method's diffusion by Jim Kim Ray Anderson - The planet's most valuable ceo? 10 Richest Roles to Play in Freedom? Pope (as steward of greatest religious riches) Soros -first bilanthoropis of south africa, of eastern hemispher mobile vilages, of open society europe, of ineteconomics, of ending currency and banking hightmares Gates- Exploring Harvard alumni's biggest Ignorances Ibrahim - ending digital inequalities Africa Slim- Ending digital inequalities in spanish mother tongues Sainsbury Family Foundation fanning European royals valuation of green energy- recalibrating James Wilson's 175th and goodwill economics greatest birthday present Skoll Google.org Bezos ... World Bank Live live.worldbank.org/‎ World BankVice President of Middle East and North Africa region, World Bank Group. April 17, 2014. Give and Take: Why Helping Others Drives Our Success · Adam Grant Open Access Week 2013 Kick ... Open Access Week 2013 Kick Off Event at the World Bank ... Toward Universal Health ... Hope this Universal Health Coverage by 2030 A.D ... Global Voices on Poverty Global Voices on Poverty – Interactive Live Blog ... The Global Burden of Disease The Global Burden of Disease - Webcast. Facebook logo ... The World Bank Group Youth ... The World Bank Group Youth Summit 2013. Facebook logo ... Making Growth Happen Making Growth Happen: Implementing Policies for ... Relationships of Top 50 to Top 10 Living  Branson youth's most valued CEO...Blecher, Mandela.. Because of phony metrics relatively few other ceos of the west's biggest companies yet care about creating jobs- this needs to the biggest change in promotional  media ever -however Danone's CEO Riboud Arguably Whole Foods CEO Mackey Particularly because of wholeplanetfoundation wholekidsfoundation wholecities foundation is worth benchmarking Google.org is vaut le voyage Gorbachev- without whom East Europe wouldnt have been the contients most vital space, Yunus would not have enjoyed the space to connect youth and nobel peace laureates, Soros would have been missing key support of open society Neville Williams without whom solar would be even further behind - and grameen's energy model for billion poor might never have been demonstrated Sarah Butler-Sloss (sainsbury family, Ashden) without whom micro energy's critical timeline for wholeplanet would be even further behind, and eg bbc nature journalists would not have had the confidence to break the news of the climate crisis Michaal Palin - without whom the cross-cultural joy of world service would have died at the BBC Queen Elizabeth without whom the worldwide goodwill of the national health service wouldnt have taken the starring role at the opening of the olympics Craig Barrett Family is worth watching Gates Foundation is best for some of the things it partners behind teh secnces - eg in Tanzania it is BRAC's main partner and it also facilitated how the 4 main mobile companies could gain from a colaborative launch of cashless money's mpesa while continuing to compete around everything else Julian's nanocredit is the next leapforward The ITU's is worth watching The quadir and hughes team are furthest ahead in doing the tech work of cashless banking (potentially a way of banking a billion as yet unbanked) Mo Ibrahim without whom the revaluation of leadership across africa wouldnt have had the funds or fame to be taken seriously, and poverty alleviation wouldnt have become a cause that so many mobile billionaires raced to partner Carlos Slim without whom spanish speaking South America wouldnt have  become central to end rotten microcredit and there might be no spanish translation services for khan academy Pope Francis without whom public servants for ending inequality wouldnt have become one of the most urgent missing professional curricula Lech Walesa without whom Eastern Europe would have been less free, human solidarite movements wouldnt link in through some of the most war-torn places on the planet, and the value of someone like the Pope in getting a nation's elders to transform whatever the sacrifice would not have been demonstrated India Founder of Infosys - perhaps the ,most practical visionary Nilekani a creator of the oursourcing/telecentre revolution President of Taj Group- one of the best companies in the world for employees Ex president kalam still rallies youth to tear up non-sustainable courses The veritable Lucknow family keep Gandhi and Montessori values of education alive like no other institure Maharishi - see taddy Blecher …
Added by chris macrae at 9:19am on April 24, 2014
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ENTREPRENEURIAL REVOLUTION NETWORK BENCHMARKS 2025now : Remembering Norman Macrae

cvchrismacrae.docx

2025REPORT-ER: Entrepreneurial Revolution est 1976; Neumann Intelligence Unit at The Economist since 1951. Norman Macrae's & friends 75 year mediation of engineers of computing & autonomous machines  has reached overtime: Big Brother vs Little Sister !?

Overtime help ed weekly quizzes on Gemini of Musk & Top 10 AI brains until us election nov 2028

MUSKAI.docx

unaiwho.docx version 6/6/22 hunt for 100 helping guterres most with UN2.0

RSVP chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk

EconomistDiary.com 

Prep for UNSUMMITFUTURE.com

JOIN SEARCH FOR UNDER 30s MOST MASSIVE COLLABS FOR HUMAN SUSTAINABILITY

1 Jensen Huang 2 Demis Hassabis 3 Dei-Fei Li 4 King Charles

5 Bezos Earth (10 bn) 6 Bloomberg JohnsHopkins  cbestAI.docx 7 Banga

8 Maurice Chang 9 Mr & Mrs Jerry Yang 10 Mr & Mrs Joseph Tsai 11 Musk

12 Fazle Abed 13 Ms & Mr Steve Jobs 14 Melinda Gates 15 BJ King 16 Benioff

17 Naomi Osaka 18 Jap Emperor Family 19 Akio Morita 20 Mayor Koike

The Economist 1982 why not Silicon AI Valley Everywhere 21 Founder Sequoia 22 Mr/Mrs Anne Doerr 23 Condi Rice

23 MS & Mr Filo 24 Horvitz 25 Michael Littman NSF 26 Romano Prodi 27 Andrew Ng 29 Lila Ibrahim 28 Daphne Koller

30 Mayo Son 31 Li Ka Shing 32 Lee Kuan Yew 33 Lisa Su  34 ARM 36 Priscilla Chan

38 Agnelli Family 35 Ms Tan & Mr Joe White

37 Yann Lecun 39 Dutch Royal family 40 Romano Prodi

41 Kramer  42 Tirole  43 Rachel Glennerster 44 Tata 45 Manmohan Singh 46 Nilekani 47 James Grant 48 JimKim, 49 Guterres

50 attenborough 51 Gandhi 52 Freud 53 St Theresa 54 Montessori  55 Sunita Gandhu,56 paulo freire 57 Marshall Mcluhan58 Andrew Sreer 59 Lauren Sanchez,  60 David Zapolski

61 Harris 62 Chips Act Raimundo 63 oiv Newsom. 64 Arati Prab hakarm,65 Jennifer Doudna CrispR, 66 Oren Etsioni,67 Robert Reisch,68 Jim Srreyer  69 Sheika Moza

- 3/21/22 HAPPY 50th Birthday TO WORLD'S MOST SUSTAINABLE ECONOMY- ASIAN WOMEN SUPERVILLAGE

Since gaining my MA statistics Cambridge DAMTP 1973 (Corpus Christi College) my special sibject has been community building networks- these are the 6 most exciting collaboration opportunities my life has been privileged to map - the first two evolved as grassroots person to person networks before 1996 in tropical Asian places where village women had no access to electricity grids nor phones- then came mobile and solar entrepreneurial revolutions!! 

COLLAB platforms of livesmatter communities to mediate public and private -poorest village mothers empowering end of poverty    5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5  5.6


4 livelihood edu for all 

4.1  4.2  4.3  4.4  4.5 4.6


3 last mile health services  3.1 3,2  3.3  3.4   3.5   3.6


last mile nutrition  2.1   2.2   2.3   2.4  2.5  2,6


banking for all workers  1.1  1.2  1.3   1.4   1.5   1.6


NEWS FROM LIBRARY NORMAN MACRAE -latest publication 2021 translation into japanese biography of von neumann:

Below: neat German catalogue (about half of dad's signed works) but expensive  -interesting to see how Germans selected the parts  they like over time: eg omitted 1962 Consider Japan The Economist 

feel free to ask if free versions are available 

0 The coming entrepreneurial revolution : a survey Macrae, Norman - In: The economist 261 (1976), pp. 41-65 cited 105 

 Macrae,Norman -1976
cited 21
2 The London Capital Market : its structure, strains and management Macrae, Norman - 1955
 Macrae,Norman - 1963  
Macrae, Norman - In: IPA review / Institute of PublicAffairs 25 (1971) 3, pp. 67-72  
 Macrae, Norman - The Economist 257 (1975), pp. 1-44 
6 The future of international business Macrae, Norman - In: Transnational corporations and world order : readings …, (pp. 373-385). 1979 >
7 Future U.S. growth and leadershipMacrae, Norman - In: FutureQuest : new views of economic growth, (pp. 49-60). 1977 Check Google Scholar | 
Future U.S. growth and leadership assessed from abroad Macrae, Norman - In: Prospects for growth : changing expectations for the future, (pp. 127-140). 1977 Check Google Scholar | 
9Entrepreneurial Revolution - next capitalism: in hi-tech left=right=center; The Economist 1976
 9bis Into entrepreneurial socialism Macrae, Norman - In: The economist 286 (1983), pp. 23-29 
10 Do We Want a Fat, Corrupt Russia or a Thin, Dangerous One?
N Macrae - Worldview, 1981 - cambridge.org
… Even if Japan scales up efforts in military defense after such clarification, Japan's defense
spending is estimated to remain within 2 per cent of its GNP. Serious consideration should be
given to the fact that realization of new defense policies and military buildup in Japan is 
 11 Must Japan slow? : a survey Macrae, Norman -  The Economist 274 (1980), pp. 1-42 
12 No Christ on the Andes : an economic survey of Latin America by the Economist
 
13Oh, Brazil : a survey Macrae, Norman - The Economist 272 (1979), pp. 1-22 
14To let? : a study of the expedient pledge on rents included in the Conservative election manifesto in Oct., 1959 Macrae, Norman - 1960  
 15 Toward monetary stability : an evolutionary tale of a snake and an emu
Macrae, Norman -In: European community (1978), pp. 3-6
16 Whatever happened to British planning? Macrae, Norman - CapitalismToday, (pp. 140-148). 1971 Check Google Scholar | 
  Macrae, Norman - In: Kapitalismus heute, (pp. 191-204). 1974
18 How the EEC makes decisions MacRae, Norman - In: Readings in international business, (pp. 193-200). 1972 Check Google Scholar | 
Macrae, Norman - 1972
20 The London Capital Market : Its structure, strains and management Macrae, Norman - 1955
 21 The coming revolution in communications and its implications for business Macrae, Norman - 1978
 22 A longer-term perspective on international stability : thirteen propositions
Macrae, Norman; Bjøl, Erling - In: Nationaløkonomisk tidsskrift 114 (1976) 1, pp. 158-168
Full text | 
23a 
Homes for the people
Macrae, Norman Alastair Duncan - 1967
Check Google Scholar
 The risen sun : Japan ; a survey by the Economist Macrae, Norman - In: The economist 223 (1967), pp. 1-32,1-29 Check full text access | 
MacFarquhar, Emily; Beedham, Brian; Macrae, Norman - The Economist 265 (1977), pp. 13-42
27 FIRST: - Heresies - Russia's economy is rotten to the core. The West should concentrate on exploiting profitable opportunities to improve it, not on supporting particular politicia...
28 The Hobart century : publ. by the Institute of Economic Affairs
Macrae, Norman Alastair Duncan - 1984
Check Google Scholar 
29 REINVENTING SOCIETY
Macrae, Norman - In: Economic affairs : journal of the Institute of Economic … 14 (1994) 3, pp. 38-39
30  How the EEC makes decisions
Macrae, Norman Alastair Duncan - In: The Atlantic community quarterly 8 (1970) 3, pp. 363-371 and in
How the EEC makes decisions
MacRae, Norman - In: Readings in international business, (pp. 193-200). 1972
31The green bay tree
South Africa Macrae, Norman Alastair Duncan - In: The economist 227 (1968), pp. 9-46
32 A longer-term perspective on international stability : thirteen propositions
Macrae, Norman; Bjøl, Erling - In: Nationaløkonomisk tidsskrift 114 (1976) 1, pp. 158-168

. we scots are less than 4/1000 of the worlds and 3/4 are Diaspora - immigrants in others countries. Since 2008 I have been celebrating Bangladesh Women Empowerment solutions wth NY graduates. Now I want to host love each others events in new york starting this week with hong kong-contact me if we can celebrate anoither countries winm-wins with new yorkers

mapping OTHER ECONOMIES:

50 SMALLEST ISLAND NATIONS

TWO Macroeconomies FROM SIXTH OF PEOPLE WHO ARE WHITE & war-prone

ADemocratic

Russian

=============

From 60%+ people =Asian Supercity (60TH YEAR OF ECONOMIST REPORTING - SEE CONSIDER JAPAN1962)

Far South - eg African, Latin Am, Australasia

Earth's other economies : Arctic, Antarctic, Dessert, Rainforest

===========

In addition to how the 5 primary sdgs1-5 are gravitated we see 6 transformation factors as most critical to sustainability of 2020-2025-2030

Xfactors to 2030 Xclimate XAI Xinfra Xyouth Wwomen Xpoor chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk (scot currently  in washington DC)- in 1984 i co-authored 2025 report with dad norman.

Asia Rising Surveys

  • 1962 Consider Japan: 1967 Japan Rising part 2.1
    • 7 May 1977 survey of Two Billion People- Asia
    • 1975 Asian Pacific Century 1975-2075 1977 survey China

  • The Economist.  Can we help peoples of Russia 1963..


    The Economist. what do Latin Americans need  1965.

     
    The Economist. Saturday, has washington dc lost happiness for ever? 1969.

Entrepreneurial Revolution -would endgame of one 40-year generations of applying Industrial Revolution 3,4 lead to sustainability of extinction

1972's Next 40 Years ;1976's Coming Entrepreneurial Revolution; 12 week leaders debate 1982's We're All Intrapreneurial Now

  • What will human race produce in 20th C Q4? - Jan 1975
  • (1984 book 2025 vreport on net generation 3 billion job creation) ...translated in different languages to 1993's Sweden's new vikings
  • 1991 Survey looking forward to The End of Politicians
  • 1996 oxford union debate- why political systems can adapt ahead of time to sustainability changes millennials will encounter
  • biography of von neumann in English and Japanese

The Economist had been founded   in 1843" marking one of 6 exponential timeframes "Future Histores"

IN ASSOCIATION WITH ADAMSMITH.app :

we offer worldwide mapping view points from

1 2 now to 2025-30

and these viewpoints:

40 years ago -early 1980s when we first framed 2025 report;

from 1960s when 100 times more tech per decade was due to compound industrial revolutions 3,4 

1945 birth of UN

1843 when the economist was founded

1760s - adam smithian 2 views : last of pre-engineering era; first 16 years of engineering ra including america's declaration of independence- in essence this meant that to 1914 continental scaling of engineeriing would be separate new world <.old world

conomistwomen.com

IF we 8 billion earthlings of the 2020s are to celebrate collaboration escapes from extinction, the knowhow of the billion asian poorest women networks will be invaluable -

in mathematically connected ways so will the stories of diaspora scots and the greatest mathematicians ever home schooled -central european jewish teens who emigrated eg Neumann , Einstein ... to USA 2nd quarter of the 20th century; it is on such diversity that entrepreneurial revolution diaries have been shaped 

EconomistPOOR.com : Dad was born in the USSR in 1923 - his dad served in British Embassies. Dad's curiosity enjoyed the opposite of a standard examined education. From 11+ Norman observed results of domination of humans by mad white men - Stalin from being in British Embassy in Moscow to 1936; Hitler in Embassy of last Adriatic port used by Jews to escape Hitler. Then dad spent his last days as a teen in allied bomber command navigating airplanes stationed at modernday Myanmar. Surviving thanks to the Americas dad was in Keynes last class where he was taught that only a handful of system designers control what futures are possible. EconomistScotland.com AbedMooc.com

To help mediate such, question every world eventwith optimistic rationalism, my father's 2000 articles at The Economist interpret all sorts of future spins. After his 15th year he was permitted one signed survey a year. In the mid 1950s he had met John Von Neumann whom he become biographer to , and was the only journalist at Messina's's birth of EU. == If you only have time for one download this one page tour of COLLABorations composed by Fazle Abed and networked by billion poorest village women offers clues to sustainability from the ground up like no white ruler has ever felt or morally audited. by London Scot James Wilson. Could Queen Victoria change empire fro slavemaking to commonwealth? Some say Victoria liked the challenge James set her, others that she gave him a poison pill assignment. Thus James arrived in Calcutta 1860 with the Queens permission to charter a bank by and for Indian people. Within 9 months he died of diarrhea. 75 years later Calcutta was where the Young Fazle Abed grew up - his family accounted for some of the biggest traders. Only to be partitioned back at age 11 to his family's home region in the far north east of what had been British Raj India but was now to be ruled by Pakistan for 25 years. Age 18 Abed made the trek to Glasgow University to study naval engineering.

  • 0 China 
  • 1 Japan/Asean
  • 2 Bangla and India
  • 3 Russia
  • 4 East Euro
  • 5 West Euro
  • 6 Usa & Canada

new york

  • 7 Middle East & Stans
  • 8 Med Sea
  • 9 Africa
  • 10 Latin Am /Carib
  • 11 Arctic Circle
  • 12 UN

1943 marked centenary autobio of The Economist and my teenage dad Norman prepping to be navigator allied bomber command Burma Campaign -thanks to US dad survived, finished in last class of Keynes. before starting 5 decades at The Economist; after 15 years he was allowed to sign one survey a year starting in 1962 with the scoop that Japan (Korea S, Taiwan soon hk singapore) had found development mp0de;s for all Asian to rise. Rural Keynes could end village poverty & starvation; supercity win-win trades could celebrate Neumanns gift of 100 times more tech per decade (see macrae bio of von neumann)

Since 1960 the legacy of von neumann means ever decade multiplies 100 times more micro-technology- an unprecedented time for better or worse of all earthdwellers; 2025 timelined and mapped innovation exponentials - education, health, go green etc - (opportunities threats) to celebrating sustainability generation by 2025; dad parted from earth 2010; since then 2 journals by adam smith scholars out of Glasgow where engines began in 1760- Social Business; New Economics have invited academic worlds and young graduates to question where the human race is going - after 30 business trips to wealthier parts of Asia, through 2010s I have mainly sherpa's young journalist to Bangladesh - we are filing 50 years of cases on women empowerment at these web sites AbedMOOC.com FazleAbed.com EconomistPoor.com EconomistUN.com WorldRecordjobs.com Economistwomen.com Economistyouth.com EconomistDiary.com UNsummitfuture.com - in my view how a billion asian women linked together to end extreme poverty across continental asia is the greatest and happiest miracle anyone can take notes on - please note the rest of this column does not reflect my current maps of how or where the younger half of the world need to linkin to be the first sdg generation......its more like an old scrap book

 how do humans design futures?-in the 2020s decade of the sdgs – this question has never had more urgency. to be or not to be/ – ref to lessons of deming or keynes, or glasgow university alumni smith and 200 years of hi-trust economics mapmaking later fazle abed - we now know how-a man made system is defined by one goal uniting generations- a system multiplies connected peoples work and demands either accelerating progress to its goal or collapsing - sir fazle abed died dec 2020 - so who are his most active scholars climate adaptability where cop26 november will be a great chance to renuite with 260 years of adam smith and james watts purposes t end poverty-specifically we interpret sdg 1 as meaning next girl or boy born has fair chance at free happy an productive life as we seek to make any community a child is born into a thriving space to grow up between discover of new worlds in 1500 and 1945 systems got worse and worse on the goal eg processes like slavery emerged- and ultimately the world was designed around a handful of big empires and often only the most powerful men in those empires. 4 amazing human-tech systems were invented to start massive use by 1960 borlaug agriculture and related solutions every poorest village (2/3people still had no access to electricity) could action learn person to person- deming engineering whose goal was zero defects by helping workers humanize machines- this could even allowed thousands of small suppliers to be best at one part in machines assembled from all those parts) – although americans invented these solution asia most needed them and joyfully became world class at them- up to 2 billion people were helped to end poverty through sharing this knowhow- unlike consuming up things actionable knowhow multiplies value in use when it links through every community that needs it the other two technologies space and media and satellite telecoms, and digital analytic power looked promising- by 1965 alumni of moore promised to multiply 100 fold efficiency of these core tech each decade to 2030- that would be a trillion tmes moore than was needed to land on the moon in 1960s. you might think this tech could improve race to end poverty- and initially it did but by 1990 it was designed around the long term goal of making 10 men richer than 40% poorest- these men also got involved in complex vested interests so that the vast majority of politicians in brussels and dc backed the big get bigger - often they used fake media to hide what they were doing to climate and other stuff that a world trebling in population size d\ - we the 3 generations children parents grandparents have until 2030 to design new system orbits gravitated around goal 1 and navigating the un's other 17 goals do you want to help/ 8 cities we spend most time helping students exchange sustainability solutions 2018-2019 BR0 Beijing Hangzhou: 

Girls world maps begin at B01 good news reporting with fazleabed.com  valuetrue.com and womenuni.com

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online library of norman macrae--

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MA1 AliBaba TaoBao

Ma 2 Ali Financial

Ma10.1 DT and ODPS

  • 1972's Next 40 Years ;
  • 1976's Coming Entrepreneurial Revolution; 12 week leaders debate
  • 1982's We're All Intrapreneurial Now
  • What will human race produce in 20th C Q4? - Jan 1975
  • (1984 book on net generation 3 billion job creation) ...
  • 1991 Survey looking forward to The End of Politicians
  • 1975 Asian Pacific Century 1975-2075
  • 1977 survey China
  • first of 4 hemisphere remembrance parties- The Economist Boardroom

health catalogue; energy catalogue

Keynes: 2025now - jobs Creating Gen

.

how poorest women in world build

A01 BRAC health system,

A02 BRAC education system,

A03 BRAC banking system

K01 Twin Health System - Haiti& Boston

Past events EconomistDiary.com

include 15th annual spring collaboration cafe new york - 2022 was withsister city hong kong designers of metaverse for beeings.app

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