Economic growth is good for your health
The more our economy grows, the greater our ability to invest in life-improving treatments and procedures
The more our economy grows, the greater our ability to invest in life-improving treatments and procedures
Discrimination is actually less pervasive in more competitive industries
We have a major opportunity to reframe the roles and responsibilities of corporate stewardship
While MacKenzie Scott can be applauded for her philanthropy, her fuzzy criticisms of the system which created her wealth are naive
Why are we biting the hand that saved us?
Governments inevitably make a mess of social welfare programs, wasting money, discouraging work and encouraging dependence
Governments boasted of having “Canadians backs” while failing to provide basic health services, rapid testing, comprehensive tracing, and the timely roll-out of vaccinations
Corporations have created a structure that’s unsustainable on political, economic, environmental and even spiritual levels
The value we add will be in the creative ways we use new tools to generate new ideas and outputs, and to solve old problems
COVID-19 has meant some shortages at grocery stores. But overall, the supply chains developed over decades fill our needs
Firms can hardly thrive without compensating employees well, maintaining good relations with suppliers and being environmentally friendly
We need to fundamentally change how capitalism works, in part by recognizing intangible assets like human and natural capital
Life in an air-conditioned bunker, drinking vodka sodas and binge-watching Netflix may not be enough to stimulate the privileged climate-change survivors