CN

C.W.M. Naastepad

86 records found

How do we judge the responsibility (or otherwise) of research and innovation?

Capital, Aristotle, and the neglected factor: freedom

Missing in the debate on the ‘responsibility’ of research, innovation, and business is an examination of a possible conflict between the quest for ‘responsibility’ and the normative economic principles or ‘micro-economic foundations’ that guide the world’s financial capital and t ...
Unless we direct technology, technology will increasingly direct us, with mass un(der)employment and a possible atrophying of the human soul (i.e. human thinking, feeling and will) as likely consequences. The root of such problems is a failure to understand capital fully, itself ...

Capital and capacities

Using capital to create economic space for capacities

Robots and us

Towards an economics of the ‘Good Life’

(Expected) adverse effects of the ‘ICT Revolution’ on work and opportunities for individuals to use and develop their capacities give a new impetus to the debate on the societal implications of technology and raise questions regarding the ‘responsibility’ of research and innovati ...
Higher real wages provide macroeconomic benefits in terms of increased demand if the economy is wage-led (as in most European economies) and of higher labour productivity growth and more rapid technological progress. Taking these benefits into account, we show that a wage-led eco ...
The Eurozone crisis has been wrongly interpreted as either a crisis of fiscal profligacy or of deteriorating unit-labor cost competitiveness (caused by rigid labor markets), or a combination of both. Based on these diagnoses, crisis countries have been treated with the bitter med ...
Er is hernieuwde aandacht voor de AIQ omdat deze in bijna alle OESO-landen een dalende trend vertoont. Er zijn verschillende macro-economische oorzaken voor de daling aan te wijzen, zoals robotisering, globalisering en arbeidsmarktderegulering. Gevolg is dat de vraag daalt, wat d ...
The dominant view, both on the mainstream right and on the left, holds that the Eurozone crisis is a crisis of labour-cost competitiveness—with trade imbalances (and hence foreign indebtedness) being driven by divergences in relative unit labour costs (RULCs) between surplus and ...