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Auteur Marva Khan |
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Titre : Fiscal space in polycrisis Type de document : document électronique Auteurs : Jorg Dobereiner, Auteur ; Marva Khan, Auteur ; Roselyn Davina Vusia, Auteur Editeur : Bonn [Germany] : Engagement Global Année de publication : jan-fév 2023 Collection : D+C development and cooperation num. 50 Importance : 43 p Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Fiscalité Tags : Fiscalité Migration Mouvement sociaux Résumé : Our era is one of unprecedented market failure. Global heating and the erosion of ecosystems result from buyers and sellers not bearing the costs that the external impacts of their self-serving transactions cost. The consequences are endangering our species’ future. Governments must thus regulate markets, invest in eco-friendly infrastructure and, where possible, repair damages. Some still believe that markets always deliver the best results, so government interventions must be limited to the bare minimum. This distorted worldview has been very powerful since the early 1980s. Back then, Britain’s Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was a protagonist of the paradigm shift towards the “small” state. Now the short tenure of Liz Truss in the same office may prove to be another turning point. In Thatcher’s tradition, Truss wanted to impress financial markets by cutting taxes. To provide essential services, she planned to increase sovereign debt. She hoped that policy would attract investors to Britain. Instead, the markets she wanted to please rejected her reckless approach. Note de contenu : -How Uganda welcomes refugees p.8-9
-Zimbabwe's collective trauma p.33-41En ligne : https://www.dandc.eu/sites/default/files/pdf_files/2017-11-dc.pdf Fiscal space in polycrisis [document électronique] / Jorg Dobereiner, Auteur ; Marva Khan, Auteur ; Roselyn Davina Vusia, Auteur . - Bonn (Germany) : Engagement Global, jan-fév 2023 . - 43 p. - (D+C development and cooperation; 50) .
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Fiscalité Tags : Fiscalité Migration Mouvement sociaux Résumé : Our era is one of unprecedented market failure. Global heating and the erosion of ecosystems result from buyers and sellers not bearing the costs that the external impacts of their self-serving transactions cost. The consequences are endangering our species’ future. Governments must thus regulate markets, invest in eco-friendly infrastructure and, where possible, repair damages. Some still believe that markets always deliver the best results, so government interventions must be limited to the bare minimum. This distorted worldview has been very powerful since the early 1980s. Back then, Britain’s Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was a protagonist of the paradigm shift towards the “small” state. Now the short tenure of Liz Truss in the same office may prove to be another turning point. In Thatcher’s tradition, Truss wanted to impress financial markets by cutting taxes. To provide essential services, she planned to increase sovereign debt. She hoped that policy would attract investors to Britain. Instead, the markets she wanted to please rejected her reckless approach. Note de contenu : -How Uganda welcomes refugees p.8-9
-Zimbabwe's collective trauma p.33-41En ligne : https://www.dandc.eu/sites/default/files/pdf_files/2017-11-dc.pdf Documents numériques
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