Oct
23
2008

Very Funny vid from Eddie Izzard

Posted by: angol in Categories: Elink Video, Funny.

Thanks To Chris Blattman for the pointer here:

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Oct
23
2008

In the Philippines we have a chorus of companies extolling the assertion that because one call center agent position in the states pays for 5 here the downturn only means more jobs. I don’t think so. The real economy is down, and when that happens some companies do dumb things, those dumb things that companies do, they mean lost jobs for countries like the Philippines.

Wal Mart has always had a pay-check related shopping spike – with a substantial number of customers living (as I did when a student) from pay stubb to pay stubb.

But for the first time they are having pay-check driven spikes in the sales of baby formula suggesting the economic pressure is more widespread.

It is about the real economy now.

Bronte Capital: It’s about the real economy now.

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Oct
23
2008

wow this is like big, wow speechless
wow! if this works I don’t know peace nobel for the whole politburo?

from marginal revolutions blog:

China policy proposal of the day

Shouldn’t this story be on p.1 of every newspaper?

Now China’s government has unveiled a controversial plan to achieve universal care that would both increase health-care funding and control prices.

As this morning’s WSJ explains, the proposed plan would be quite a shift for China. The draft plan’s overall goal is to cover 90% of the population within two years and achieve universal care by 2020. It aims to return to non-profit national health care, an idea that was largely abandoned in the country 1980s.

This all stands in contrast to China’s current system, which provides little government funding to government hospitals and requires patients to pay heavy out-of-pocket expenses. The WSJ notes that out-of-pocket payments made up more than 60% of health spending in China at the end of the 1990s.

The plan — drafted in consultation with groups including the World Health Organization, the World Bank, consultant McKinsey & Co. and a few Chinese university-based public health experts — requires all revenue raised by public hospitals to be funneled to the state. The government also aims to set pricing standards for medical services.

Marginal Revolution: China policy proposal of the day.

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