|
Do
you share the optimistic determination of investing in next generation interacted by friends of The Economist’s Unacknowledged Giant as well as the founding
fathers of the revolution of digital media’s ecology? There are 2 opposite economics and futures that can be spun by
capitalism??? RSVP chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk ER The French word Entrepreneur "between take" originates in cutting off heads of royalty *the one per cent of late 1700s" for monopolising peoples' productive assets- can you search more joyful ways of transferring assets for
youth to be productive? how do we deal with over-government crisis identified in The Economist since 1978...? Political and
"Official bureaucrats" now control use of GDP by so-called western democracy than ever that of old priests, kings
or communists -2010s is most exciting decade where social crisis of .gov will determine sustainability of all our children's
children Survey of broken-down governments in English-speaking world News The Economist. Saturday, 23 December 1978. Pages 45-48. Vol 269, issue 7060. The Economist. Saturday, 22 January 1972. 2011-2012: 40th and climactic year: dialogue started with networks of The Economist in 1972: how to prevent macroeconomists
collapsing global financial economy in 2012. The Economist. Saturday, 22 January 1972. KNOWLEDGE WEBS Retrospective: Silicon Valleys for All 1982; Netfuture 1984; Sunshades in October & Other Errors of North's Macroeconomists 1 2 Norman Macrae nearly 4000 leaders @ The Economist. By tradition only surveys were signed. 1962, Norman's
14th year of 40 at The Economist saw his first survey "Consider Japan" signed. Next year: he led a team to USSR:
survey forecast communism would die within a quarter of a century. Decade later 1972 survey" gave western economists
a maximum of 40 years to prevent meltdown of global financial system; whence his joyful surveys on Entrepreneurial Revolution mapped where leaders were redesigning the net generation's most productive futures - forecasting in 1975 the asian pacific
worldwide century and journalising the first book of the internet's economic and social business media significance in 1984.
rsvp chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk (tel wash dc 1 301 881 1655 ) if you have a specific reason for needing a copy of one of these surveys and I will list access
options known to me. Norman Macrae judged Female and Youth grassroots networks of Bangladesh as the winners
of The Economist's Entrepreneurial Revolution net generation competition 1976-2005. He spent his last 5 years preparing to
co-launch Journal Genre of New Economics starting up Yunus Partnership @ Journal of Social Business with Adam Smith Scholars
& Friends of Bangladesh's 40 year test marketing of microeconomics and global village networking. Norman’s rehearsals of how youth’s futures need to innovate cheerfully above
history’s compound conflicts were not much loved by UK Upper Classes with the odd exception (eg Prince Charles quipped
using Norman Macrae's scriptwriting at his first tour of Japan starting Wales partnership with Sony and other goodwill impacts),
but were warmly supported by 2 generations of the Imperial Family in Japan and the odd US president and John Von Neuman's
family. In John Von Neumann's biography commissioned by Sloan Foundation, Norman Macrae identified Johnny's paradigm shift
for designers of net generation economics; : Johnny grabbed other people's ideas, then by his clarity leapt five blocks
ahead of them. and helped put them into practical effect. We think this is the social action that smart people exist to mediate
- especially when you joyfully adopt Johnny's belief that computers will allow research teams to tackle one hundred times
as many projects 100 times more quickly. Before Johnny, the happiest examination of the purpose of media was the 1943 biography of the centenary of The Economist. from which all of Norman's diaries stem | 011 ad from Economist
The global economy – Another year of living dangerously Turmoil in the Middle East, Collapsing Euro and disaster in Japan arouse economic angst. Central banks must not make
it worse READ MORE >> Macroeconomic crises have a dismal way of recycling each quarter of a generation AND
getting larger as global disasters. Reviews at worldeconomist.net | ER's Ten green bottles Breakthrough erroneous
mindsets of macroeconomics before there is nothing left at all: #1 Entrepreneurs-and good news media owners - are not
political- they connect left right and centre dialogues Verify Top 2 pro-youth economists: Norman Macrae 1923-2010 & the most exciting microeconomist of our epoch & net generation : Muhammad Yunus born 1940 ... The Economist. Saturday, 25 December 1976. Pages 41-43. Vol 261, issue 6956. Italian 76 translator of Entrepreneurial Revolution Romano Prodi |  | ,,,,,, | | Postcards
from Entrepreneurial Paris 2011 a world record? of 650,000 start ups last year was
announced March 2011 at Embassy of France in DC - the French rediscovery of the love of their original idea "entrepreneur" would
love to see danone communities launch an english language version at same time usa co-producer SfH french embassy 24 hubs of MIT and obama startups and mcs and G.Am PDF] File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View Jan 31, 2011 DC: Embassy of France... Dinner. Welcome by François
Delattre, Ambassador of France... Moderated by Ira Gershkoff, MITEF Chapter Vice Chair ...
President Barack Obama's Startup America Initiative ... www.france-science.org/IMG/.../Program_MIT_Enterprise_Forum_2011.pdf
| . Better care at one eighth the cost? Cover Below The Economist. Saturday, 28 April 1984. Pages 23,24. Vol 291, issue 7339.  News from the Yunus Partners in End Nurseless Villages pioneered
by Nike Girl Effect , Glasgow Caledonian and village girls march 2011 princess
anne caps first class of Grameen Girl nurses April Glasgow team lead celebrations starting World
Heathcare Congress - xtremely affordable teams | | help find 100 most entrepreneurial revolutionary articles or nation's future economics scripts
The Economist's Unacknowledged Giant Norman Macrae ever wrote
- 00 1972 the next 40 years - map of why global financial system would go into meltdown in 2010s if specific errors of macroeconomics not resolved in
interim
- 0 1984 the internet generation can be 10 times more productive : their most exciting decade 2010s depends on doubling knowledge around ending poverty first
- 1 2008 consider bangladesh
- 2 1962 consider japan
- 3 1975 consider asian pacific www century ->4
1975 americas 3rd century - Time review
- 5 1976 entrepreneurial revolution
- 6 1982 intrapreneurial now
- 7 1984 healthcare is compounding bust futures everywhere
| 250 years yunus to adam smith  trilliondollaraudit.com |
|  | According to General Theory of Keynes: increasingly only economics
rules the world; Thus 2 opposite system-round choices : dismal macroeconomics of old wall street, or youth's joyous microeconomics& sustainability exponentials
rising | Norman Macrae's main books include: 1955 London
Capital Market 1963 Sunshades in October 1984 with Chris Macrae The 2024 Report - aFuture
History of The Net Generation to 2024 republished over next 2 years in many languages as 2025 Report or 2026 Report with
a 1993 update in Swedish : Den Nye Vikingen - Sweden's Future 1995-2015 1992 John Von Neumann = Biography
plus Scenario chapters of Hackett's 3rd world war series aimed at military wanting to downsize themselves so that peacse
dividend is invested in net generation's borderless world |
| | | | | Institute of Economic Affairs Advert first 4 Hobarts including #2 "To Let" by Norman Macrae The Economist. Saturday, 4 June 1960. Page 34. Vol 195, issue 6093. | | | | Radical Reaction : Advert to book compiling several
early Hobarts The Economist. Saturday, 14 October 1961. Page 34. Vol 201, issue 6164. | | | | Consider Japan Part 1 - Survey by Norman Macrae The
Most Exciting Example News The Economist. Saturday, 1 September 1962. Pages 53,54. Vol 204, issue 6210. Consider Japan Part 2 Lessons for Developers? The Economist. Saturday, 8 September 1962. Pages 57-61. Vol 204, issue 6211. | | Changing Russia - Survey led by Norman Macrae The Mustard Seed
The Economist. Saturday, 1 June 1963. Pages 16,17. Vol 207, issue 6249. | | Ad of Norman Macrae's Book Sunshades in October (no free reviews alowed of books by
E-journaists) The Economist. Saturday, 16 November 1963. Page 57. Vol 209, issue 6273. | | Allen & Unwin Autumn catalogue includes Macrae's Sunshades in October
and Manmohan Singh's "Demand Theory and Economic Calculation in a Mixed Economy" The Economist. Saturday, 30 November 1963. Page 57. Vol 209, issue 6275. | | Brief From trip to Latin America, Norman Macrae reports economic policies
being pursued by the rich countries and institutes of North America and Europe are going most tragically wrong The Economist. Saturday, 25 September 1965. Page 3. Vol 216, issue 6370. | | No Christ on The Andes - What's Gone Wrong? The Economist. Saturday, 25 September 1965. Pages s9-s11. Vol 216, issue 6370. | | The German Lesson A survey by Norman Macrae The Economist. Saturday, 15 October 1966. Page s3. Vol 221, issue 6425. | | | | German Lessons Letters
to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 29 October 1966. Page 4. Vol 221, issue 6427. | | The Economist Contents The Economist. Saturday, 27 May 1967. Page 3. Vol 223, issue 6457. | | The Risen Sun Norman Macrae's Second Survey on Japan The Economist. Saturday, 27 May 1967. Page s9. Vol 223, issue 6457. | | The Risen Sun - II (The Import Balancing Trick) The Economist. Saturday, 3 June 1967. Page s7. Vol 223, issue 6458. | | The Economist Contents The Economist. Saturday, 3 June 1967. Page 3. Vol 223, issue 6458. | Cover The Economist. Saturday, 3 June 1967. Page s1. Vol 223, issue 6458. | | Institute of Economic Affairs () Ad The Economist. Saturday, 17 June 1967. Page 58. Vol 223, issue 6460. | | | | Old France in a Hurry (Billions from Somewhere) The Economist. Saturday, 18 May 1968. Pages s11,s12. Vol 227, issue 6508. | | The Green Bay Tree - Survey of South Africa The Economist. Saturday, 29 June 1968. Page s9. Vol 227, issue 6514. | | Envoi (Why isn't there a bloody black revolution? And will there be one?) The Economist. Saturday, 29 June 1968. Pages s45,s46. Vol 227, issue 6514. | | South Africa Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 6 July 1968. Page 4. Vol 228, issue 6515. | | South Africa Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 27 July 1968. Page 4. Vol 228, issue 6518. | | The Economist Contents The Economist. Saturday, 10 May 1969. Page 3. Vol 231, issue 6559. | | The Neurotic Trillionaire (The Mormons Oust The Pugilists) A Survey of
Mr Nixon's America The Economist. Saturday, 10 May 1969. Pages s11,s12. Vol 231, issue 6559. | | America Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 17 May 1969. Page 4. Vol 231, issue 6560. | | The Economist Contents The Economist. Saturday, 9 May 1970. Page 3. Vol 235, issue 6611. | | The Phoenix is Short-Sighted A survey
of Western Europe - to be the next superpower or to make America's mistakes on a grander scale? The Economist. Saturday, 16 May 1970. Page s9. Vol 235, issue 6612. | | The New Europe Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 23 May 1970. Page 4. Vol 235, issue 6613. | | The New Europe Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 6 June 1970. Page 4. Vol 235, issue 6615. | | Education & Courses Ad The Economist. Saturday, 20 February 1971. Page 81. Vol 238, issue 6652. | | | | From enemy she became lover The Economist provides a special issue on UK & Europe The Economist. Saturday, 1 January 1972. Pages s9,s10. Vol 242, issue 6697. | | Britain's industrial backyard News The Economist. Saturday, 1 January 1972. Pages s17-s21. Vol 242, issue 6697. | | A revealing yesterday Business and Finance - A survey "The Next
Forty Years"of Multinational Business in which Norman Macrae first argues for blending the roles of exponential economics
and future historian. Checklist: macroeconomic short-term fixes prompted by world wars needing urgent addressed if world's
financial system is not to collapse in 2010s The Economist. Saturday, 22 January 1972. Pages s5-s8. Vol 242, issue 6700. | | The Economist Contents The Economist. Saturday, 22 January 1972. Page 3. Vol 242, issue 6700. | | Multinational business Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 29 January 1972. Page 6. Vol 242, issue 6701. | | Multinational business Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 5 February 1972. Page 8. Vol 242, issue 6702. | | Ecology Letters to Editor - a letter on future history of Arab-Islamic
civilisation by Ambassador of Jordan The Economist. Saturday, 12 February 1972. Page 4. Vol 242, issue 6703. | | The next 40 years Because of widespread interest, the survey Ad
The Economist. Saturday, 8 April 1972. Page 20. Vol 243, issue 6711. | | | | | |
| | | |
| | No one quite like them Brian Beedham Survey of Japan The Economist. Saturday, 31 March 1973. Pages s7,s8. Vol 246, issue 6762. | | The people we have become Survey of UK The Economist. Saturday, 28 April 1973. Pages s3-s8. Vol 247, issue 6766. | Contents The Economist. Saturday, 28 April 1973. Page 3. Vol 247, issue 6766. | | The people we have become Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 12 May 1973. Pages 4,6. Vol 247, issue 6768. | | The Watergate Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 7 July 1973. Page 4. Vol 248, issue 6776. | | Tyrannosaurus Rex News The Economist. Saturday, 1 December 1973. Pages s35,s36. Vol 249, issue 6797. | | | | The socialist revolutionaries are at take-off point Survey of Algeria turday, 13 April 1974. Pages 41-45. Vol 251, issue 6816. | | | | | | After 10 years (The Economist changed editors earlier this month. The departing one,
Alastair Burnet, gives his impressions of the paper and what it has been trying to do in his years) Editorial
Leaders The Economist. Saturday, 26 October 1974. Pages 15,16. Vol 253, issue 6844. | Asia Pacific Century The Economist. Saturday, 4 January 1975. Page 3. Vol 254, issue 6854. | | The embarrassed heir The Economist. Saturday, 4 January 1975. Pages 15-18. Vol 254, issue 6854. | | A garden is lovesome The Economist. Saturday, 4 January 1975. Pages 22-28. Vol 254, issue 6854. | | Japan Letters to Ed The Economist. Saturday, 18 January 1975. Page 6. Vol 254, issue 6856. | | Pacific century Letters to Ed The Economist. Saturday, 1 February 1975. Page 6. Vol 254, issue 6858. | | Pacific century Letters to Ed The Economist. Saturday, 5 April 1975. Page 6. Vol 255, issue 6867. | | Survey of America's Third Century The Economist. Saturday, 25 October 1975. Page 3. Vol 257, issue 6896. | | Recessional for the second great empire? News The Economist. Saturday, 25 October 1975. Pages s3,s4. Vol 257, issue 6896. | | Classified Ad The Economist. Saturday, 25 October 1975. Page s42. Vol 257, issue 6896. | | America's third century Letters to Ed The Economist. Saturday, 8 November 1975. Page 4. Vol 257, issue 6898. | | America's third century Letters to Ed The Economist. Saturday, 15 November 1975. Page 10. Vol 257, issue 6899. | | America's third century Letters to Ed The Economist. Saturday, 13 December 1975. Page 10. Vol 257, issue 6903. | | Survey of The Coming Entrepreneurial Revolution (ER) The Economist. Saturday, 25 December 1976. Page 3. Vol 261, issue 6956. | | Ten green bottles News The Economist. Saturday, 25 December 1976. Pages 41-43. Vol 261, issue 6956. | | Towards the industrial archipelago News The Economist. Saturday, 8 January 1977. Pages 31,32. Vol 262, issue 6958. | | Bottom-up is best News The Economist. Saturday, 8 January 1977. Page 35. Vol 262, issue 6958. | | Granulated Capitalism - a survey responding to ER The Economist. Saturday, 8 January 1977. Page 3. Vol 262, issue 6958. | | The coming entrepreneurial revolution Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 22 January 1977. Pages 4,6. Vol 262, issue 6960. | | Tomorrow's capitalism Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 5 February 1977. Page 4. Vol 262, issue 6962. | | Big can be beautiful A response to ER by 2 managers of General Electric
Company The Economist. Saturday, 5 March 1977. Pages 45,46. Vol 262, issue 6966. | | Son of Buggins News The Economist. Saturday, 5 March 1977. Page 34. Vol 262, issue 6966. | | Quiet flows the chart News The Economist. Saturday, 5 March 1977. Pages 33,34. Vol 262, issue 6966. | | Variety, mobility News The Economist. Saturday, 5 March 1977. Pages 38,45. Vol 262, issue 6966. | | Oakeshott's archipelagos News The Economist. Saturday, 5 March 1977. Pages 34-38. Vol 262, issue 6966. | | Even more entrepreneurial Norman Macrae replies to nearly 3 months of
correspondence on Entrepreneurial Revolution The Economist. Saturday, 12 March 1977. Pages 33-38. Vol 262, issue 6967. | | Contents The Economist. Saturday, 12 March 1977. Page 3. Vol 262, issue 6967. | | Britain and Europe
Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 26 March 1977. Page 4. Vol 262, issue 6969. | | Contents The Economist. Saturday, 7 May 1977. Page 3. Vol 263, issue 6975. | | Tomorrow's workshop - 2 billion people - novel suggestions
for East Asia News The Economist. Saturday, 7 May 1977. Pages s7-s11. Vol 263, issue 6975. | | Asia Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 4 June 1977. Page 7. Vol 263, issue 6979. | | A miracle has been postponed Survey China The Economist. Saturday, 31 December 1977. Pages 13-15. Vol 266, issue 7009. | | On a wing, a prayer and a string News The Economist. Saturday, 31 December 1977. Page 24. Vol 266, issue 7009. | | Will we no' go back again? News The Economist. Saturday, 31 December 1977. Pages 33,34. Vol 266, issue 7009. | | The sleeping giant News The Economist. Saturday, 31 December 1977. Pages 19-22. Vol 266, issue 7009. | | The rules return News The Economist. Saturday, 31 December 1977. Pages 39-41. Vol 266, issue 7009. | | China Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 21 January 1978. Page 6. Vol 266, issue 7012. | | Towards a Keynesian Friedmanism News The Economist. Saturday, 17 June 1978. Pages 37-41. Vol 267, issue 7033. | | Spine-chillers Reviews The Economist. Saturday, 22 July 1978. Pages 108,109. Vol 268, issue 7038. | | Coping stones (Walter Bagehot) Reviews The Economist. Saturday, 28 October 1978. Page 125. Vol 269, issue 7052. | | Survey of broken-down governments in English-speaking world News The Economist. Saturday, 23 December 1978. Pages 45-48. Vol 269, issue 7060. | | Contents The Economist. Saturday, 23 December 1978. Page 3. Vol 269, issue 7060. | | Too much government Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 27 January 1979. Pages 4,6. Vol 270, issue 7065. | | Elephants can't be pink Survey Brazil The Economist. Saturday, 4 August 1979. Pages s3,s4. Vol 272, issue 7092. | | The post-Confucian challenge News The Economist. Saturday, 9 February 1980. Pages 67,68. Vol 274, issue 7119. | | The decade for the third shock? Survey Japan The Economist. Saturday, 23 February 1980. Pages s3,s4. Vol 274, issue 7121. | | Japan Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 15 March 1980. Page 6. Vol 274, issue 7124. | | Japan Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 12 April 1980. Pages 4,5. Vol 275, issue 7128. | | | | Survey America The Economist. Saturday, 27 December 1980. Page 3. Vol 277, issue 7165. | | Marching past Georgia News The Economist. Saturday, 27 December 1980. Pages 13,14. Vol 277, issue 7165. | | Reagan's inheritance Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 17 January 1981. Page 4. Vol 278, issue 7168. | | The Economist Conference Unit Display Advertising The Economist. Saturday, 31 January 1981. Page 55. Vol 278, issue 7170. | | The Economist Conference Unit Display Advertising The Economist. Saturday, 7 February 1981. Page 49. Vol 278, issue 7171. | | Co-prosperity, please Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 9 May 1981. Page 4. Vol 279, issue 7184. | | Barbara Ward News The Economist. Saturday, 6 June 1981. Page 22. Vol 279, issue 7188. | | | | Display Advertising The Economist. Saturday, 19 December 1981. Page 9. Vol 281, issue 7216. | | Children's choice Arts and Entertainment The Economist. Saturday, 26 December 1981. Pages 105-108. Vol 281, issue 7217. | | Display Advertising The Economist. Saturday, 9 January 1982. Page 25. Vol 282, issue 7219. | | Big goes bust News The Economist. Saturday, 17 April 1982. Pages 47,48. Vol 283, issue 7233. | | Contents The Economist. Saturday, 17 April 1982. Page 5. Vol 283, issue 7233. | | Wispy-misty bubbles Reviews The Economist. Saturday, 25 December 1982. Pages 101-104. Vol 285, issue 7269. | | A spectre is stalking Hungary News The Economist. Saturday, 19 March 1983. Pages 23-29. Vol 286, issue 7281. | | Contents The Economist. Saturday, 19 March 1983. Page 3. Vol 286, issue 7281. | | The secret is to think big and act small Business and Finance
The Economist. Saturday, 24 December 1983. Page 71. Vol 289, issue 7321. | | Richard's realm Reviews The Economist. Saturday, 31 March 1984. Page 93. Vol 290, issue 7335. | | Better care at one eighth the cost? News The Economist. Saturday, 28 April 1984. Pages 23,24. Vol 291, issue 7339. | | Contents The Economist. Saturday, 28 April 1984. Page 3. Vol 291, issue 7339. | | Health care Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 12 May 1984. Page 6. Vol 291, issue 7341. | | Health care Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 23 June 1984. Page 6. Vol 291, issue 7347. | | Pigs have wings (Anti-gravity) Science and Technology The Economist. Saturday, 22 September 1984. Pages 92,94. Vol 292, issue 7360. | | Contents The Economist. Saturday, 29 September 1984. Page 3. Vol 292, issue 7361. | | | | A time to learn and a time to play Reviews The Economist. Saturday, 1 December 1984. Pages 99-104. Vol 293, issue 7370. | | Our Unlikely Pioneer Reviews The Economist. Saturday, 9 February 1985. Pages 77,78. Vol 294, issue 7380. | | Contents The Economist. Saturday, 16 February 1985. Page 3. Vol 294, issue 7381. | | Twenty-five suggestions Editorial Leaders The Economist. Saturday, 16 February 1985. Pages 19,20. Vol 294, issue 7381. | | Corporate
America invents the in-house entrepreneur Business and Finance The Economist. Saturday, 23 February 1985. Pages 67,68. Vol 294, issue 7382. | | The Display Advertising The Economist. Saturday, 20 July 1985. Page 10. Vol 296, issue 7403. | | Display Advertising The Economist. Saturday, 3 August 1985. Page s3. Vol 296, issue 7405. | | Conference Unit Display Advertising The Economist. Saturday, 17 August 1985. Page 24. Vol 296, issue 7407. | An extraordinary time at the horses News The Economist. Saturday, 21 December 1985. Pages s1-s3. Vol 297, issue 7425. | | Horseracing Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 25 January 1986. Page 8. Vol 298, issue 7430. | | The most important choice so few can make News The Economist. Saturday, 20 September 1986. Pages 23,24. Vol 300, issue 7464. | | Secondary education Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 11 October 1986. Pages 6,8. Vol 301, issue 7467. | | Education Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 18 October 1986. Page 6. Vol 301, issue 7468. | | Green cape, brown cape Letters to
Editor The Economist. Saturday, 18 April 1987. Page 4. Vol 303, issue 7494. | | Business & Personal Classified Advertising The Economist. Saturday, 23 April 1988. Page 146. Vol 307, issue 7547. | | Birthday honour News The Economist. Saturday, 30 April 1988. Page 62. Vol 307, issue 7548. | | The Economist Contents The Economist. Saturday, 30 April 1988. Page 5. Vol 307, issue 7548. | | Business & Personal Classified Advertising The Economist. Saturday, 30 April 1988. Page 129. Vol 307, issue 7548. | | Business
& Personal The Economist. Saturday, 7 May 1988. Page 133. Vol 307, issue 7549. | | Business & Personal The Economist. Saturday, 14 May 1988. Page 141. Vol 307, issue 7550. | | Old men don't regret News The Economist. Saturday, 24 December 1988. Pages s18-s20. Vol 309, issue 7582. | | The Economist Contents The Economist. Saturday, 24 December 1988. Page 5. Vol 309, issue 7582. | | Arrived, but haven't noticed News The Economist. Saturday, 24 December 1988. Pages s5-s7. Vol 309, issue 7582. | | Executive Focus The Economist. Saturday, 21 January 1989. Page 9. Vol 310, issue 7586. | | | | Mrs Thatcher's place in history News The Economist. Saturday, 29 April 1989. Pages 28,29. Vol 311, issue 7600. | | The Sunday Times The Economist. Saturday, 8 July 1989. Page 27. Vol 312, issue 7610. | | Brief lives revisited Reviews The Economist. Saturday, 21 April 1990. Page 141. Vol 315, issue 7651. | | Sweaty brows,
slippery fingers News The Economist. Saturday, 8 September 1990. Pages 21-28. Vol 316, issue 7671. | | Slowly does it Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 13 October 1990. Page 8. Vol 317, issue 7676. | | With all her faults, she is my country still News The Economist. Saturday, 22 December 1990. Pages 73-78. Vol 317, issue 7686. | | Red in tooth and claw (Comparative advertising) Business and Finance The Economist. Saturday, 18 May 1991. Pages 93,96. Vol 319, issue 7707. | | A future history of privatisation, 1992-2022 News The Economist. Saturday, 21 December 1991. Pages 17-20. Vol 321, issue 7738. | | Conferences The Economist. Saturday, 28 March 1992. Page 144. Vol 322, issue 7752. | | Cato Institute The Economist. Saturday, 4 April 1992. Page 97. Vol 323, issue 7753. | | Best of them all? (Mathematicians) Reviews The Economist. Saturday, 19 December 1992. Page 93. Vol 325, issue 7790. | | Small is consistent Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 8 May 1993. Page 8. Vol 327, issue 7810. | | Some moral dilemmas, 1993-2143 News The Economist. Saturday, 11 September 1993. Pages s101-s103. Vol 328, issue 7828. | | The
future surveyed News The Economist. Saturday, 11 September 1993. Page s3. Vol 328, issue 7828. | | World Politics and Current Affairs Contents The Economist. Saturday, 11 September 1993. Page s3. Vol 328, issue 7828. | | Norman's conquests Letters to Editor The Economist. Saturday, 9 October 1993. Pages 8,10. Vol 329, issue 7832. | | | | Death of the brand manager Business and Finance The Economist. Saturday, 9 April 1994. Pages 79,80. Vol 331, issue 7858. | | | | | | Plenty of gloom News The Economist. Saturday, 20 December 1997. Pages 21-23. Vol 345, issue 8048. | | A hero of our time Reviews The Economist. Saturday, 29 May 1999. Pages 123,124. Vol 351, issue 8121. | |
0.1 Has a continental or worldwide search solutions on job creation
that can be replicated across communities been organised before this EU launch of Nov 2011?While alumni of entrepreneurial economics have always valued job creation searches- we
know of no clear evidence that this has been top of mind in the way that continental-wide government has operated since
1984 even though it was scripted by The Economist's Unacknowledged Giant as the number 1 question the first net generation
would need to mediate if sustainable futures and humanity's most needed millennium goals are to be served what's different about nov 2011 is 4 top directorates of the EU have nailed their future reputation to
this search -more
Posted on: November 23, 2011 Microfinance Focus, November 4, 2011: Professor Muhammad Yunus was invited to deliver
a key note speech during the G20 Young Entrepreneurs Summit held in Nice, France. Professor Yunus addressed an audience of
more than 400 entrepreneurs from all G20 countries. In his speech, he shared his personal entrepreneurship experiences, his
faith in young entrepreneurs to be the pillars of society and the need to include poor countries in the discussion process
in making global decisions. Professor Yunus being an entrepreneur himself started off creating the Grameen Bank that
provides microfinance services to the poor who had little access to financial provisions. From that, he ventured into a wide
number of social businesses such as Grameen Nursing College, Grameen Eyecare Hospitals, Grameen Shakti, etc. He has
always considered young entrepreneurs to be the most effective solution for the future. He said “In my opinion, G20
YES is a fabulous initiative, gathering so much energy and momentum from all over the world. Because of their creativity and
leadership, provided that they commit to share the value they create, these 400 young entrepreneurs in this room can change
the world.” Professor Yunus is also a member of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) Advocacy Group, advising
the Secretary General of the United Nations. Hence, he believes that the next generation of youths should be handed over the
process of the MDGs as soon as possible. He believes that entrepreneurs will have a key role to play in fulfilling the MDGs,
if they are committed to the social value created by their companies, and social business can be part of the solutions. In
his speech, he added that the G20 needed to broaden its scope to deal with the current world crisis. It can no longer remain
a political forum with economic agendas. The G20 needs to create a social agenda as well. Professor Yunus proposes that ‘social
business’ should be brought to the agenda of G20, as one of the concrete and effective solutions to be considered for
immediate implementation so as to guide capitalistic investment towards social value and jobs creation, rather than sheer
profit maximization strategies. A social business is a cause-driven business where profits stay within the company for its
sustainability. Lastly, Professor Yunus concluded that the G20 should be expanded into the G25, where poor countries
from each continent should be included in the global agenda which they are part of. He added that “Their problems are
inter-related with others, and their proposals of solutions should be considered by the most economically advanced countries
in making global decisions. A G25 would be a big step toward ensuring that global social issues are raised, and MDGs implementation
is fully shared on the global agenda. And finally, because fighting poverty together is the only way to bring long lasting
peace in this world.” Source: http://www.microfinancefocus.com/muhammad-yunus-expresses-faith-entrepreneurs-g20-summit inquiries chris macrae info @worldcitizen.tv us tel 301 881 1655 ; us office 5801 nicholson lane
suite 404, North Bethesda, MD 20852 USA - skype chrismacraedc
Mapping is a process of discovery. Crucially maps are only as usable as updating correctness of bottom
up information. Think of your own use of a map. You look for the "you are here arrow". You want to be directed to
somewhere/someone you dont know how to get to; you want your return vist to be safe as well as a value multiplying win-win.
Does anyone remember the simplest findings of einstein and jon von neumann. Einstein proved
that to innovate more value you need to go more micro in what you model; von neumann showed that there is more value to be
networked by interfacing safe flows across systems instead of ruling over separation of boundaries. There isnt a single
global metrics profession that gets these mathematical -and natural - principles right. Unless we change this global
markets will cycle through ever greater collapse and more and more communities will lose sustainability. Mapmaking is that
critical an idea to what the net genration will achieve in 2010s; but its also one that children from primary age up can action
learn. Its simple. Its just that it works the other way round from top-down people's fatal conceit.
It explores how to make the invisible principles and practices of real wealth creation
visible, and therefore useable. Our planet needs case studies underline the search for new win-wins that build ‘system
integrity’ Trust-flow is the unseen wealth to invest sustainability in. Tranpsarently mapped it develops
a goodwill gravity tyhat invites with roleplayer in a community to multiply goodwill while sustaining their own cashflow..
Trust is not some vague, mushy, abstract warm-hearted sentiment. It is an economic powerhouse – probably just as economically
and socially important as oil. The point is, there are specific things you need to do to get trust flowing, just as
there are specific things you need to do to get oil flowing. And like oil trust has a dark side. Right now, the world is awash
with the carbon emissions which threaten the stability and sustainability of its ecosystems. Right now, the world is also
awash with the ‘carbon emission’ of trust – mistrust. Indeed it may well be that our ability to tackle the
one issue – the threat of environmental catastrophe – depends on our ability to tackle the other issue: how to
generate, deepen, extend and sustain trust.>br>But what is the best way of doing this? One thing is for sure. You don’t
build and sustain trust via some sentimental exercise of goodwill to all and sundry. There are three very simple principles
at the heart of effective trust generation. First, trust is generated via win-win relationships. It’s virtually
impossible to generate or sustain trust without mutual benefit for those involved. But beneficial outcomes are not enough
in themselves. For trust to be built and sustained, both sides need to signal a demonstrable commitment to finding win-win
ways forward. Such a commitment may require real changes to what we say and do. Second, real ‘win-wins’
are hardly ever purely financial or material. You don’t build trust simply by walking away with more cash in your pocket.
Trust works at all the dimensions and levels of human exchange. Yes, it’s about financial and material rewards. But
it’s also about purpose (what people want to achieve). It’s about politics with a small ‘p’: the use
and abuse of power, the crafting and application of rules of fair play. And it’s about emotions: the sometimes overwhelmingly
strong emotions, both positive and negative, that are generated when people deal with other peopleWhat’s constitutes
a ‘win’ – a sense of real improvement – is therefore highly specific. It depends absolutely on the
details of who the parties are, what they are trying to achieve, in what context. Building trus, therefore involves discovering
these specifics. Just as oil doesn’t flow out of the ground, get refined and pump its way into motor vehicles automatically
and without effort, so identifying and doing what is necessary to get trust flowing requires dedicated, skilled effort. It
requires a disciplined, structured process, not a vague sentiment.
3) Third, even if we do steps 1) and 2) there’s
still a good chance it won’t succeed. Why? Because it ignores an invisible third factor. In the real world, purely two
way bilateral relationships don’t exist. There is always a third party whose interests or outcomes are affected by what
the other two parties do but who is not a party to the contract. The environment is a case in point. Producers and consumers
may both benefit from buying and selling to each other – but what happens if, in doing so, they destroy the environment
they both depend on?
This raises a hugely important question. When two parties pursue win-wins and build mutual
trust, are they doing so in a way which creates a win and builds trust for the third party at the same time? Or are they simply
pushing the problems – and the mistrust – further down the line on to this third party? Building vigorous, healthy
networks of trust is a different kettle of fish to ‘you scratch my back and I’ll scratch yours’
win-win conspiracies. It requires a Map of all the key relationships plus careful consideration of knock-on consequences.
It requires a different perspective.
These three simple, basic steps do not happen automatically. They need to
be worked at. The territory needs to be deliberately Mapped and explored. What’s more, there are obstacles in our way
– mental and practical obstacles that need to be cleared. Prevailing economic theories about ‘rational economic
man’ for example, deny the need to commit to win-win outcomes. Instead, they promote supposedly ‘rational’
(i.e. narrowly selfish behaviours) which actively undermine trust The same theories insist that the only valid measure of
human benefit is money, thereby excluding from consideration many of the biggest opportunities for improvement. Meanwhile
many vested interests do not want to extend the circle of trust to third parties and complete networks because their positions
of power depend on their ability to take advantage of the weaknesses of these third parties. That’s another job for
Mapping: helping to identify and mount such obstacles. The potential benefits of doing so are unthinkably huge. They
start with a simple negative: the relief that comes from when you stop banging your head against a brick wall. Mistrust breeds
wasteful, wealth destroying conflict that tends to feed on itself. Anger and hatred engender anger and hatred. Simply easing
or stopping the terrible waste of mistrust would transform prospects for many millions of people. We desperately need to find
ways of doing this. Then there are the positive benefits. Understanding the real nature of human wealth – all those
dimensions of purpose, ‘politics’ and emotion as well as money and material comfort – means we can start
being human again; human in the way we think, and act. What’s more, many of these intangible benefits won’t cost
a penny. They’re there for the taking, if only we puts our minds to it. But there’s more, because trust is
also an economic superpower in its own right. In the pages that follow we will show conclusively that material and financial
riches are also dependent on trust. In fact, we will argue the case for going one step further. We will say that material
and financial riches are a by-product of trust: the visible fruits of invisible, intangible human exchange. Once you understand
that sustainable cash flows are a by-product of sustainable trust flows, your understanding of what makes a successful business
is transformed. Separately, each of these three fruits – reducing the waste of conflict, unleashing the potential
intrinsic benefits of human exchange, and energising the sustainable creation of material wealth – are massive in their
own right. Put them together and they represent a vast new continent of opportunity. As we said, this book is addressed
to entrepreneurs and system innovation revolutionaries. Wherever you happen to be, whatever the change you want to make
is, the principles explored in this book apply. The wish to change and the will to change are not the same as being able to
change successfully. For that you need to understand your territory. You will need new Maps . 
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