@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

ChrisMayLA6

@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us

Retired Professor of Political Economy
(Lancaster University, UK - retired 2021)
(also #ProfDJ across the Lune Valley)
Contributor: North West Bylines #NoBridge

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ChrisMayLA6, to Economics
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

Q. how much economic advantage does UK get by speaking english.

Other countries gain economic developmental advantage from the range of people with english proficiency.

So turning that around: does the UK's 'natural' speaking of English mask or reduce (some) economic deficiencies that would otherwise be problems?.

Thought experiment: if the UK did no speak the globe's second language what would be the implication for its economic development?


https://www.cambridgeenglish.org/Images/539681-perspectives-english-for-development.pdf

ChrisMayLA6, to fediverse
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

I see is saying that if X (formally Twitter) goes to the wall, it will be the 'advertisers [that] bankrupted the company'... once again he seems unable to see that is a symptom not the cause of X's problems; which of course lies with him.

I guess we'll be seeing another flow of folk into the if the advertisers 'strike' continues (s many think it will).

Its an extraordinary example of billionaire hubris!

ChrisMayLA6, to Hydrogen
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

For supporters of a economy, its all looking a bit like the Betamax/VHS choice in the 1980s (for this of you old enough to recall the river video system);

the promise of a system is increasingly taking the Betamax role; it may be a superior technology, but all the main are going down the - route (the VHS option).

the political economy of advance is seldom easy to predict

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2024/feb/13/will-hydrogen-overtake-batteries-in-the-race-for-zero-emission-cars

ChrisMayLA6, to random
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

Looks like the demonstrators were subject to a classic bait & switch operation today - they were reassured through detailed meetings with the , led to believe there was a way that they could exercise their right to protest, only then to be arrested when they did... so much for - another step down a road we're constantly told is merely scaremongering.... its almost entrapment

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/may/06/head-of-uks-leading-anti-monarchy-group-arrested-at-coronation-protest

ChrisMayLA6, to iowa
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

As wins (by a large margin) the Republican caucus in , the prospect of a second Trump term edges closer....

What seemed unthinkable not so many months ago, now starts to look possible.

Whatever, might think (rightly or wrongly) about 's record in Govt., the notion that Trump might be an 'improvement' to someone on the other side of the Atlantic looks delusional...

I'm just perplexed about how he gains any support at all, but clearly he's appealing to something?

ChrisMayLA6, to Scotland
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

Meanwhile in :

On a low turnout (37.2%), Labour secured a 20% swing in tis favour to win the beating the SNP by 58% to 27% of the vote... while the crashed to 3.9%.

And, now the reading of the runes can get under way....

Can 'win back' Scotland?

Is this indicative of how the vote might go in a general election?

Does it suggest concerns about 's electoral appeal are miss-placed?

I'm looking forward to the weekend papers

ChrisMayLA6, to renewableenergy
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

If you were hoping that somehow would exclude power (most obviously due to its financial costs & the historic problem of its waste products)... the fact that the rising price of would suggest demand (by Governments' programmes) is rising will be disappointing news.

Whether its a victory for sectoral lobbying or a lack of confidence in developments around energy storage from renewables, its not good news for anyone wanting the end of nuclear power.

ChrisMayLA6, to books
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

At the risk of reigniting a debate that has been had in my timeline in the past... here's a report of a University of Valencia that looked at over 20 paper examine the differential effects of reading digitally & on paper.

The research confirms my experience (my own & in the reading of my erstwhile students) that reading digitally is less likely to lead to long-term educational (knowledge) benefits...

@bookstodon

https://www.upmpaper.com/knowledge-inspiration/blog-stories/articles/2024/makes-you-learn/?utm_source=linkedin&utm_medium=paid_social&utm_campaign=PaperBecauseItsReal2024&utm_term=&utm_content=Image

ChrisMayLA6, to random
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

Hmmm.... so 's 'plan' for the is to start off by 'encouraging' staff to work overtime to help start to clear the backlog, while they wait for investment to kick-in.

He claims the staff are 'up for this because they know that bringing down the waiting list will reduce the pressure on them in the long run'.... OK... but presumably only for the short time before his long(er) term plan comes not focus...

Getting already burnt out staff to work (even) harder is a big risk!

ChrisMayLA6, to london
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

Having just seen another casual allusion to 'this overcrowded isle', I think people who believe the UK to be over-crowded either don't understand the shape of population distribution or think the whole country looks like the suburbs of .

There may be an issue about the carrying capacity of this island, but on a purely spatial level its not overcrowded, the population is just clustered in a few places.

A less clustered population might also help re-balance regional ?

ChrisMayLA6, to random
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

Hurrah... good sense breaks out in the as the 'Waitrose of the North', Booths begins to get rid of self-service check-outs.

Given the price premium at Booths, we (the customers) want the social interaction with staff at the checkouts, not be told to 'scan & bag'!

More importantly, not only do checkouts provide regular local employment, they are also for many semi-isolated shoppers a key bit of rare social interaction... so a welcome reverse!

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-lancashire-67373472

ChrisMayLA6, to random
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

A small but significant global movement is seeking to make free to use as a central plank to urbanism.

as the Guardian point out:

'Flourishing & accessible public transport systems are an essential feature of sustainable 21st-century living. They are a means of social inclusion & wellbeing, helping to generate a sense of place and collective belonging'!

Being free from fares can be a big part of this... but in the UK we're wedded to an altogether different model!

ChrisMayLA6, to sciencefiction
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

I have now completed the nine volume books series The Expanse by James A Corey, and what a ride it has been.

Its quite an extraordinary feat of sustained (coherent) imagination & I would thoroughly recommend it to anyone who likes world-building SF.

With its multi-viewpoint narrative strategy but also with it central core of crucial characters, this is space opera of the highest quality.

And the finale is wonderfully pleasing in plotting terms!

Its been a joy!


@bookstodon

ChrisMayLA6, to books
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

For this of us accused of buying too many - Umberto Eco was on our side:

'It is foolish to think that you have to read all the books you buy, as it is foolish to criticize those who buy more books than they will ever be able to read. It would be like saying that you should use all the cutlery or glasses or screwdrivers or drill bits you bought before buying new ones'

h/t Subir Dey (LinkedIn)

@bookstodon

ChrisMayLA6, to disability
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

Across the political Right, the narrative is that disability benefits (primarily Personal Independence Payments; PIPs) are too easy to get & are often paid to the 'undeserving'... however, in reality nearly half of applicants are rejected, rising to over two thirds for endometriosis (a gendered dimension I'll leave you to ponder), but with high rates of rejections over-turned on appeal (often with the same evidence).

More Tory lies, callousness & inhumanity

https://www.theguardian.com/society/article/2024/may/12/claims-conditions-personal-independence-payments-disability-benefits-cancer-arthritis-amputees

ChrisMayLA6, to Bulgaria
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

As Prof. John Curtice observes (after his latest polling), showing around 80% of likely labour voters are pro-EU:

'Labour does have to realise it will find itself back in office off the back of an electorate that is three-to-one in favour of joining the EU'.

Whether or not this means may be thinking about how to re-engage with the , rejoining, of course, is not something we can just wish to happen, the EU would need to agree & that willingness is hardly a foregone conclusion!

ChrisMayLA6, to bookstodon
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

Defend our

(from @tomgauld)

@bookstodon

ChrisMayLA6, to cooperatives
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

When I was assembling my last book (Corporations: A research agenda), I became quite interested in Mondragon in Spain as an alternative way of organising businesses (and featured them in the book).

Somehow I missed this recent profile on the Spanish Cooperative conglomerate. It make for an interesting read when we are told there is no other way of running firms in capitalism.... because clearly there is!


https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2024/apr/24/in-the-us-they-think-were-communists-the-70000-workers-showing-the-world-another-way-to-earn-a-living

ChrisMayLA6, to random
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

The IPPR thinks it will take two terms to reverse the damage wrought on the by the .... sadly I think they are under-estimating the damage the Tory strategy has caused the underlying social structures that support the .

Don't get me wrong the work needs to start & will certainly take a decade, but the reversal will take decades to finally rid us of the legacy of a toxic decade of ...

The more immediate Q. is: is the man to do it????

ChrisMayLA6, to random
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

What is extraordinary about is that she has managed to make look better than we had thought at the time (although, of course, still a nightmare).... indeed, this seems to be the job of the current crop of ministers; to make us reassess those who went before, encouraging us to think the earlier ministers weren't as bad, because now the real nutters are on the public stage!

Is it all some cunning plan?

ChrisMayLA6, to books
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

Here's a handy guide to check yourself against; which way do you display/store/shelve your ?

I have so many that I fit a number of different categories depending on which part of he house you're in.... I doubt I'm alone in my pluralist shelving habits

@bookstodon

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2024/jan/17/shelf-absorbed-nine-ways-to-arrange-your-bookshelves-and-what-they-say-about-you

ChrisMayLA6, to BBC
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

The are getting a lot of flak over their non-coverage of the march in over the weekend.... while there was widespread coverage abroad, it failed to be mentioned (apparently, I no longer watch/listen to the BBC news) at all by the BBC.

Of all the anger, the best suggestion was that the next march should actually have Broadcasting House as its end point - mind you, I'm sure they's still manage to ignore that too.

But, hey, I'm sure the new Chair of the BBC will sort it out

ChrisMayLA6, to random
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

The problem of is that in many ways her diagnosis is/was right:

''I believe that the reason for the problems we have is the 25 years of economic consensus that have led us to this period of stagnation...And I believe it is vital that we understand that & shatter that economic consensus, if we are to avoid worse problems in the future'!

The problem was what she wanted to replace it with was merely a hard-boiled version of what went before.... not a radical change in policy direction.

ChrisMayLA6, to random
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

Interestingly, Friedrich Merz, head of the German Christian Democrats, believes that:

'The continental Europeans were not entirely blameless when it came to Brexit... We lost patience with the special role that Britain always played in European politics. We didn’t do enough to help them come to a different referendum result'!

Bittersweet for Remainers, but an indication that their/our own campaigning failings were compounded by complacency(?) in the EU about the referendum.

#Brexit
quote/FT

ChrisMayLA6, to technology
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us avatar

thinks (by which he seems to mean digital technologies) will make the more efficient & means we can stop pouring money into a 'leaky bucket'.

Quite apart the vacuity of such techno-boosterism, you would have thought in the wake of the disaster, anyone thinking deploying technology is the answer, might want to be more careful.

Many people are watching Mr Streeting & are getting worried about how he thinks about NHS reform!

I'm one of them!

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