By Timothy Cox | Thursday, July 1, 2010

Our daily round-up of what other think-tanks and commentators are saying on the big issues:

Doug Bandow reviews Ian Bremmer’s latest “realistic yet optimistic” offering, The End of the Free Market.

Aidwatch reports on the failure of another top down celebrity endorsed development fad- the PlayPump.

By Alec van Gelder | Thursday, July 1, 2010

Kenyan MPs have just voted in favour of an 18% pay increase—for themselves. This makes them among the best paid lawmakers in the world.

 

By Marc Sidwell | Thursday, July 1, 2010

This year's Bastiat Prize is now closed for entries. Thank you very much to all those who entered. The standard of entries has been exceptionally high and we look forward to releasing a shortlist of potential winners in mid-September.

By Timothy Cox | Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Our daily round-up of what other think-tanks and commentators are saying on the big issues:

Foreign Policy explores the geopolitics of the iPhone and the scramble for high value resources.

The benefits of sound economic management: how Mauritius is wooing super-investors.

By Timothy Cox | Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Frederic Bastiat is 209 years young today.

June 30 2010 is also the final day for entries to the ninth annual Bastiat Prize for Journalism, which has prizes for both bloggers and print journalists: online entry form and full details are here.

Bastiat was masterful at exposing the absurd reasoning behind protectionist policies. His classics include A Negative Railroad and the Candlemakers' Petition- a satirical appeal to block out the sun to “save the candlemakers” in France.

Bastiat’s work is as relevant today as it was two centuries ago and those who carry on his legacy deserve recognition. How else, but with the clarity of humour, could we decipher the logic behind the EU taxing our shoes in order to “save our shoemakers” and the US unfairly subsidising agriculture abroad to compensate for unfairly subsidising its own farmers at home?

To celebrate his birthday, the Foundation for Economic Education has also published a free download of The Law on Facebook. 

By Timothy Cox | Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Our daily round-up of what other think-tanks and commentators are saying on the big issues:

Jamie Whyte explains why politicians are not best placed to chose people’s personal priorities.

Brian McGraw and Geoffrey Michener on the egregious US farm subsidies, now being paid to both foreign and domestic agricultural producers.

By Alec van Gelder | Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Speaking at a DfID's event Bob Geldof said:

"Poverty can only be eliminated through trade and investment. And it is trade and investment that will support the dynamism and enterprise of people in sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia and give them the jobs, dignity and opportunity that they deserve."

 

By Timothy Cox | Monday, June 28, 2010

Our daily round-up of what other think-tanks and commentators are saying on the big issues:

The WSJ on why Hayek is making a comeback.

Chris Stephen in The Scotsman on why trade and not aid is the message Africa needs to hear.

By Timothy Cox | Monday, June 28, 2010

Beijing’s thirst for top-down infrastructure projects is hampering access to water for China’s poorest people. The latest proposed scheme, the “South-to-North Water Diversion Project”, attempts to solve the deep inequality in access to water across the northern (where water is more scarce) and southern (where water is more prevalent) regions. However, despite great expense, this project is as likely to fail as the previous expensive and misguided scheme- the Three Gorges Dam. IPN’s Caroline Boin and Nathaniel Clark discuss the implications of this latest "Super-Project" and offer a viable alternative to this most pressing of problems in today’s Korea Times.

By Timothy Cox | Friday, June 25, 2010

Critical:

•    Canada’s lessons for the G-20 and the world.

Criticised:

•    Rwanda: Taking two steps forward and three back.

•    Kenyan price controls: increasing the costs for the nation’s businesses.

•    The International Whaling Commission: the seedy reality of international deal brokering is exposed.

By Alec van Gelder & Timothy Cox | Friday, June 25, 2010

We are amongst the first to laud Paul Kagame’s economic reforms that have propelled Rwanda’s Doing Business rankings straight to the top of the “best reformers” list.  Slashing the cost of registering new businesses and removing other bureaucratic and administrative barriers to raising capital, making investments and trading domestically and internationally are the reforms other African governments must emulate if they are to escape the poverty and aid trap. 

Yet these business-friendly reforms have come at a steep price for political freedom and civil liberties in Rwanda.  Kagame looks certain to win yet another seven-year term in August and there is every indication that he is becoming more authoritarian by the day, using state powers to make life a living hell for political opposition and trampling over the freedom of speech that forms the backbone of civil and open society.  News of the assassination of Jean Leonard Rugambage, Editor of a Rwandan newspaper that was critical of Kagame before authorities mysteriously forced it to shut its operations, does little to suppress many fears that Rwanda is spiralling towards a political dictatorship.

By Alec van Gelder | Friday, June 25, 2010

Scott Lincicome has a great op-ed explaining how Canada was one of the first large economies to recover from the Great Recession not by embarking on a massive round of bailouts and handouts to its local producers, but by liberalising trade and giving all Canadians the best opportunity to compete in the global marketplace.  What exactly did Stephan Harper’s government do?  Lincicome explains:

"At the onset of the recession, Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s government moved aggressively to improve Canadian manufacturers’ global competitiveness. After extensive consultations with Canadian industries, Ottawa unilaterally eliminated tariffs on 1,755 different types of machinery, equipment and other manufacturing materials.

The Department of Finance presented a straightforward rationale for the move: “By reducing the cost of importing key factors of production, tariff relief encourages innovation and allows businesses to enhance their stock of capital equipment.” The Department projected that Canada’s complete liberalization of more than C$5 billion in imports will provide an additional C$300 million in annual duty savings for Canadian businesses."

When released, the G-20 communiqué (written in advance of the meeting itself, you see) will inevitably be laden with grandiose promises about “commitments” to concluding the Doha Round at the World Trade Organisation, new “tougher” international financial regulations and other pieces of feel-good rhetoric.  What it should contain is a commitment by each participating government to follow in the footsteps of the host nation and a strict time-table for doing so.