David R. Montgomery See book keywords and concepts | For other alternative ideas, like organic practices and biological pest control, it is consumers rather than governments who are driving the process of change in today's global economy without a global society.
But governments still have an important role to play. In the developed world, through policies and subsidies they can reshape incentives to promote both small-scale organic farms and no-till practices on large, mechanized farms. In developing countries, they can give farmers new tools to replace their plows and promote no-till and organic methods on small labor-intensive farms. | Stacy Malkan See book keywords and concepts | Just as toward safer green chemistry California's energy-efficiency policies have fos-alternatives tered a vibrant solar industry in the state, chemicalspolicy org effective chemical policies would likewise birth new industries in green chemistry and clean manufacturing to meet the demands of the 21st-century global economy.
New Year, New You
"All we have to do is design new systems. That's new business," as Aveda's creator Horst Rechelbacher told cosmetics industry CEOs in Miami. | | Otherwise, the state will face growing environmental and health problems and risk being left behind in the global economy.7
"Our universities are not teaching green chemistry because industry isn't demanding chemists with this kind of knowledge," Wilson said. "The fact is that innovating new products, from both a technical and commercial viability point of view, is very difficult to do. The process of innovation is expensive and uncertain. | David R. Montgomery See book keywords and concepts | Over the long run, when we consider the effect on the soil and on a post-oil world, markets for food may work bettet (although not necessarily more cheaply) if they are smaller and less integrated into a global economy, with local markets selling local food. As it becomes increasingly expensive to get food produced elsewhere to the people, it will become incteasingly attractive to take food production to the people—into the cities.
Despite its seemingly contradictory name, urban agricuhure is not an oxymoron. | | In the new global economy, former political colonies continued to serve the interests of wealthier nations—only now trading soil for cash. But this is not all that new: the United States was in the same position before its own revolution. six
Westward Hoe
Since the achievement of our independence, he is the greatest Patriot, who stops the most gullies.
PATRICK HENRY several years ago, on a breakneck research trip down rough dirt roads through a recently deforested part of the lower Amazon, I saw how topsoil loss could cripple a region's economy and impoverish its people. | Michael J. Panzner See book keywords and concepts | Still, knowing the appropriate steps to take under different scenarios isn't necessarily enough if the reporting lags and complexities of a sprawling global economy obscure signals when to favor one approach over the other.
Yet some strategies can make the going easier. For one thing, it will be wise to pay heed to at least one timeless maxim: "Assume the worst, hope for the best, and be prepared for whatever happens. | Mark Schapiro See book keywords and concepts | The EU made a decision, Thery said, to work with its developing country partners in the global economy to assist them in meeting Europe's more rigorous requirements. "If you export your problems abroad," he added, "then that's a problem."18 The EU's international promotion of its environmental initiatives, though, is not being driven purely by beneficence: standing alone in the world with higher standards could in the long run put its businesses at a competitive disadvantage.
Orville Schell, who has written eleven books and numerous dispatches for the New Yorker on China, and is now head of U. | | Nowhere have the implications of this dynamic become clearer than in China —the room from which comes the elephant of the global economy. The unprecedented 9 percent a year that China's economy has been growing since 2001, the 25 percent of the world's steel it consumes, the 10 percent of the world's electricity, the 30 percent of its coal, the coal-fired power plant it is building every week, entices and haunts Europeans and Americans alike. McKinsey & Company predicts that at the current rate of growth, one quarter of the world's total factory output will come from China by 2025.? | | To make it work, the manufacturing powerhouses of the new global economy had to be on board.
Within days of REACH passing in the parliament, emissaries were sent from Europe to inform manufacturers around the world of the new toxic screening imperatives it demands. The European Commission knows," said Stacy Vandeveer at Brown University, "that there is a global competition over who's setting the global standards. | | The traffic in chemicals moves in as many directions as the global economy itself. Europe is the world's largest chemical producer, controlling about 33 percent of the global market, compared to the United States' 28 percent. U.S. firms sell about $27 billion a year in chemicals to Europe; European firms sell about $41 billion in chemicals to the United States.29 Dozens of other countries sell Europe millions of tons of raw chemicals, not to mention chemical-containing consumer goods. Europe's trade interactions are as diverse as America's. | | That malevolent wild tiger (in the Europeans' view) or that harmless caged tiger (in the Americans' view) will recur as we travel the fault lines between the United States and Europe over the precautionary principle—distinctions that are helping reshape production decisions in the global economy. We shall see next what happens when two dueling interpretations of scientific data rise to the center of the ongoing challenge to U.S. primacy now being posed by the European Union.
Sex & Plastic
Ikjany things have to happen on a boy's path toward manhood. | | As Brussels becomes the new center of the action—and threat—for global business, the number of lobbyists since 2001 has tripled; the largest contingent of non-European lobbyists in Brussels are Americans, many of whom have moved wholesale from Washington to Brussels to try to stop, or slow down, European efforts to "green" the global economy. AmCham EU, an affiliate of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce representing U.S. transnationals operating in Europe, has seen its membership double since 2001. In the process, U.S. | James Howard Kunstler See book keywords and concepts | Global warming will contribute to conditions that will shut down the global economy.
Revenge of the Rain Forest and Other Tiny Destroyers
The high tide of the cheap oil age also happened to be a moment in history when human ingenuity gained an upper hand against the age-old scourges of disease. We have enjoyed the great benefits of antibiotic medicine for roughly a half-century. Penicillin, sulfa drugs, and their descendants briefly gave mankind the notion that diseases caused by microorganisms could, and indeed would, be systematically vanquished. Or, at least, this was the popular view. | | Adios Globalism
The so-called global economy was not a permanent institution, as some seem to believe it was, but a set of transient circumstances peculiar to a certain time: the Indian summer of the fossil fuel era. The primary enabling mechanism was a world-scaled oil market allocation system able to operate in an extraordinary sustained period of relative world peace. | | Edward Luttwak, Turbo Capitalism: Winners and Losers in the global economy, New York: HarperCollins, 1999; John Gray, False Dawn: The Delusions of Global Capitalism, New York: New Press, 1998. the bottom as the economic assets are dismantled and sold off, and their livelihoods are closed down. Both Luttwak and Gray make the case that millennial economics produced ever-greater disparities between winners and losers, between the wealthy and the poor, and that these deformities of economic behavior have the power to wreck societies. | Leslie Taylor, ND See book keywords and concepts | Since 1980 the global economy has tripled in size and the world population has increased by 30 percent. Consumption of everything on the planet has risen—at a cost to our ecosystems. In 2001, The World Resources Institute estimated that the demand for
The Amazon is being destroyed at an estimated rate of 20,000 square miles a year. If nothing is done to curb this trend, the entire Amazon could be gone within fifty years.
Loggers transporting Amazon timber down the river. rice, wheat, and corn is expected to grow by 40 percent by 2020, increasing irrigation water demands by 50 percent or more. | James Howard Kunstler See book keywords and concepts | The combination of increased global oil supply and a moribund global economy took its toll. In late 1985, world oil prices collapsed. By early 1986 West Texas crude had plummeted from a high of $31.75 a barrel to $10. Some OPEC countries went as low as $6. The fifteen-year-glut was on.
The price collapse benefited many businesses, but hit U.S. oil companies hard. The majors quickly shut down exploration ventures and shed employees. Independents went out of business and suppliers went bankrupt as drilling stopped. Oil cities such as Tulsa and Houston went into economic tailspins. | Peter Rost See book keywords and concepts | Senator Olympia Snowe (R-ME) added, "If European countries can safely trade prescription drugs, the United States should be up to the task as well,"8 while Representative Marion Berry (D-AR) emphasized, "Here we are in a global economy, and the United States allows these drug companies to take advantage and rob our own people. That can't continue."5
When the elected representatives were done presenting their views, they had yet another surprise for me. Because of Pfizer's letter, Representative Jo Ann Emerson (R-MO), gave me a military flak jacket. | James Howard Kunstler See book keywords and concepts | What a shock, then, to find out that the so-called global economy was just a set of transient economic relations made possible by two historically peculiar circumstances: twenty-odd years of relative international peace and reliable supplies of cheap oil.
Who Needs the Future?
Globalism was primarily a way of privatizing the profits of business activity while socializing the costs. This was achieved by discreetly discounting the future for the sake of short-term benefits. | Jeremy P. Tarcher See book keywords and concepts | Sarah Anderson, John Cavanagh, Thea Lee, and Institute for Policy Studies, Field Guide to the global economy (New York: The New Press. Distributed by W. W. Norton, 2000).
Alan AtKisson, Believing Cassandra: An Optimist Looks at a Pessimist's World (White River Junction, Vermont: Chelsea Green, 1999).
Robert M. Axelrod, The Evolution of Cooperation (New York: Basic Books, 1984).
Ben H. Bagdikian, The Media Monopoly (Boston, Massachusetts: Beacon Press, 1997).
Kevin Bales, Disposable People: New Slavery in the global economy (Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 1999). | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | All of that stands at odds with the fact that we live in a global economy. We must be able to compete globally from this point on, and if we cannot compete globally and have a more efficient healthcare system that eliminates the fraud waste and the paperwork waste, and if we do not have a more efficient tax system such as the flat tax, we're going to pay the price in this country. In terms of healthcare, people are going to go somewhere else to get it. People are going to go somewhere else to buy their prescription drugs. | Ray Dodd See book keywords and concepts | Companies are made up of people, members of the community, and more and more are recognizing that in a global economy environmental problems and human problems are everyone's problem. The supply of products can only be sustained if the living Earth and its communities are revered and protected. Conscious companies that put these values into action are reaping rewards inside their organizations and at the cash register. | | Losses to investors, customers, and employees were shattering—so large that a shudder was felt throughout the global economy. In the aftermath of the collapse, criminal charges were leveled at the firm's top executives. One of the world's most respected accounting companies, Arthur Andersen, with more than 28,000 workers worldwide, was implicated as an accessory and slowly dismantled, accused of accounting fraud.
The conduct of the executives at Enron was hardly an isolated incident. | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | You see, a lot of jobs are leaving the country simply because the health care and health insurance costs are skyrocketing to the point where we can't compete in the global economy.
Organized medicine has given us a system of disease and bankruptcy, and all it can do is worry about the "pretty scary" side effects of alternative therapies that might actually help people be healthy. You must live in another reality to believe pharmaceuticals are the answer to everything, including diseases that have nothing to do with infectious pathogens or microbes. | James Howard Kunstler See book keywords and concepts | Meanwhile, the cumulative price shocks of two years running had sent the global economy into deep recession. Interest rates in the United States soared above 20 percent. Demand for oil fell as economies slumped.
By the early 1980s, the American gas-guzzler fleet had been replaced with much smaller cars, most of them foreign-made. The electric power industry was shifting massively to natural gas. Conservation practices were finally having an effect. | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | Corporations simply cannot pay skyrocketing health insurance costs and simultaneously remain competitive in the global economy. For a 45-year-old manager working in the U.S., the monthly health insurance bill could easily exceed $700 all by itself -- and that's higher than the entire monthly cost (salary and benefits included) of hiring a similarly skilled worker in many other countries.
Thanks to the massive political influence of Big Pharma, the United States has now become the most expensive country in the world in which to conduct business. | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | And as fuel costs continue to rise in our uncertain global economy, this could save you even more in the years ahead. Longer term, you may even consider switching to a hybrid vehicle, although hybrids are today not well justified in terms of cost savings alone. (There are other reasons to own a hybrid, however...)
The second thing to consider is the value of your life and safety, since new cars have much better safety features. They have better airbags and restraint systems, better crumple zones and better road handling for dangerous conditions such as icy or wet roads. | Alex Steffen See book keywords and concepts | In today's global economy, that depends on Chinese manufacturers and U.S. consumers as much as it does on Lesotho's workers and government. ez
Understanding Global Shipping
Search Amazon.com for books about the Internet, the global telecommunications network that connects us all, and you'll find more than 23,000 titles. Search for books on shipping containers and you'll find fewer than 200. After all, who wants to read about container ships and the cargos they carry? | | They are the engines of our global economy, offering greater opportunities for finding a job, educating our kids, starting a better life. But well-designed cities don't just help comfortable people become prosperous, they meet our most basic needs—from clean water and adequate housing to education, health car, and other social services—better than spread-out suburbs do.
And no two cities are alike. Even present-day cities modeled on past ones (like Shanghai's Bund, built to resemble a European city), end up entirely unique as people live in them, use them, and change them. | | It was an attempt to ward off the economic slump the planet faced between World Wars I and II, when trade between nations slacked, markets collapsed, and the global economy lapsed into the Great Depression.
After the war, the Allied nations, led by the United States, advocated a system of reduced international trade barriers, convertible currencies, and trade among one another. As their economies recovered, Japan and Germany also bought into this system, and when the Soviet Union fell, newly independent Eastern European and Asian states joined in. |
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ABOUT THE CREATOR OF NATURALPEDIA: Mike Adams, the creator of this NaturalNews Naturalpedia, is the editor of NaturalNews.com, the internet's top natural health news site, creator of the Honest Food Guide (www.HonestFoodGuide.org), a free downloadable consumer food guide based on natural health principles, author of Grocery Warning, The 7 Laws of Nutrition, Natural Health Solutions, and many other books available at www.TruthPublishing.com, creator of the earth-friendly EcoLEDs company (www.EcoLEDs.com) that manufactures energy-efficient LED lighting products, founder of Arial Software (www.ArialSoftware.com), a permission e-mail technology company, creator of the CounterThink Cartoon series (www.NaturalNews.com/index-cartoons.html) and author of over 1,500 articles, interviews, special reports and reference guides available at www.NaturalNews.com. Adams' personal philosophy and health statistics are available at www.HealthRanger.org.
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