Economist Jeremy Rifkin spoke with Argentine reporters about the Internet of things, the collaborative commons, the eclipse of capitalism, and Pope Francis.
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Some critics believe that one of the biggest problems for Mexico is that its middle class is complicit in a deeply entrenched inequality.
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The political opponents of the government of President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner claim that Argentina is now “a dictatorship because the government can pass any law it likes,” and kind of miss the point about democracy.
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According to a member of its negotiating team, the FARC is and always has been a political organization.
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It has long been said that politics is the concentrated expression of economics, but over time many observers have declared this idea “outdated” or invalid. Enter Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa.
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Leftist leaders have diagnosed the core problem as being neoliberal capitalism, and so they believe that all that is needed is to remove it and replace it with something else. In this case… socialism. But neoliberal capitalism isn’t the core problem so much as it is an environment that makes everything worse for most Hondurans.
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The long term impact of President Peña Nieto’s reforms will depend on their implementation.
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The country is going through a bad patch, and it isn’t doing anybody much good.
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As several Latin American countries vote in various elections in the month of October, many observers will be watching and trying to predict whether the “Pink Tide” is about to contract.
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In the exchange of barbs between Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff and her main rival Marina Silva, who is right? Reinaldo Azevedo says “both and neither.” Patricio Navia thinks that Silva could be “the alternative for a new Latin American left.”
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