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Annabelle b

Market Failure: The Case of Organic Food by Bryan Caplan - 0 views

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    The article I chose for this week talks about how organic foods are increasing in quantity and the industry is increasing in profit as well. Many people have started consuming only 'organic foods' and this is causing distress for the industry because they need to be able to supply more. However, some consumers consider the idea of 'organic foods' as just healthier foods but they aren't receiving the extra health they're paying for.
Valentin a

Scarcity of Human Organs - 4 views

shared by Valentin a on 19 Sep 12 - No Cached
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    This article tells the reader about the problem of too few human organs being are avaiable that could be transplanted. "The shortage of available organs is a global feature of organ transplantation and has been a challenge almost since its inception." Meaning that human organs are extremely rare since they are on demand.
Annabelle b

India to seek support for food security proposal at WTO - 0 views

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    India has objected to some of the clauses in the trade facilitation agreement and sought support for the developing countries' food security proposal at the World Trade Organization (WTO). In the latest rounds of talks, India has also made it amply clear that if there is no forward movement on G-33 nations food security proposal, trade facilitation would also not move. The G-33 is a group of developing countries.
Stephen b

OPEC Assures Ample Oil Supply - 0 views

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    These days, with an economy recovering from a slight collapse and people looking to alternatives to gasoline and coal, a shortage of oil is not very good for the fossil fuels industry. Yesterday, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries announced that oil prices would remain stable, even in these times of uncertainty. With all the negatives of oil (the pollution, the wars it has caused, the danger it can put workers at to obtain, etc.) demand has started to decrease. But, petrol suppliers can't just increase their prices like the supply demand curves might predict because they don't want to risk scaring the remaining consumers into thinking the price of oil will only increase as more of it is used up. This has left OPEC and all of it's members in a bit of a pickle.
Stephen b

Why Can't Walmart Be More Like Costco? - 1 views

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    Ok, this one may be a bit of stretch this week but it flows more into "margin" than "negative externality", but stick with me. What I really like about this article was that it could have focused on the Chinese sweat shops or the lack of parking lot security, which, admittedly, are negative externalities, but it went in depth on the differences between the externalities of Costo's labor force as opposed to Wal-Mart's. You see, people really like Costco because it pays it's workers between $11-19 an hour while Wal-Mart only pays $11-12. Many would like to say this is because Wal-Mart is the child of Satan brought to Earth to annihilate humanity and do battle with the son of God... who is also God... And to that I say, "corporations aren't people", but that's besides the point. Wal-Mart doesn't just do this because they want more money and because Costco is socially conscious, it's because the margins are much different between both companies. You may not think about it, but all that organizing and "everything you need is here" costs a lot more than what twice as customers can suffice. A lot of that low paid wage goes towards menial tasks like waiting at a cash register for a half hour before the rush of customers arrive or going from aisle to aisle putting the cereal back on the correct shelf because you're just too lazy to do it yourself. What we don't realize is that, sometimes, the negative externalities that we see are a product of our own self-entitled sentiment.
Elias S

Europe fears 'uncontrolled protectionism' as emerging markets turn against free trade - 0 views

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     Too much protectionism is not good as well as no protectionism, it will ruin the free trade in the world. 
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    This article looks at the European Commission, an organization that has warned of a slide towards "blatant and uncontrolled protectionism" across the globe as emerging markets from several countries are starting to defend themselves, warning that abuses by countries like Russia, Brazil, Indonesia, China and other key states could pose a growing threat to global recovery. The EU trading body has said "154 new tariffs and restrictive measures have been pushed through over the past year while "virtually none" has been abolished"
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