Ha-Joon Chang - 23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism

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Publicado 2010-09-09
Development economics expert Ha-Joon Chang dispels the myths and prejudices that have come to dominate our understanding of how the world works in a lecture at the RSA.

Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @selvmordspilot
    I loved the point concerning child labor as an infringement on the free market. Spot on example.
  • @meisam14
    Fantastic economist. He has his head in the right place. 
  • @kiiyll
    I love the little "hmm?" he adds after some sentences.
  • @kokopelli314
    ...virtually all of today's rich nations became rich through the use of, trade protection, government subsidy and regulation rather than free trade, free market policies" This is why Ha-Joon Changs book, "23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism" is on my winter reading list.
  • @underoathuea
    through reading this guy alone I got a first in my last economics essay, and I'm a psi student. he is my first last and only academic idol. thankyou
  • @weewee33wee44
    I read his book recently .. Marvelous book .. Strongly adviced .. His speech now is not as clear as his writing there .. Just Get his book and enjoy unfolding a new ecomonic mystries - yours , Mohammed Qabazard (Kuwait)
  • @scientiaarsvita1
    "We have to have pessimism of the intellect, but optimism of the will." brilliant. And brilliant analysis of the brainwashing of the free marketeers. I also love Ha-Joon Chang's dry humor: "The vatican has a lot of smart people." "In the economics profession today, interest in the real world is an indirect admission that you are not very good."
  • @WAAAAAAAAAAAY
    this is the kind of economic analysis [ANALYSIS not description] we need in tertiary education. Brilliant
  • @t3mpl3guardian
    The fact that you made the capability to read polysyllable word a prerequisite for reading his book has chilling implications. The fact that people in the 21st century still face such a high rate of illiteracy in developed countries shows some of the failings inherent in the current economic model. I will definitely try to find a copy of his book and thank you for encouraging people to become more aware of how economics work. And thank you RSA for sharing these discussions with all of us.
  • @Crimsonbonnet
    Love Ha Joon Chang. He questions the evidence and the myth of free market capitalism. Read Bad Samaritans and really loved it...
  • @futsal1958
    "Active economic citizenship" -- now there's a cause worth promoting! Thank you, Ha-Joon.
  • @DaveE99
    “95% of economics is common sense made complicated”. Lol. Someone on tic too was like “what’s the point of life?” And some one responded “to pick berries, but they made it complicated.”
  • Glad I found this guy, he may well turn out to be our generations Leon Trotsky. Great teacher
  • @FletchforFreedom
    THANK YOU. I haven't had such a good laugh in years!!! I didn't think anyone was foolish enough to seriously reference Michael Parenti anymore let alone a Pirate Television Non Sequitur-fest. Thatnks for the sources - they're hilarious!!!
  • @syystomu
    Everybody who is able to read sentences with polysyllable words in any language in which this book is available should read it. If you've graduated from high-school, you should read it. Sadly, though, I haven't even managed to convince one single friend of mine to read it because everybody has too many books to read, nowadays. But economics ARE important to our day-to-day lives and to our future, so we NEED to learn more, all of us. A couple of people isn't enough: we need wide-spread knowledge.
  • Absolutely, there is a political motivation to constantly praise free market neoliberalism as a wonderful system. It is no different to the lauding of communism as the best system even as it was clearly on its death bed in the late 80s in Eastern Europe. Once you have committed yourself to supporting a system and often overcome opposition to that end, it becomes very difficult to subsequently say it isn't working as well as you thought it would. Its failures are deliberately swept under the carpet and any data which might support it are often exaggerated wildly.
  • @TZMSocialEvolution
    @CytherLynx The first part of Zeitgeist: Moving Forward actually covers what you just said in great detail, which is why I like that film more than the others to date. The expert analysis and real scientific study involved.