-
Recent Posts
- Dipping the Budget’s toe in the waters of wellbeing
- Chalmers hasn’t delivered a wellbeing budget, but it’s a step in the right direction
- Beyond GDP: Chalmers’ historic moment to build wellbeing
- RN Breakfast interview on stamp duties and land taxes
- Doughnut economics article turned into a podcast episode
Follow me on Twitter
My TweetsTags
- 2ser
- Australia
- banking and finance
- budget
- class
- climate
- climate change
- consumerism
- deficit
- democracy
- ecological footprint
- economic growth
- Economic policy
- economic rent
- employment
- environment
- Free market
- gdp
- government
- government budget
- history
- Independent Australia
- industrial relations
- inequality
- Ken Henry
- land tax
- Malcolm Turnbull
- mining
- neo-classical economics
- Nietzsche
- philosophy
- podcast
- political donations
- political theory
- politics
- rent-seeking
- resource rent tax
- retirement
- superannuation
- taxation
- taxation policy
- tax to GDP ratio
- The Age
- The Conversation
- The Drum
- The Guardian
- The Monthly
- unemployment
- wellbeing
- women
Categories
- Ageing population
- Australian politics
- climate change
- conservation
- democracy
- Economic theory
- finance
- Gender
- housing affordability
- Inequality
- Land tax
- Media appearance
- Modern Monetary Theory
- movie review
- neo-classical economics
- Op-ed
- philosophy of economics
- political economy
- Political philosophy
- radio
- radio interview
- Speech
- statistics
- superannuation
- Sustainability
- tax economics
- TV
- Uncategorized
- unemployment
- war crimes
- wellbeing
Tag Archives: philosophy
How our economy is like an out of control AI
By Warwick Smith | 8 September 2019, 12:30pm First published at Independent Australia Humans, individually, can be incredibly brilliant but collectively we’re often puzzlingly stupid. To take a simple, uncontroversial example, we know that forests are critical for our survival. … Continue reading
A failure of collective intelligence
By Warwick Smith An essay I wrote has won second prize in New Philosopher magazine’s latest writer’s prize and has been published in the magazine. As I did with my last New Philosopher essay, I’ll probably publish this in another … Continue reading
Posted in Economic theory, philosophy of economics, Sustainability
Tagged climate, environment, New Philosopher, philosophy
Leave a comment
Video of speech for the Victorian Fabians
Here’s a speech I gave on the economics of inequality at the AGM of the Victorian Fabians. The speech notes are below the video. Warwick Smith from Australian Fabians Inc. (AFI) on Vimeo. Speech notes from Per Capita’s Medium page. … Continue reading
Posted in Inequality, Speech
Tagged class, history, history of economics, inequality, philosophy, politics
Leave a comment
The perils of the last human: flaws in modern economics
By Warwick Smith, University of Melbourne This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article. Nietzsche’s much quoted line “God is dead” was not, as it is often presented, a statement of triumphant atheism but was a … Continue reading
Posted in Economic theory, philosophy of economics
Tagged consumerism, economic growth, Nietzsche, philosophy, The Conversation
Leave a comment
The perils of the last human – by Warwick Smith in New Philosopher magazine
Issue # 5 of New Philosopher is out today and in it is my piece about what we can learn from Nietzsche about modern political economy and climate change. For those of you who don’t know it, New Philosopher magazine … Continue reading