GV BG Smiling Face

Wednesday 14 November 2012

300 words on today


Eliane Glaser - 
Spoke of how the big corporations and the government (‘elites’ as she puts it) are displaying apparent vulnerability in such a way that we do not notice what their true agendas are.
The government is making cuts to education and in other public sector bodies. Glaser argues that the money it is trying to save in this way already exists in the hands of 0.1% of Britain’s population – the richest people.
I felt her examples were quite one sided – very ‘left wing’ with not much holistic overview.
Later during the group talk there was a general agreement that her arguments were one sided. She gave an impression that she had not informed us of different aspects regarding the subjects she had brought up.
She made me wonder how much of a culprit to this phenomenon am I. This is because I realised that until she made these comments I was seriously convinced that both elites mentioned previously are indeed losing their power.

Evan Davis-
Started off by proclaiming that Britain’s greatest contribution to the world is the factory. Davis’s talk focused around the attempt to understand and explain how developed countries make their money.
Despite the UK’s apparent lack of imported goods it is still considered as one of the world’s strongest economies. The lifestyle it’s citizens (especially Londoners) is very high, so how is this high level maintained?
His argument is that after a while, affluent countries discover that they don’t have to physically make all that they design (‘outsource’ mentality). The physical production is the moved to other countries (Japan in the past, now China) whilst the intellectual property remains ‘in-house’ to become the affluent country’s export.
Davis pointed out that amongst other services, higher education is one of the UK’s most successful export.
His argument was very well structured, this was made particularly apparent in comparison to the first speaker’s.


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