upmicro.com - searching for 100 professionals who want to build economics for youth

latest news on the death of macroeconomics is coming but timing youth's escape is absolutely critical 1
 please tell us quotes that explkan how economcs became the centre of 2010s most exciting decadeKeynes: increasingly only economics rules the worldPresident Obama: 16 April 2010: We know that without enforceable, common sense rules to check abuse and protect families, markets are not truly free - FC ning   
We believe it is every hi-trust economist's and professional's duty to help network 2010s youth most exciting decade. 60 of us will be debating this for 2 hours in The Economist's Boardroom London on Nov16 as a tribute to Unacknowledged Giant, and dad Norman Macrae. If you think you need to be there, please contact chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk washington DC tel (usa=1) 301 881 1655 skype isabellawm family foundations

The unacknowledged giant

The unacknowledged giantAdd to Playlist

 

 Our mentor Norman Macrae 1 2 3  4 passed in summer 2010.

In his memory, Norman Macrae Foundation likes to offer small amounts eg up to $4000 so citizens in different palces can have a party to discuss UPMicro's search for hi-trust professionals  - cases- youth's global assembly party in Glasgow has resulted in the launch of 2 Up Micro journals .. .more examples DC ; your idea welcomed at info@worldcitizen.tv

About UPMicro.com- we believe that economics is designed to benefit specific groups of people; for 2010s to be the most exciting decade, we would like that group to be youth worldwide united by the greatest human race to end poverty and any other threats to sustainability (exponentials rising) of all communities. ideas on that emerge from bookclubs of 1000s of readers at eg http://worldcitizen.tv/
Our Microeconomics origin tracks Scottish schools of Adam Smith and James Wilson, French schools of entrepreneurs, Indian continent schools from Gandhi to today's sustainability system design (eg Nobel Laureate Social Business Systems) world heroines and heros in Bangladesh. We believe we are supported by system design clues of mathemticians like Einstein and Von Neumann.
British Century 1775-1875American-Atlantic Century 1875-1975

Asia-Pacific Century 1975-2075 -out of India 1 Bangladesh 1 2 China Japan 1

Norman Macrae, Pacific Century 1975-2075, The Economist 4 January 1975
NYRM: To understand where The Economist is coming from, it helps to look at its history, which began with a Scottish hatmaker’s exasperation with British Corn Laws. James Wilson felt government tariffs on imported grain and crops killed trade, and he wrote a pamphlet about it. But he still wasn’t satisfied and, in 1843, started The Economist. Its mission was to repeal the Corn Laws in particular and promote free trade in general through what it called “a severe contest between intelligence, which presses forward, and an unworthy, timid ignorance obstructing our progress.” The Anti-Corn-Law League helped fund the struggling publication, a newspaper at its start. Three years later, the Corn Laws were repealed, but The Economist, a bastion of free trade, continued to publish...“Opinion is woven into the magazine,” says Clive Crook. This approach is, perhaps, best summed by Norman Macrae, a senior editor at The Economist a few decades back, who Crook says would tell his colleagues, “It’s not a ‘newspaper,’ it’s a ‘viewspaper.’” If paradox is where economics and innovation interface, Norman's most delicious view: a calling to economists began Xmas Day 1976 with a series on Entrepreneurial Revolution http://erworld.tv - this announced a search for a new capitalism- Norman had just spotted that the West's 3rd Quarter of the 20th C (drowning in mass media's trivia and big gov) had killed off all the hi-trust assumptions needed to value Adam Smith's free market constructs.  
 http://www.normanmacrae.com/netfuture.html At it is simplest all of our futures connected by a networked world will be spun by one of 2 opposite economics systems compounding opposite consequences. Take a look and see if you believe UpMicro is the one you would want communities around you and your future generations. chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk  skype isabellawm : family foundations, Washington DC region (1) 301 881 1655
  

UP Micro

DOWN Macro

 64trilliondollarquestions5.jpg

Upmicro maps how to design value multiplying exchanges which are 10-win, or when networks connect pairs of systems 100-win. It models expoentials - to hep leder know what future they are spinning up (tensely purposeful but not conflicted) or down (multiplying conflicts with true purspoe). Micro designs are always very simple to map but very contextually detailed. The accounting professionals we are looking to join us need to agree that global accounting has made stupendous 2 errors on goodwill; it adds things up insted of multiplying - eg andersen had billions of business value but destoyed its trusr with society to zero value; consequence it becme worth billions*0=0 not what andersen's managers assumed billions+0=billions; also global accountants still impose an industrial valuation mindset- machines can be booked in as investments whereas people are always costs to cut. When these 2 details are compounded quarter after quarter into one single spredseeted number- people forget wht the number represents. In this way Global accountnts have destroyed at least 100 multibillion corporations in 2000s by rewarding managers to chase numbers that were not the exponential truth. This was foreseen as  crisis in the year 2000 book Unseen Wealth.

How could any common sense person call what wall street macroeconomics did with subprime housing investments "economical". In fact, my dad's last article suggests that it was so costly that unless we learn the right microeconomic lessons we will have chained a generation of US youth to depression and debt. I find the following books extremely scary as they explain how mnay of orwell's big brothers re already chaining us all with macroeconomics (which as early as 1984 dad was writing up at his desk at The Economist as mostly disgraceful political chicanery)

It takes a pillage, Naomi Prins - the story of Goldmn Scahs

Too Big to  Save by Robert Pozen

Crisis by Design by JOhn Wolfe  

Economics for youth & future

Economics for old & past

Economics for the small and growing

Economics for the big and decaying

Economics for compounding zero conflicts : win-win-wins

Economics compounding conflicts so that one most powerful groups extracts from all others every cycle : lose-lose-lose

Economics for investing in life critical needs of babies, families, communities

Economics that cannot see such small systems as children or individuals’ productive learning curves

Economics for discovering the creativity born inside every person and education that empower all people to create jobs

Economics where most people never discover their greatest creative flows and are failed by over-standardised examinations

Economics where media heroises those who achieve the greatest improvements in the human lot

Media that images over reality and which heroises players of spectator sports

 Whole truth celebrting the most purposeful organisations and networks humans can design Inconvenient truth thst traps more and more people in organsations that are not measured in a grounded way to live unique purpose, other than that of rewarding a few speculators at everyone else's increasing cost 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 

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Sunday, September 5, 2010

brainstorm: can the young and the micro plan escape routes as the old and the macro kill off their economies
Update 1 - our updates com[prise 2 sections - some of the ltst gossip around world's future capitals connectung 2000 bookclub of dr yunus' invittion to 2010s most exciting decade and an article on future conflicts to circumnavigate - eg below from The Atlantic 

To Colin, Glasgow Caledonian Yunus Centre & Yunus Friends
1 fantastic that your oct 19 event with Work Foundation's Will Hutton in London is happening; I don't know my diary yet (have been keeping october for a meeting in dhaka!)
2 can I introduce you again to jonathan- he connects 3000 entrepreneurs across the world in 50 office space that started out of london; www.the-hub.net   (CNN the oficeless generation); I think it would be good if someone well connected from the hub was at your event; there are cities like Glasgow & Paris where their future as a yunus city is unstoppable; there are next cities where the hub can help connect momentum  (in New York around Monica Yunus; in whichever Spanish city becomes the 2010s SB fusion of all the work of yunus and queen sofia, and likely the hub of post-euro spanish economics) ;
 I am working on how does one have  microeconomics celebration party of dad in brussels since dad was the only journalist to know the founders of the EU from the get-go in Messina and back in 1976 Romano Prodi was the Italian translator of Entrepreneurial Revolution (still the survey that did more than any other to brand the microeconomics word entrepreneur as economics most popular word) 
 http://erworld.tv We believe it is every hi-trust economist's and professional's duty to help network 2010s youth most exciting decade. 60 of us will be debating this for 2 hours in The Economist's Boardroom London on Nov16 as a tribute to Unacknowledged Giant, and dad Norman Macrae. If you think you need to be there,

The unacknowledged giant

The unacknowledged giantAdd to Playlist
I think I am correct in saying dr yunus and jonathan are in the middle of deep collaboration negotiations; jonathan is my main london contact point for people who want before or after discussions of how dads party at The Economist changes conventional mindsets of economics out of London's media- doubtless I will need to ramp up shareholder activism of The Economist before it helps 2010s youth s the social action newspaper of adam smith tht it was founded to be ;
back in 2005 we convened an open space at the  hub asking people to join in a 7 year collaboration plan to reform media until it covered economics sustainably; much of the economy of Europe depends on whether ultimately we free the way the  BBC covers economics and business news analysis from government; in anyone's list of Europen catalysts that could make 2010s most exiting tye BBC most be in the top 5; I hope that sooner than later paul rose bbc  microenergy correspondent (connecting the energy awards http://www.ashdenawards.org  of prince charles and lord sainsbury's oldest daughter) and sally magnusson can meet; and we can start to plot which other broadcster gets it; I have to find exactly the right time in the momentum of such things to ask for help from heavyweights like baroness sarah hogg, and andrew neil ); one of jonathan's fellows at the hub is jon snow who certainly was on the right side when he used to cover gordon brown's african commission- out of johannesburg lesley is the social busienss corepondent jontahan and I would stake our connections on around that continent; so these dots have an optimists way of connecting pursposeful economics if we have detailed enough maps being interpersonally shared to change economics from mcro down to http://upmicro.com  
chris
Hub fellows in London include
 

Tim Smit  founder Eden Project

John Bird founder Big Issue

Alain de Botton author

Jon Snow  Channel 4 ,

Peter Head director ARUP

Vandana Shiva physicist



Help youth celebrate the death of macroeconomics

 hub just-in-time maps of the escape routes for the young and the micro, while the old and the macro kill off each other's economies

http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2010/09/is-the-us-economy-so-bad-it-cant-get-much-worse/62505/

 

It's been a brutal summer for the economy. The housing sector, like a balloon batted in the air one last time by the government credit, resumed its inevitable fall. Economic growth slowed to a lead-footed 1.6 percent, and job growth is even more anemic. Meanwhile, consumers are cranky, the trade gap is gaping.



More from TheAtlantic.com:



Mapping Troubled Housing Markets

Most signs point to a slow and steady recovery, but what if the pessimists are right, again? What if the United States isn't in the slow-lane to recovery, but rather on the precipice of another decline -- a double dip?

[

To see where this re-recession might begin, my colleague Dan Indiviglio and I imagined five financial earthquakes, each with a single epicenter: housing, consumers, toxic assets, Europe, and the debt. The following five scenarios are listed in order of likelihood.

1. Housing's Mini-Bubble Pops

Perhaps nothing poses as a big of a concern to the U.S. economy as its housing market. It's unclear how the government's efforts to stabilize the market through a buyer credit, ultra-low mortgage rates, and mortgage modification programs will pan out. Did it just create another mini-bubble that's beginning to pop now that the support has been withdrawn?

[See Why the Housing-Market Recession Isn't Over]

Here's the scenario. Weak home sales and continuing foreclosures result in climbing real estate inventory. This has two effects. First, it makes new homes even less attractive which further reduces construction jobs. Second, it puts downward pressure on home prices, which makes it harder for struggling homeowners to sell their home to avoid foreclosure and also keeps strategic default rates high, exacerbating the problem. Lower home values encourage Americans to save more and spend less, since their wealth is effectively reduced. The Dow drops and credit markets tighten even further, suffocating private investment just as homeowners bunker down and slash spending. Growth turns negative.

2. You Break the Economy

You, the American consumer, are reloading savings after a debt-fueled decade. But as any general will tell you, when an entire squad reloads at once, it leaves everybody vulnerable. It's the same with the economy.

Here's the scenario. Consumer sentiment continues to fall slowly, and spending turns negative again. Small businesses hold off to replenish their inventories or add new workers. Wages and hours freeze, and unemployment takes a leap toward 10 percent in October. Congress is paralyzed, because it's only weeks away from the mid-terms. The stock market sees business revenue trending flat, joblessness rising and Congress doing nothing, and it sparks a 300-point sell-off. Americans frightful for their savings cut back spending even more the next month, and overall growth turns negative.


3. Toxic Assets Return

If you closely followed the bank bailout, then you know it wasn't originally billed as simply throwing money at the banks. Instead, the Treasury intended to purchase the toxic assets from banks, which were the source of investors' uncertainty concerning bank stability. But the Treasury couldn't figure out a way to do this quickly enough to make it effective. As a result, the banks were largely stuck with these bad assets. We just don't know how bad, yet.

Here's the scenario. The residential real estate market's problems continue. Even once foreclosures begin to decline, we see waves of defaults, as modification program participants re-default at rates of 30% to 50%. Commercial mortgage-backed securities continue to deteriorate, as some businesses struggle with weak consumer demand. Home and commercial real estate values keep declining, and so do the value of the assets that back them. Banks with exposure to these toxic securities see another round of losses, and investors question their stability. The market plummets, credit freezes, and growth turns negative.

4. Europe Falls Apart

Europe seems to have avoided an all-out collapse of confidence in its ability to pay back its debt. But things can change, and fast fast. Indeed, the Greek debt crisis went from ignorable wire stories to front page news in a matter of days.

Here's the scenario. Slow growth in weak Eurozone states like Greece, Spain, and Italy turns negative and spooks investors, who demand higher returns on government debt. Europe's bond rates spike. Countries announce further austerity -- tax increases and spending cuts -- which strangles our biggest export market. The EU central bank responds by announcing a plan to write down troubled debt, which dings some Americans banks.

In a flight to quality debt, the dollar appreciates. This hurts our exports even more. As the trade deficit gapes open and manufacturing's good run dead ends, the stock market plummets, taking household wealth down with it. Families looking to restore balance sheets cut back on spending, and the American producer loses the American consumer and the European buyer. Growth turns negative.

5. Debt Finally Catches Up to Us

Interest rates on U.S. debt are low today for one big reason. Investors trust the United States, at least more than they trust other countries. If the people giving us money suddenly have as little faith in America as Americans, that could change, and quickly.

Here's the scenario. The IMF recently said the United States has a 25 percent chance of seeing dramatically higher interest rates in the near future. But the bond market can strike without warning, as it did in Europe earlier this year. If uncertainty with our political process gets reflected in our interest rate, we'll have a harder time affording debt, 55% of which has to be rolled over in the next three years. Pension and mutual funds with government debt would be written down, causing Americans to save even more of their paychecks. We'd be left with two bad choices: tax cuts to juice consumption or tax hikes to please our lenders. But at that point, it would be too late to avoid a double dip.

The Atlantic's external correspondents
Daniel AkstJournalist, novelistAndrew CohenLegal analystMickey EdwardsFormer congressmanGarrett EppsLaw professor and journalist
Richard FloridaCreativity expertAlex GibneyDocumentary filmmakerWilliam HaseltineScientist, entrepreneurBen W. Heineman Jr.Policy expert
Philip K. HowardLawyer, civic leaderHua HsuWriter on music and cultureWendy KaminerLawyer, civil libertarianZachary KarabellExpert on economic trends
Ed KochFormer mayor, film buffDamien MaChina analystLisa MargonelliEnergy & environment writerPeter OsnosJournalist, publisher
Patrick OttenhoffMapmakerRichard A. PosnerFederal appeals court judgeAlyssa RosenbergWriter, editor, pop culture geekCristine RussellScience and health writer
Harry ShearerActor, director, musicianEllen Ruppel ShellScience journalistDavid ShenkScience & culture writerErik TarloffNovelist, screenwriter
Edward TennerCulture-and-tech historianBrian TillWriter on foreign policyAbraham VergheseAuthor and physicianLane WallacePilot, entrepreneur, writer
James WarrenPolitical analystGraeme WoodWriter and traveler 

9:01 am edt 


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