maandag 26 juli 2010

Global Carbon Dioxide Emissions Fall in 2009 - Past Decade Still Sees Rapid Emissions Growth

In 2009, carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in China—the world’s leading emitter—grew by nearly 9 percent. At the same time, emissions in most industrial countries dropped, bringing global CO2 emissions from fossil fuel use down from a high of 8.5 billion tons of carbon in 2008 to 8.4 billion tons in 2009. Yet this drop follows a decade of rapid growth: over the 10 previous years, global CO2 emissions rose by an average of 2.5 percent a year—nearly four times as fast as in the 1990s. Increasing temperatures and the resulting melting ice sheets and rising sea levels demonstrate the destructive effects of the carbon accumulating in the atmosphere. Read the complete paper of the Earth Policy Institute here.

Does happiness affect productivity?

Happiness economics typically looks at how macro-level variables such as economic growth affect happiness. This column turns such thinking on its head and asks whether a rise in happiness might change behaviour at the micro-level, looking specifically at productivity. Experiments suggest that happiness raises productivity by increase workers' effort. Economists may need to take the emotional state of economic agents seriously. Read the complete article on EU VOX here.

Informel zorg in Vlaanderen

Lees die publicatie van de Studiedienst van de Vlaamse regering hier.

Vlaanderen in cijfers_2010

Lees die publicatie van de Studiedienst van de Vlaamse Regering hier.

Bomen groeien niet tot de hemel: de werkelijke kostprijs van de dienstencheques

Lees die HIVA studie hier.

Thriving China is ever more open for business

For the past year, China has expanded domestic demand and worked to attract foreign investment, contributing to the global recovery. However, concerns have recently been floated, not least among foreign businesses, that China is now less welcoming of foreign investment. In fact, China will open wider in the future.
Read this article in the FT here.

Et si on cassait la logique du "toujours plus"

Le professeur Christian Arnsperger (UCL) défend l’idée d’une “prospérité sans croissance”. Une idée assez neuve qui plaît surtout aux étudiants…
Lisez l'article dans LLB ici.