Scandinavian countries are an interesting example. For example, they heavily tax their middle class, are quite business-friendly and have no required minimum wage. But as you are alluding to, they do get away with a high GDP per capita despite a higher tax burden. I think the Scandinavian-modeled state would not look like what pro-social safety net Americans would expect. But again, would love to see the experiment played out.
What kind of capitalisation convention is that? It's not German, or all the nouns would have been capitalised. Prepositions and conjunctions, with verbs and pronouns some of the time?
Technically speaking productivity is amount of output per unit of time worked, working less time typically reduces both the numerator and the denominator so it doesn't necessarily affect productivity.
Operations kept working, it just the office stuff that got down, and a bunch of web apps used to get status info on DSLAMS and bunch more subsistems. It is bad, but not as bad as a total disaster.
<i>It's a one way transaction where money accumulate to the capitalists while the population is depleted. Money should circulate, like water in nature. It should not be captured in some lake (offshore account) from where it goes no further.</i>
Well, that's what he have since Reaganomics, isn't it?
Aren't there dumps of the bygone ones anywhere?