In a lecture entitled "Fighting Poverty", Senator Hugh Segal explains why we need a new national approach to tackling poverty arguing that the costs and consequences of poverty are much larger than direct spending on social programs. Segal has been a long-time proponent of establishing a Guaranteed Annual Income. This lecture was produced in collaboration with the Literary Review of Canada.
Tags / income
Tagged with “income”
(20)
-
Senator Hugh Segal on Fighting Poverty in Canada
-
EP06: Patio11 on building products that make money (part 2)
Want to build a software product that actually earns income?
In this (Part 2) episode Patrick McKenzie (Patio11) shares specific tactics for researching a market and finding a problem to solve. Listen now.
-
SPI 037 : Monetizing in a Hobby Niche
In this session of the Smart Passive Income Podcast I’m stoked to feature yet another success story from someone who has built a six-figure business online in a hobby niche that, to be honest, I never thought was possible to make a living from – at least online.
Lain Ehmann from LayoutaDay.com shares an amazing story about how she’s built an online business in the scrapbooking industry!
Beyond her story, she shares a ton of incredibly useful information that I look forward to putting into practice myself someday.
Tagged with seo websites smart passive income podcast
-
Passive Income - The SMART Way, with Pat Flynn! (Podcast) | Virtual Business Lifestyle
Another edition of Chris C. Ducker’s Virtual Business Lifestyle Podcast in which he interviews Smart Passive Income blogger Pat Flynn on how to create passive income.
-
Tony Ruiz: Smart, Young, Hungry and ‘Venturing’ Out There! | Virtual Business Lifestyle
Virtual Business Lifestyle Guru, Chris C. Ducker, interviews up-and-coming blogger and online entrepreneur, Tony Ruiz, from VentureMixx.com.
-
SPI 034 : My 3rd ANNUAL Passive Income Report
My 3rd ANNUAL Passive Income Report! A breakdown of the income I earned in 2011 as well as the lessons I learned that helped me get there.
http://www.smartpassiveincome.com/3rd-annual-passive-income-report/
-
Politics Weekly podcast: middle class taxes and Super Tuesday | Politics | guardian.co.uk
Simon Jenkins, Jonathan Freedland and Heather Stewart discuss child benefit, plus why moderate Republicans are a dying breed
http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/audio/2012/mar/08/politics-weekly-podcast-taxes-super-tuesday
-
Episode #68 – How We Sold A Blog For 5 Figures + Interview With Chris Ducker
-
Charles Hugh Smith: Why Local Enterprise Is The Solution - Blogs at Chris Martenson
A growing number of individuals believe our economic and societal status quo is defined by unsustainable addiction to cheap oil and ever increasing debt. With that viewpoint, it’s hard not to see a hard takedown of our national standard of
http://www.chrismartenson.com/blog/charles-hugh-smith-why-local-enterprise-solution/61547
-
Public Lectures and Events: The Haves and Have Nots
This event was recorded on 8 February 2011 in Old Theatre, Old Building.
Inequality is a surprisingly slippery issue, involving not just straightforward comparisons of individuals, but also comparisons of price and consumption differences around the world – and over time. In this lecture Branko Milanovic, the lead economist at the World Bank’s research division, will approach the issue in a new and innovative way, focusing on inequality in income and wealth in different time periods and contexts: from inequality in Roman times (and how it compared with inequality today), to depictions of wealth inequality in literature (Pride and Prejudice and Anna Karenina), to inequality across generations of a single family (the three generations of Obamas illustrating this theme). As for global inequality today, the talk will examine its main cause (differences in average incomes between countries), the role China and India might play, and, perhaps most importantly, whether global inequality matters at all, and if does, what can we do to reduce it. Branko Milanovic is one of the world’s leading experts on inequality. He is lead economist at the World Bank’s research division in Washington DC, a visiting fellow at All Souls College, Oxford, and the author of The Haves and Have Nots: A Brief and Idiosyncratic History of Global Inequality.
http://www.lse.ac.uk/resources/podcasts/publicLecturesAndEvents.htm
Page 1 of 2More
