Tim Worstall Tim Worstall

That propensity to truck and barter

Though meteorites can fall anywhere on Earth, the Sahara has become a prime area for their discovery, partly because the climate is favourable for their preservation but also because they are relatively easy to spot against the sand.

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Madsen Pirie Madsen Pirie

Fixing regulation

The UK has inherited too much process-driven regulation from the EU, which tends to apply the precautionary principle - regulate early and heavily if there’s even a theoretical risk - even before clear evidence of harm.

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Madsen Pirie Madsen Pirie

Rural community

Those who say our sense of community has gone should take a look at rural England.

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Madsen Pirie Madsen Pirie

For better or for worse

The future is always a mix of gains and losses, and for the UK there are some fairly clear trajectories where life is likely to get better, but also areas where challenges will deepen.

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Tim Worstall Tim Worstall

We don’t believe the analysis

Partly we think this is making the same mistake everyone did about university. Graduates make more money than non-graduates.

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Tim Worstall Tim Worstall

To educate M. Piketty on wealth

D’ye recall when Professor Piketty told us all that wealth had become so important to the economy that we were going back to the days of Jane Austen?

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Madsen Pirie Madsen Pirie

Magnates attract status

There is an obvious case for suggesting that politicians and minor royals like to associate with billionaires because they don't have enough money themselves to live the lifestyle they think their status entitles them to.

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Tim Worstall Tim Worstall

Schrodinger’s oil fund

It’s not unusual to see Guardianistas and the like bemoaining the fact that Britain spent the oil money. If only we’d saved it all like Norway we’d have a huge wealth fund!

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