Cumulative Causation is a framework that combines economic and social factors that reinforce each other to deliver "virtuous cycle" growth or "vicious cycle" of decline.
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"Covid, Brexit and The Anglosphere" examines differing frameworks to drive economic growth and economic development in an increasingly complex and multi-polar world.
Intended for a broad readership, from the armchair expert, to the college and high school student through to experts, policy maker and academics, the book seeks to "demystify" the complexities of economic growth and their relationship to the underlying frameworks that deliver global trade in an interpretive rather than mathematical manner. It focuses on economic development within today’s Post Covid, Brexit, Ukraine War and Trumpian MAGA fragmenting world. Whilst explaining the underlying economic theories, we unpack the complex interactions between the economic and social within the overarching construct of "Cumulative Causation" to equip the reader to evaluate competing ideas, policy proposals and associated theories, to enable critical evaluation of the offered solutions. Set in a context of perceived exceptionalism where failure risks shifting constructive Patriotism into acrimonious Nationalism, the book proposes a framework to drive economic progress that uses Brexit and underlying economic concerns as a spur to urge re-establishing Entrepreneurial Capitalism.
Intended for a broad readership, from the armchair expert, to the college and high school student through to experts, policy maker and academics, the book seeks to "demystify" the complexities of economic growth and their relationship to the underlying frameworks that deliver global trade in an interpretive rather than mathematical manner. It focuses on economic development within today’s Post Covid, Brexit, Ukraine War and Trumpian MAGA fragmenting world. Whilst explaining the underlying economic theories, we unpack the complex interactions between the economic and social within the overarching construct of "Cumulative Causation" to equip the reader to evaluate competing ideas, policy proposals and associated theories, to enable critical evaluation of the offered solutions. Set in a context of perceived exceptionalism where failure risks shifting constructive Patriotism into acrimonious Nationalism, the book proposes a framework to drive economic progress that uses Brexit and underlying economic concerns as a spur to urge re-establishing Entrepreneurial Capitalism.