Production Is Directly Also Consumption

By CHEN LIANGYU

Wealth is something truly extraordinary, but it's still perishable. The exchange of equivalents will always remain the essential factor, and yet it’s a world full of apples and oranges.
Bookmark and Share

"I Will Do Anything for Love": Inside the Minds of Real Prostitutes

By REGINALD VELJANSEN

Perhaps as much as 1% of the female population in the United States has worked as a prostitute at one point or another in their lifetime. Does the real-life Julia Roberts actually find her Richard Gere waiting out there in the cold hard streets of the free market?
Bookmark and Share

The Baltic Sea Economy of Tomorrow

By NICHOLAS HAWKSMOOR

Casual observers are beginning to notice that the economic focus in the Baltic Sea region is shifting eastwards from the Skagerrak and the heart of Europe, a terrain first opened up by Julius Caesar’s infamous “deed of manhood.”
Bookmark and Share

Political Economy Is Not Technology

By EDWARD MURRAY

The State Treasury is the reserve fund and the temple. But not all that glitters is gold. It’s time to finally reveal the “very secret relationship” between private and national wealth.
Bookmark and Share

The Hiring of Day Laborers and Its Significance

By CHRISTOPHER WREN

Most statisticians agree that in capitalist production the hiring of day laborers is often a supremely characteristic index of an enterprise’s strength or weakness. In all forms of hiring by the day, family co-operation still tends to be the basis of capitalist co-operation.
Bookmark and Share