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The Austerians Take Over the NYT's News Pages: The Case of FranceDean Baker / January 16, 2014
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People Who Were Alive Through the Housing Bubble Do Not Consider Homeownership "a Way of Obtaining a Firm Financial Foothold"Dean Baker / January 15, 2014
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The Trans-Pacific Partnership Is Not a Free-Trade AgreementDean Baker / January 15, 2014
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When Is the NYT Going to Start Putting Budget Numbers in Context?Dean Baker / January 14, 2014
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For Obamacare It Matters If Enrollees Are Skewed by Health, Not AgeDean Baker / January 14, 2014
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Latin America and the Caribbean
More Forced Evictions in Rio de Janeiro: What Happened to the Statute of the City?On the night of January 7 another series of forced evictions took place in the Metrô-Manguiera favela slum in Rio de Janeiro. Approximately 500 meters from Maracaná stadium, site of the 2014 World Cup final match, 40 families were brutally kicked out of their homes by the military police who used pepper spray and tear gas grenades.
Unfortunately, this did not come as a surprise to anyone who has been following preparations for Olympics and World Cup in Rio de Janeiro. Thousands of people have already been evicted due to event-related construction projects and real estate speculation activities. They have received compensation settlements well below market rates or have been relocated to the far outskirts of the city, in violation of the City’s Organic Law which stipulates that victims of forced evictions have to be relocated close their previous residences. How can these types of activities still happen 12 years after the national Statute of the City was passed?
The Statute of the City of 2001 mandates that all cities of over 20,000 implement a Master Plan that follows a series of norms to guarantee effective public participation in all city government spending and project implementation. When the Statute was passed, cities were given a grace period of 5 years to either facilitate new Master Plans or revise their current plans to abide by the new directives. At the time, Rio de Janeiro’s 1992, 10- year plan was still in effect. With the 5 year grace period granted by the Statute of the City, it remained legally binding until 2006. The City Council passed a further, 2 year extension, however the new Master Plan was only ratified in February, 2011.
During the legislative vacuum between the expiration of the old Plan and the ratification of the new one, the City Council passed a series of laws to facilitate real estate speculation related to the World Cup and the Olympics. Furthermore, Mayor Eduardo Paes issued Decree N. 32080 on April 7, 2010, which authorizes forced evictions in all areas that the City Government decides are at risk for natural disasters. This decree is being used as a political tool to clear out areas of interest for the real estate industry in places like Providencia Favela, located in the newly gentrifying port area, where the City is building a cable car system for tourists and over 800 families are targeted for eviction. Since there was no Master Plan in effect during this period, are these new laws and decrees legal?
CEPR and / January 13, 2014
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Medical Travel: If Bill Gates Wanted to Do Something Good for the WorldDean Baker
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Larry Summers Joins the Reality-based Economics CommunityDean Baker
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Minimum Wage and PovertyJohn Schmitt / January 13, 2014
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Robert Samuelson Gives Us Another Example of the Single-Parent FallacyDean Baker / January 13, 2014
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The Obsession with Age-Skewing in Obamacare ContinuesDean Baker / January 13, 2014
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Robert Samuelson Blames “Failure” of War on Poverty on Women’s and Latino’s Insufficient Focus on Self-ImprovementShawn Fremstad / January 13, 2014
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#ShriverReport: A Woman's Nation Pushes Back From the BrinkYesterday an important study by Maria Shriver, in partnership with the Center for American Progress, was released nationwide. The Shriver Report: A Woman's Nation Pushes Back From the Brink.
"is a groundbreaking investigation into the millions of women who are doing it all and barely scraping by, struggling to provide and parent in a nation that hasn’t kept pace with the modern realities of their lives. It combines research, analysis and ideas from the nation’s top academic institutions and think tanks, essays by leading thinkers, stories of real women struggling with our modern economy, and a comprehensive poll."
CEPR and / January 13, 2014
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Latin America and the Caribbean
Haiti by the Numbers, Four Years LaterCEPR / January 12, 2014
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Kevin Drum on Marco Rubio’s Poverty Plan: Two Quick ReactionsShawn Fremstad / January 12, 2014