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09 June 2010

Market crap

Apple’s ‘value’ exceeding that of Microsoft is an illusion, says JASON WALSH

‘They get their cash and they deserve it—so why can’t I have my Plato?’

Business jargon disguises the fact that moxy is what counts in capitalism. Fine, but can we cut the instrumentalist agenda, asks STEPHEN RAINEY

Monopoly money cuts and the toy-town economy

70 per cent of the North’s economy is state subsidised – it’s time to stop playing with the toy economy, says STEPHEN RAINEY

07 June 2010

Oxfams to the left of me, Oxfams to the right. Business? Missing in action

The North is about to pay a very high price for its isolation from both the British and Irish polities

06 June 2010

Anglo-Keynesian government

Slashing government spending doesn’t sound like Keynesian economics but it is when it’s done to prop-up failing businesses, says JASON WALSH

03 June 2010

This is no ‘bailout’ of Greece

Greece will suffer due to the EU intervention, it’s French and German banks that are getting bailed-out, says JASON WALSH

17 May 2010

Catastophism for capitalism

Recessions are better for the right, says DOUG HENWOOD

07 May 2010

Greek lessons

The trouble in Greece underlines two important lessons: austerity packages don’t have to accepted and that frustrated violent actions achieve nothing, says JASON WALSH

06 May 2010

Democracy victim of hedge fund managers

DOMHNALL Ó COBHTAIGH asks, why has a hedge fund has been allowed to trump democracy in Greece?

25 April 2010

Call me the North London slasher

David Cameron’s slash-and-burn policies could see the Unionist/Tory marriage collapse before it’s consummated, says STEPHEN RAINEY but there’s another problem lurking in the long grass

17 April 2010

Attack of the kiddy bikinis

The Penny’s moral panic is a sideshow – the real story is the infantalisation of adult women, says DAN JEWESBURY

15 April 2010

Lie back and think of the bondholders

COLETTE BROWNE is not impressed with the ‘fighting Irish’

14 April 2010

Anglo – a class act

DOMHNALL Ó COBHTHAIGH explains how Anglo, AIB and Bank of Ireland forced him to leave Sinn Féin and how Anglo in particular typifies the follies of Irish economics

13 April 2010

Should we have let Anglo go?

Suggestions on what to do with the parasitic new Anglo Irish (Bank) class from forth contributors GERARD CASEY, STEPHEN KINSELLA and JASON WALSH

11 April 2010

Quinn’s ‘zaibatsu’-lite comes tumbling down

Quinn’s diversification and attempt at vertical integration was its ultimate insurance against tough times – it’s a pity the authorities in the border counties didn’t think similarly, says JASON WALSH

07 April 2010

It’s not Quinn that’s insolvent, it’s Ireland

The Quinn Group’s difficulties reflect failure of Irish economic policy – and the government’s response, says DOMHNALL Ó COBHTHAIG

02 April 2010

This union won’t get you. Much

‘What do we want? Not much. When do we want it? Er…’

31 March 2010

Nama’s lesson for socialists

Nationalisation is not public ownership, says JASON WALSH

30 March 2010

The upside of Nama

A disastrous ‘bad bank’ and worse policy, the National Assets Management Agency has one thing going for it: at least people are talking

26 March 2010

My tech, not theirs

Why do we have to ‘break’ information technology devices to get them to do what they were supposed to do in the first place, asks TERENCE J. LAVERTY

20 March 2010

Google: neither good nor evil

Google is a business and that’s why it acts the way it does – so why single it out for critique?

19 March 2010

Communism for everybody – except you

From Google, through the banks, to the arts, everyone is arguing for their own private communist society to protect them from the ravages of the market, says JASON WALSH

18 March 2010

Essay: the forward march of republicanism, halted

Republican writer LIAM O’RUAIRC says the jig is up for Sinn Féin but argues that republicanism is, like modernity itself, unfinished business

17 March 2010

Wherever green is worn out

Forget St Patrick’s Day, it’s St Tina’s Day in Ireland, says JASON WALSH

15 March 2010

Ryanair’s hot air

The ‘promise’ of jobs at Dublin airport is an empty one

05 March 2010

Brown and Cameron’s hangdog looks

Is Britain headed for a hung parliament, asks JASON WALSH – and does it matter?

19 February 2010

The Greek disease

Whatever about the ‘necessity’ of austerity packages, anti-Greek sentiment is inflated by prejudice and unmasks EU bully-boy tactics

17 February 2010

The Euro economy in your pocket

As the Greek economy continues to tank many are wondering if joining the Euro was the right idea. JASON WALSH says it doesn’t matter which currency you have, what matters is how much of it you have in your pocket

15 January 2010

forth elsewhere: The green panic over China is a re-run of the racist yellow peril

China-bashing has a long and ugly history, says forth editor JASON WALSH, writing in Global Comment

18 December 2009

In defence of the striking trolley dollies

Despite BA’s High Court injunction to block a 12-day Christmas strike, it was a fitting end to the Year of Surreal Industrial Relations that it took airline cabin crew to stand up for workers, says TIM BLACK

17 December 2009

Left on the shelf

Having spent three decades predicting the collapse of capitalism real soon now the left has been blindsided by the global recession. Here’s why:

Marketing myths

Both boosters and critics of capitalism should so a little more (free) market research. JASON WALSH crunches the numbers.

09 December 2009

State capitalism in Britain

In light of the cod conflict between the private and public sectors in Ireland, forth reprints this article by James Heartfield which shows that business and the state are intertwined

08 December 2009

Leader column: tomorrow’s budget for cut-price economics

Whatever is announced tomorrow one things for sure: Ireland’s intellectually bankrupt political class has no solutions to offer. Here’s why:

07 December 2009

Copenhagen: we need development, not sustainability

The only thing that is truly unsustainable is a belief in sustainability says ROB LYONS

04 December 2009

Buy Irish politics

A collapse of political legitimacy is the price of the tricolourful recession-busting ‘buy Irish’ campaign, says Stephen Rainey

28 November 2009

Review: Green Capitalism: Manufacturing Scarcity in an Age of Abundance

Jason Walsh reviews a book that argues capitalism’s green critics are giving solace to a business class that no longer believes in itself

24 November 2009

Strike one against the government

Today’s ‘day of action’ by unions had the feeling of a set-piece battle, but not because union members aren’t committed

17 November 2009

Money matters: why AIB should pay its executives whatever it wants

The assault on the underserving rich will end up as an attack on the living standards of the rest of us, says Jason Walsh

16 November 2009

Leader column: Let’s politicise the economy

There are no solutions to the economic crisis because no-one will think politically

13 November 2009

Give me what’s mine

Marking the recent visit of Arthur Scargill to Ireland, former Yorkshire miner Edward Devoy compares the era of the miners’ strike to today

12 November 2009

Concern about poverty does nothing to address real economic need

Who are you calling poor? Endless pontificating about ‘The Poor’, whether in the third world or closer to home, gives intellectual cover to real economic division, says Jason Walsh

11 November 2009

Forced deportations aren’t racist – they’re just stupid

Calls for immigrants to ‘go home’ are a result of a failure to argue for open borders

09 November 2009

The state and recession

With unions taking to the streets demanding no cuts to public sector pay forth asks what, exactly, is the role of the state in Ireland’s economy?

04 November 2009

forth elsewhere: technology will set us (partially) free

forth editor Jason Walsh writes in the new Irish site teic.ie about technology’s potential to free humanity

28 October 2009

No buy zone

Of course the border distorts the economy – this imaginary line has distorted everything else in Irish life since the 1920s. Forget shopping and look at the real economic story, says Jason Walsh

27 October 2009

Ibec and Ictu: two cheeks of the same arse

The phoney war of words between the bosses and workers doesn’t convince Jason Walsh

21 October 2009

Bashing the bank workers

Attacks on AIB for seeking to raise staff salaries unmask the austerity drive at the heart of Irish life, says Jason Walsh

20 October 2009

It’s the politics, stupid

imageAre bank economists are bad for the economy, asks Stephen Kinsella reporting from the Dublin Economic Workshop

08 October 2009

Stallman on the future

In the first of a series of essays entitled ‘What is to be done?’, free software activist and computer programmer Richard Stallman gives his thoughts on the state of the world and what should done about it.

10 August 2009

Labour pains

Is the return of the strike a sign of renewed industrial militancy or just a pale shadow of bygone days?

By Jason Walsh

What happens when angry citizens crash the gates of America’s CEO class?

They chicken out at the last minute. Mark Ames recounts the doomed bus tour of AIG executives’ posh homes in Connecticut.

Nama or nationalisation?

The Irish public is being offered Hobson’s choice.

By Jason Walsh

Content producers of the world unite!

By focusing on consumption, both sides in the debate over illegal file-sharing ignore the value of creative labour.

By Jason Walsh

29 April 2009

Cometh the hour, cometh not the green man

S.O.S: the Celtic Tiger has tanked

05 March 2009

Irish uprising

Irish uprising?Irish people are angry about the recession, but there’s little evidence that the land of green is turning red