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Policy Summer 2002

Vol. 18 No. 4 (Summer, 2002)

Policy Magazine Summer 2002 issue.

  • FEATURE: Does Prison Work?
    Nicole Billante and Peter Saunders | 09 Sep 2002
    During the 1990s, the United States experienced a significant drop in the incidence of most categories of crime, while in Australia serious crime rates went up. A key difference appears to be that in the US more offenders ended up in prison.
  • FEATURE: Towards a Global Tax Cartel?
    David R. Burton | 12 Dec 2002
    The OECD is using the post-September 11 political climate to browbeat so-called tax havens into dismantling legal and constitutional safeguards protecting financial privacy so that high-taxing EU governments can get the information they need to tax (again) income sabed or invested in offshore jurisdictions.
  • FEATURE: The New Fiscal imperialism
    Terry Dwyer | 12 Dec 2002

    In an effort to raise more revenue to fund their ageing welfare states, OECD governments are trying to turn low-tax jurisdictions into fiscal colonies by forcing them to 'harmonise' their legal and administrative systems so as to collect more income tax for EU countries.

  • FEATURE: Environmental Trade Sanctions
    A. Nicholas | 12 Dec 2002
    What is at stake? In trying to enshire new WTO rules justifying punitive trade sanctional on environmental grounds, the European Union is seeking to protect its farmers, thus denying developing countries the full benefits, through market access, of an open world trading system.
  • FEATURE: Green Protectionism
    Denis Dutton and Wolfgang Kasper | 12 Dec 2002
    Behind the strident campaigns of Kyoto Protocol promoters and global warming activists lies blatant self-interest in justifying a new form of protectionism that would protect the EU's ageing industrial base while shackling competition from other countries.
  • INTERVIEW: Economic Freedom
    Wolfgang Kasper | 12 Dec 2002

    The 'Haves' and the 'Have Nots.'

    Four leading liberal thinkers discuss the problems of development in the third world, the effect of the 'aid industry' and the anti-globalisation movement.

  • COMMENT: The Crisis Within Islam
    Richard W. Bulliet | 12 Dec 2002
    The real 'clash of civilisations' is not a confrontation between the West and Islam but an intra-civilisational battle between different versions of Islam, pointing to a crisis of authority over what Islam really stands for that must be resolved.
  • COMMENT: Knowledge, Demagoguery and Democracy: A Hayekian perspective
    Alex Robson | 12 Dec 2002

    What exactly did Hayek mean when he wrote that a parochial belief in democracy independent of the values that it promotes can be as devastating as a belief in the 'common good' or the 'general welfare'?

  • REVIEW ARTICLE: Is Globalisation Good or Bad For Poor People?
    Helen Hughes AO | 12 Dec 2002

    Imagine There's No Country: Poverty, Inequality and Growth in the Era of Globalization by Surjit Bhalla (Institute for International Economics, 2002.)

    Globalization, Living Standards and Inequality: Recent Progress and Continuing Challenges Edited by D. Gruen, T. O'Brien and J. Lawson (Reserve Bank of Australia and Australian Territory, 2002.)

    Exaggerating estimates of poverty has become a growth industry. Now the World Bank has been accused of using its monopoloy of data to double the estimated extent of poverty in developing countries.

     

  • REVIEW: The Enlightenment and the Origins of European Australia
    Greg Melleuish | 12 Dec 2002
    The Enlightenment and the Origins of European Australia by John Gascoigne (Cambridge University Press, 2002.)
  • BOOK REVIEW: The Voluntary City
    Jeremy Shearmur | 12 Dec 2002

    The Voluntary City Edited by David T. Beito, Peter Gordon and Alexander Tabarrok (University of Michigan Press and The Independent Institute, 2002.)

  • BOOK REVIEW: Does Education Matter?
    Andrew Norton | 12 Dec 2002

    Does Education Matter? Myths About Education and Economic Growth by Alison Wolf (Penguin Books, 2002.)

  • BOOK REVIEW: The Global Market For Higher Education
    Christopher Pokarier | 12 Dec 2002

    The Global Market for Higher Education: Sustainable Competitive Strategies for the New Millenium by Tim Mazzorol and Geoffrey Norman Soutor (Edward Elgar, 2002.)

  • BOOK REVIEW: Can Japan Compete?
    Helen Hughes AO | 12 Dec 2002
    Can Japan Compete? by Michael E. Porter, Hirotaka Takeuchi and Mariko Sakakibara (MacMillan Press Ltd, 2000.)
  • BOOK REVIEW: Happiness and Hardship
    Richard Tooth | 12 Dec 2002
    Happiness and hardship: Opportunity and Insecurity in New Market Economics by Carol Graham and Stefano Pettinato (Brookings Institution Press, 2002.)
  • BOOK REVIEW: The Prince's New Clothes
    Chris Leithner | 12 Dec 2002
    The Prince's New Clothes: Why do Australians Dislike their Politicians? by David Burchell and Andrew Leigh (University of NSW Press, 2002.)