Author: Francine (page 39 of 90)

Let’s Kick Private Equity Out of Nursing Homes

NOT ONLY IN THE US8 Private equity’s presence in health care has been, in a word, disastrous. The complex financialized ownership structure that private equity has imposed on health care facilities has shuttered rural health care providers, overcharged and denied care to elderly patients, and even delayed wheelchair repairs. In nursing homes, private equity has killed. Americans for Financial Reform has uncovered deeply concerning levels of infection and death in private equity-owned nursing homes compared to all others.  A broad-based coalition is now circulating a petition to demand that policy makers protect nursing homes from Wall Street greed. Add your name and, at the link below, learn more about what we can do. Americans for Financial Reform’s campaigner Ricardo Valadez explains federal proposals to mandate nursing home ownership transparency and create safe nurse-to-patient ratios. 
READ MORE  (from Inequality.org)

The Future of European Welfare States

How, against the same neoliberal background, one tries to make different social policies in Europe …

The future of European Welfare States | Meer

How to avoid another debt crisis?

Eurodad’s reaction to the IMF/WB spring meetings 2023

Reaction: IMF/WB Spring Meetings 2023 – So-called ‘reforms’ create greater dependence on private finance and increase debt burdens – Eurodad

To end long-term unemployment?

Social enterprises can offer the long-term unemployed an exit from the vicious circle of inactivity, France is showing.

Eradicating long-term unemployment (socialeurope.eu)

Open Veins … in SouthEast Asia

In 1971, Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano published the book Open Veins of Latin America, a chronicle of colonialism and imperialism in the region. The image of an open vein is literal, in veins of ore, minerals, among other natural resources, that are being extracted and exported out of Latin America and into the United States and Europe. An open vein also denotes bleeding, as in a body. In this case, a continent being bled dry.

More than fifty years later, rich countries acknowledge that development work has to change. The global South should have a greater voice over how economic support could improve their lives. But those in power are still overlooking the dominant economic system that has shaped development.

Read IBON’s paper

Radical right’s impact on the Welfare State

Radical-right parties are transforming the welfare state, recreating a moral separation between the ‘deserving’ and ‘undeserving’.

The populist-radical-right impact on the welfare state (socialeurope.eu)

How the world’s billionaires got so rich 2023?

Yes, how?

How The World’s Billionaires Got So Rich 2023 (forbes.com)

ILO: Social Justice needed for overcoming global challenges

In statements delivered to the World Bank/International Monetary Fund Spring Meetings in Washington, the ILO Director-General, Gilbert F. Houngbo, highlighted growing inequality worldwide and the need for social justice.

He called for coherent multilateral action to strengthen the social dimension of sustainable development and economic growth – as envisaged by the ILO’s proposed Global Coalition for Social Justice.

World Bank / IMF Spring Meetings: Social justice indispensable to overcome global challenges, ILO tells World Bank/IMF

World Health Organisation at 75

World Health Day this year marks 75 years of WHO. WHO has presented a timeline for these years. You might think of different issues that could have been  highlighted. The Lancet has published its version of a timeline for WHO 75 years 

https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(23)00677-3/fulltext

How economic models kill the economy

Americans have been hammered for decades with an economic message that amounts to this: When wealthy people like me gain even more wealth through tax cuts, deregulation, and policies that keep wages low, that leads to economic growth and benefits for everyone else in the economy. And equally, that investing in you, raising your wages, forgiving your debt, or helping your family would be bad—for you! This is the trickle-down way of thinking about economic cause and effect, and there can be no doubt that it has substantially contributed to the greatest upward transfer of wealth in the history of the world.

Read the article

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