COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Ellen McArthur Lectures > Safeguarding the future: families, education, and contract
Safeguarding the future: families, education, and contractAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Amy Erickson. This is the third lecture in a series of four. The future will be present one day and needs to be cared for. Who will do it and how? Prevailing interest rates define a credit time horizon. A project that needs more time to mature cannot be undertaken by business alone. Uncertainty also screens off the future and needs to be offset by government. In lecture one the UK Private Finance Initiative (PFI) (1990-2050) is in harmful defiance of these norms. Housing finance appears to defy them as well but lecture two shows that the rise of home ownership (and most infrastructure investment) accords with the model. Why are children not produced for profit? Raising them to maturity exceeds the patience of capitalists. Lecture three works out the temporal constraints on markets for education and social insurance. Credit time horizons are ethical boundaries too, and lecture four shows how transgressions give rise to corruption. Overall, time horizons determine whether business or government owns the future. This talk is part of the Ellen McArthur Lectures series. This talk is included in these lists:Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
Other listsObstetrics & Gynaecology CIBB2014 Technology Enterprise Group Seminar SeriesOther talksMachine Learning and the Future of Drug Discovery Control Design Using Differential Games – From Centralised to Decentralised Control Fuzzy Protein Theory Introduction to the U.S. Academic Job Market Neural Networks for Genomic Variant Calling The Curious Martin Folkes (1690–1754): sociability and collecting in the mid-18th century |