Friday, March 20, 2026

100 Best Economics Blogs to Follow in 2026

 

Miloš Forman

“The cornerstone of democracy is free press – that's the cornerstone. I'm convinced if the press ... it was not possible, of course, but if the free press existed through this century, there wouldn't be Hitler there wouldn't be Stalin, there wouldn't be all this incredible price people have to pay for their freedom.”

 

Miloš Forman, film director and screenwriter


Atlassian defends firing engineer for suggesting CEO is ‘rich jerk’


From Vienna’s rooftops, the Kremlin is listening in Russia has increased satellite dish activity on buildings it owns in Austrian capital


“The US is hurtling towards autocracy at a faster rate than Hungary and Turkey”. The Varieties of Democracy Institute: “Our data on the USA goes back to 1789. What we’re seeing now is the most severe magnitude of democratic backsliding ever…”


Dear allies of America, please don’t confuse our president with us Robert Reich

 We are trying our best to resist him, contain  him and remove him from office as quickly as we possibly can. Thank you for your patience


Jeffrey Epstein’s elite relationships visualised: the prince, the sultan and the politicians

Guardian analysis of more than a million emails reveals financier’s deep and longstanding ties with the wealthy and powerful


International law is in retreat. We cannot let it die Even defenders of the rules are speaking of them in the past tense. But they remain indispensable, argues historian Margaret MacMillan


100 Best Economics Blogs to Follow in 2026FeedSpot. Includes Naked Capitalism. A special shout out to the esteemed commentariat for making this site such a valuable resource!



Are the small tax havens really all that safe?

That is the theme of my latest Free Press column, excerpt:

If you are a Dubai resident, the chance that you will die in this conflict is very small. But you no longer can treat safety as something you do not have to think about. And you may face some uncertainty about when and how you can leave the country, a question that formerly was never in doubt. So two major advantages have vanished, even if the current conflict is settled soon. Another problem is that a substantial part of your supply of desalinated fresh water can be taken out by a well-placed missile.

More generally, the war underlines how tenuous the position of a place like Dubai is in the geopolitical order. I have enjoyed my three trips to Dubai, but I never felt entirely safe there on anything beyond a day-to-day basis. I always knew the place relied on protection from the United States and a certain degree of forbearance from its larger neighbors, including Saudi Arabia. Both Dubai and its larger encompassing unit, the United Arab Emirates, are extremely small.

And:

In most daily life, the small tax havens will feel safer than Cape Town. In the longer run, I am not entirely sure. My longer-run plans might be more robust in Cape Town. Or in Brazil. Or in Mexico. Those are all fairly dangerous places that nonetheless seem to have considerable macro stability in the longer run. South Africa has a pre-1930 history of taking in persecuted Jews from Europe and giving them an environment where they can thrive. Even the coming and going of apartheid, in 1948 and 1994, did not change South Africa’s high degree of security from foreign threats.

Dare I suggest that these larger places are more fun and also have more soul?

Worth a ponder.

I would much rather be exiled to Cape Town than to Dubai, all things considered, even assuming away the current conflict in the Middle East.


Davids Clune and Blunt:

Les Jeckeln born in 1926 - A transcript of an oral history interview with him is available through the NSW Parliament


Archive directory unlocks secrets of world’s knowledge repositories

“For the first time, journalists and researchers have a searchable directory of over 1,500 of the world’s knowledge repositories. The new publication is from Newsjunkie.net, the data-journalism resource known for its “Who’s Behind the News” reporting. Guide to Public Archives II, a fully revised and expanded directory of the world’s artifact and document repositories, is designed to help journalists and scholars quickly and easily locate essential research materials. 

The updated guide now includes a full representation of essential archives from major institutions such as the Library of Congress and the Vatican Apostolic Archive to regional and specialized collections devoted to particular communities, disciplines, and eras, such as the Timorese Resistance Archive. Each entry has been significantly expanded, with richer descriptions, improved structure, and more detailed information on collections, access policies, and contact points. 

The Guide to Public Archives II has never been more necessary. It arrives at a moment of heightened urgency around the preservation of public records. As federal agencies remove datasets, government websites are compromised by misinformation, and historical records whitewashed, archivists, researchers, and journalists need a destination untarnished by ideology. The Guide to Public Archives II is a permanent, free reference to the world’s institutions that hold the record of human activity not altered by prejudice or partisanship…