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Artigos sobre grandes nomes do nosso campo: Jan Timbergen (Nobel em 1969) numa matéria do arquivo do NYTimes falando um pouco sobre países desenvolvidos e sub e taxação progressiva como uma melhor saída para diminuir desigualdades: https://www.nytimes.com/1970/01/16/archives/for-the-underdeveloped-a-plea-against-disastrous-cuts-in-aid.html; e Frank Ramsey pela New Yorker, amigo de Keynes, e outro que nos ensinou sobre taxação:
"Ramsey hoped to turn his essay about truth and probability into a book, which he worked on in the late twenties, but during this time he also produced two articles for The Economic Journal, which was edited by Keynes. One was the article on savings—Ramsey mentioned to Keynes that it was “much easier to concentrate on than philosophy”—and the other was about tax, and ultimately no less consequential. Its key proposal is that, given certain conditions, the rates of sales taxes should be set in such a way that the production of each taxed commodity falls by the same proportion. The tax article, like the savings one, eventually became the basis of a subfield of economics concerned with “optimal taxation,” and changed the way economists thought about public finance." (https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2020/05/04/the-man-who-thought-too-fast).
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Descobri o Five Books pela publicação do Ricardo Reis por lá; gostei desses dois: https://fivebooks.com/best-books/economics-coronavirus-ricardo-reis/ e https://fivebooks.com/best-books/alex-ross-music-writing/
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E é sempre bom acordar com algo novo do Milton pra ouvir, no caso a nova versão de Cais com Criolo e Amaro Freitas (um dos músicos que mais tenho ouvido; dos grandes talentos que surgiram no país nesses tempos!). Tô me aventurando no jazz japonês também, ando escutando Ryo Fukuy e Hozan Yamamoto
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Planos pra daqui a pouco são adiantar a escrita da Monografia (alocação de fatores dos fundos de pensão pré e pós- QE, o de outrora, não este) e assistir o Gauguin - Viagem ao Taiti que o Varilux liberou
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