Signatures 378 total
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151
Name: Marzia Grassi on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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152
Name: Stephanie Blankenburg on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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153
Name: Ashok Chakravarti on Mar 2, 2010Comments: Two of the most successful Asian economies, China and India, to protect their high rates of growth have taken measures to increase effective demand, including increasing public spending. The policy debate in the West would do well to learn something from this experience.Flag
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154
Name: G. Chris Rodrigo on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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155
Name: Anonymous on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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156
Name: Mark O'Sullivan on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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157
Name: Albert Puig on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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158
Name: Jeff Madrick on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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159
Name: Sergio Rossi on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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160
Name: Ahmad Seyf on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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161
Name: Prof Peter Howells on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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162
Name: Lawrence Busch on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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163
Name: Peter Challen on Mar 2, 2010Comments: Let us all study with due attention proposals for monetary and fiscal reform, that return people's credit to the state, freeing it from usury, while widening capital ownership; and replace regressive taxes with progressive collection of community value for the community through a Land valuation Tax, to decrease the insidious increase in the rich/poor gap.Flag
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164
Name: Ronald Stamper on Mar 2, 2010Comments: In addition, we should restore to the nation one of its most important powers usurped from us by the banks: the creation of money. Whereas official money enters the economy without interest being charged, bank money, which is debt created from thin air when loans are made, demands the payment of interest. The present system is intrinsically unstable only avoiding collapse by the continual growth of demand and, hence, the despoiling of the plant. Green economy needs money reform. tFlag
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165
Name: Anthony Kasozi on Mar 2, 2010Comments: We need to pay attention to provisioning over the longer term and not simply winning a short term political advantage that we pay for in worse economic, social and environmental outcomes for many years hence...Flag
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166
Name: Dannreuther on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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167
Name: Reza Fazeli on Mar 2, 2010Comments: The budget debate in the U.S is not that different from the U.K.Flag
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168
Name: John Hillard on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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169
Name: M June Flanders on Mar 2, 2010Comments: The issue is broader, in my view, than that of the UK budget alone.Flag
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170
Name: Jorge Bateira, PhD Student Univ. Of Manchester on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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171
Name: Rolf Czeskleba-Dupont on Mar 2, 2010Comments: As a 'foreigner' I nevertheless subscribe to the petition, as it is an issue for Denmark, Germany and the EU alike to promote a really transformative Green New Deal.Flag
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172
Name: Juan J. Durán on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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173
Name: Julian Le Grand on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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174
Name: Professor Mariana Mazzucato on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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175
Name: Vitor Neves on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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176
Name: JC Spender on Mar 2, 2010Comments: Cutting the deficit may well be eating our seed-corn. But Keynesianism is limited by the nation's ability to absorb the debt. We are seeing that countries can go broke too, something beyond what Keynes imagined when the British Empire was still relatively intact. That's gone, so there's an upper bound to the policy. Exactly where that is, who knows?Flag
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177
Name: Giovanni Dosi on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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178
Name: Richad Fuqiang Zhu on Mar 2, 2010Comments: I support Prof. Hodgeson's propose. However, in my opnion, the key of economic crisis can be attrubited to social insititutions.Flag
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179
Name: Fabiano A. S. Dalto on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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180
Name: Edith Kuiper on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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181
Name: John T. Harvey, Professor Of Economics on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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182
Name: W R J Peiris (MR) on Mar 2, 2010Comments: Agreed. Encouraging to see fresh thinkingFlag
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183
Name: Stuart Crane on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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184
Name: Juliet Annansingh on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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185
Name: Liz Ainslie on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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186
Name: Mikel Navarro on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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187
Name: Sunita Pandey on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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188
Name: Matt Hancock on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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189
Name: Conceição Soares on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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190
Name: Mehrdad VAhabi on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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191
Name: Vladimir Cvijanovic on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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192
Name: NOEMI LEVY ORKLIK on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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193
Name: Margaret Levenstein on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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194
Name: Stuart Holland on Mar 2, 2010Comments: Good petition. A Green New Deal for Europe should issue its own bonds which, like those of the US , do not count on the debt of its member states. This does not need a federal government or a fiscal union. The European Investment Bank has been doing it and is remitted to investment both in the environment and green technologies.Flag
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195
Name: Kurt Dopfer on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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196
Name: Kanchana N Ruwanpura on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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197
Name: Peter McMylor on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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198
Name: Anonymous on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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199
Name: Robin Naylor on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag
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200
Name: Dr Philip Walden on Mar 2, 2010Comments:Flag