text Zoom: SML
Welcome: Member
 

    Contact Us

    University Engagement
    Level 1, 230 North Terrace
    The University of Adelaide
    SA 5005 Australia

    Phone: +61 8 8313 5800

    alumni@adelaide.edu.au


     Â Â 

    2012 Research Tuesdays July

     
    Fiscal Fraternity 

    How market-based economies won the world
    and why we must adapt to continue prospering
     



    Attendance is FREE and RSVP is essential

    Adelaide onLION Members - Click HERE or on the Registration button at the top of the page(Priority Registration)
    Non Members - Fill out the public form

    Since emerging in the 1800s, the market-based economy has experienced a tumultuous rise to prominence.  In the early 1900s, international tensions over wealth distribution sparked WWI and the rise of communism and fascism. Then came the Great Depression and a monumental clash of ideologies in WWII and the Cold War.

    By century's end, capitalism had emerged clearly dominant, albeit tempered by governmental controls to protect the disadvantaged and spread opportunity. Prosperity and equality were unprecedented and, broadly speaking, still are. But a new challenge has emerged: how are we to live in such an interdependent world? Can we address shared threats? Agree on common responsibilities?

    In this detailed presentation, the University of Adelaide's Professor Richard Pomfret will map capitalism's influential journey and argue that to continue enjoying its benefits we now require a global Age of Fraternity.

    Speaker: Richard Pomfret is a Professor of Economics at the University of Adelaide. He is a former Professor of Economics at Johns Hopkins University, Washington DC, and has published over 100 articles and 17 books, including 2011's The Age of Equality: The twentieth century in economic perspective.

     
    Contact Information
    p: 8303 3692
    e: research.tuesdays@adelaide.edu.au
     
    Date & Location
    Date: 10/07/2012
    Time: 5:30 PM to 6:30 PM
    Location: North Terrace Campus
    Horace Lamb Lecture Theatre