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" ... "Financial regulators may dislike VCs because of their anonymity or cross-border circulation. Such concerns may be legitimate in some instances but must not be generalised. In most cases, transactions in VCs result from the free business choices of economic agents and, therefore, should be treated by regulators as any other financial transaction or instrument—that is, proportionally to their market importance, complexity, and associated risks," the report authors, from the Center for Social and Economic Research, wrote. ... "
" ... Beware, then, those who believe that general experience is a substitute for specific experience—or that all situations are somehow analogous. Beware also generalised claims of advisory success. Sometimes, of course, circumstances can be reduced to their lowest common denominator, and reframing problems can help advisors and clients find common ground. But the more directly relevant the advisor’s experience is to the matter at hand, the more useful the advice on offer will be. ... "
" ... Debate is raging within the community of international privacy professionals as to whether this week's judgment permits of the use of the EU Standard Contractual Clauses mechanism for EU to U.S. data transfers. One perspective is that the arc of legal ambiguity affects only those U.S. entities that are directly subject to the rules in FISA section 702 and Executive Order 12333, as they pertain to generalised surveillance of foreign nationals abroad, which would cover the likes of telecommunications backbone providers and ISPs, with entities falling outside of these areas being able to use Standard Contractual Clauses, on an ongoing basis, or as an alterative to the use of Privacy Shield. These are complex legal issues and the law is not settled, so concerned entities need to take considered advice, but regardless of how this issue is resolved, this week's judgment should quickly lead to a conclusion that data use needs to be minimised, not least to reduce the risk of conflict with the EU legal order. ... "
" ... We can in fact put this more simply. A good guide to what public policy should be is to look around the world and see what does in fact work as public policy elsewhere. So, say, we see that generalised price fixing in Venezuela has brought that economy to its knees, low corporate taxation has Ireland producing stellar growth. So, obviously, we should abjure price fixing (yes, obviously including minimum wages as well as consumer prices) and tax capital and corporates more lightly. ... "
" ... While it is not terribly edifying to search for the next socio-political breakdown, two further thoughts are worth drawing out in this regard. The first concerns emerging economies. Last week the IMF released growth forecasts for the chief economies of the world. What was striking was the relatively sluggish forecast growth for emerging economies, with a generalised rise in poverty. A structural slowing in growth in emerging nations will go against the grain of steadily rising prosperity of recent decades, and this could provide the backdrop to a more challenging political backdrop in Brazil, Ethiopia, Venezuela, Turkey and Pakistan to name a few countries where faltering economics, identity and ethnicity are faultlines. ... "