He wrote about Brazil as this sleeping giant shackled by inflation, and fifty years later, that's still arguably the biggest
economic story playing out in South America.
Not exact matches
Amid the political uncertainty in Europe prompted by upcoming elections and the start of Brexit negotiations, another
story is quietly
playing out, involving improved
economic and corporate conditions.
If Merkel, Hollande and co
play hardball, and if the
stories of
economic punishment are proven to be true, then Scotland, England and Wales will face a severe
economic storm.
Of course, most narratives of Trump's rise have emphasized just the opposite: widespread distrust of elites, the sheer number of Republicans vying for the nomination, a weak
economic recovery, and the media's fixation on outrageous and «shareable»
stories play a part in almost any thinkpiece on his candidacy.
His
story «The Machine That Would Predict the Future» explores the promise of the FuturICT project, an attempt to build a computer model of all the social,
economic, ecological and scientific factors at
play in the world.
«INSIDE JOB» (***) I was certainly in a receptive mood to «Kaboom» after emerging from US documentarian Charles Ferguson's sophomore feature «Inside Job» — a thorough, incisive if faintly dry breakdown of the current
economic crisis that
plays a little like last year's «Capitalism: A Love
Story» on a heavy dose of Ritalin.
They tackle complex subjects — like balancing environmental and
economic concerns — even as they seek to master the extraordinary but complicated hardware and software that have leveled the
playing field of filmmaking so that students need not wait to be out in the «real» world to convey important
stories.