Should we accept economic inequalities?
Economic inequality is one of the most frequently mentioned forms of inequality and it is what is mainly included in the most recent Oxfam report.
Economic inequality is one of the most frequently mentioned forms of inequality and it is what is mainly included in the most recent Oxfam report.
In this short column on the recent Netflix blockbuster Don’t Look Up, Mateusz Ciasnocha – a participant of the Economy of Francesco from Poland and a Co-Leader of the Farm of Francesco project born within The Economy of Francesco – reflects on the movie and shares his three insights that emerged after watching and reflecting on the film with the EoF Community.
José Oscar, a Colombian economist, works on econometric models capable of directing investments: from the fight against cocaine production to the production of solar energy in favelas.
In the seminar, promoted by the Women for Economy Village, Gianna Martinengo, entrepreneur, was invited to share her experience and knowledge about the pandemic situation that changed the way of work and its impact on women's occupation.
The first seminar of the EoF Academy was held on Monday 20 December. The speakers were Mariana Reis Maria, PhD candidate in Economics (UNICAMP) – tutor Dr. Alessandro Fiorini - presenting a topic entitled Green energy finance: fiscal policies in the energy transition from an Agent-Based Model Analysis and Matheus Belucio, CEGAFE-UE University of Évora – tutor Prof. Giulio Guarini - with a presentation about the Analysis of the influence of philanthropy on eco-efficiency in 108 countries.
La EconomĂa de Francisco, un camino nuevo para rehumanizar los negocios y la economĂa. Los dĂas 11 y 12 de diciembre se organizaron ferias comerciales en las parroquias de El Caney y Santa LucĂa, Cuba, donde participaron no sĂłlo los proyectos de EconomĂa de Francisco, sino tambiĂ©n otros invitados.
Few days after Black Friday, we would like to share the interview with Olena Komisarenko, a doctoral student at the Pontifical University of St Thomas Aquinas, in Rome.
Listening to plants for a new economic paradigm is the title of the second edition of the EoF School, a higher education course promoted by The Economy of Francesco. A new experience of training and reflection for the hundreds of young economists and entrepreneurs of the world who have already registered to follow the lessons online.
How did remote working affect our lives, productivity, and well-being? Will it be the new standard after the pandemic? In response to these questions, The Economy of Francesco's thematic village, Women for economy, decided to organize a space for dialogue to understand the challenges, advantages, and disadvantages that this type of work brings with it.
Ana Tamargo is among the organizers of one of the regional gatherings on October the 2nd, 2021. We met her. “I was born and raised in Caracas, Venezuela, and 7 years ago I moved to Madrid, Spain” – Annie continues. “I am currently working at the Corporate Responsibility Department of a Food Distribution Company and I am part of the Business in Transition village of EoF”.