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Search Result for “reward”

Showing 1 - 10 of 59

OPINION

How to feed the world's ten billion people

Oped, Yurdi Yasmi, Published on 22/01/2026

» With the world struggling to feed eight billion people today, how will we feed ten billion by 2050?

OPINION

It's the economic history, stupid

Oped, Iker Saitua, Published on 14/01/2026

» Every year, I walk into a first-year lecture hall in Bilbao at the University of the Basque Country (EHU) and watch shoulders slump. The title of the course I'm teaching -- "Economic History" -- draws a similarly dejected reaction from my students: "Meh." "Boooring." "What's this even for?" Some call it "the history class", as if it belonged to another century.

OPINION

Prospects dim

Oped, Postbag, Published on 02/01/2026

» Re: "Land bridge will harm nature", (Opinion, Dec 31).

OPINION

The treacherous sycophancy of the populists

Oped, Michael Burleigh, Published on 15/12/2025

» Until a few days ago, it had never crossed my mind that people across Europe -- including Londoners like me -- were living in a strife‑afflicted hell hole, "suffocated" by regulations, stripped of political liberties, and bound for "civilisational erasure". So, it was with some surprise that I read this assessment in the new US National Security Strategy -- a document that echoes pseudo‑intellectual propaganda more than resembling any serious foreign‑policy analysis.

OPINION

What's to blame for inequality?

Oped, Keun Lee, Published on 01/09/2025

» Over a decade ago, Nobel laureates Daron Acemoglu and James A Robinson, together with their co-author Thierry Verdier, contrasted America's "cutthroat" brand of capitalism with Western Europe's "cuddly" version. The qualities that make cutthroat capitalism more conducive to innovation, they argued, also lead to higher levels of inequality, while cuddly reward structures tend to lead to lower growth and higher welfare. Today, inequality is soaring, notably in the United States. Do policies aimed at boosting innovation risk making a bad situation worse?

OPINION

Flat fare a good start

Oped, Editorial, Published on 17/07/2025

» The 20-baht flat fare for electric trains that will run from Oct 1 this year to Sept 30 next year is a welcome move to ease the cost of living for city commuters.

OPINION

Southeast Asia facing hidden extremist threat

Oped, Muhammad Makmun Rasyid, Published on 07/07/2025

» In May, Indonesia's counter-terrorism unit arrested an 18-year-old man in Gowa, South Sulawesi, on charges of spreading Islamic State (IS) propaganda and inciting bomb attacks on social media. Identified only as MAS, the suspect represents a deeply troubling development in Southeast Asia's struggle against terrorism: the rise of youth radicalisation driven entirely by online exposure.

OPINION

Unbury the truth

Oped, Postbag, Published on 15/05/2025

» Re: "Justice must ditch the glitz", (Editorial, May 13). 

OPINION

Hypertension hides in plain sight

Oped, Jos Vandelaer & Renu Garg, Published on 15/05/2025

» Thailand's economy has surged. Its health care system is admired. Yet a silent killer is quietly stealing lives, straining hospitals, and sapping the nation's future. That killer is hypertension -- and it's hiding in plain sight.

OPINION

Curse of casinos

Oped, Postbag, Published on 09/05/2025

» Re: "Senate to invite PM to explain casino-entertainment complex bill", (BP, May 8).