Conflict of Interest, Nepotism and Cronyism

A conflict of interest arises when a person, as a public sector employee or official, is influenced by personal considerations when doing his or her job. Thus, decisions are made for the wrong reasons. Perceived conflicts of interests, even when the right decisions are being made, can be as damaging to the reputation of an organisation and erode public trust, as an actual conflict of interest. In some countries, the law makes it compulsory for public agencies to have Codes of Ethics which cover these matters. Most countries consider the matter so important, and so fundamental to good administration, that they have a specific conflict of interest law. This can provide that e.g. “a State officer or employee shall not act in his official capacity in any matter wherein he has a direct or indirect personal financial interest that might be expected to impair his objectivity or independence of judgment.”

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Law on Ministers Duties‏ by Charles Wilkin QC

By his oath of office a Minister undertakes to carry out his functions in good faith for the benefit of the people of St. Kitts and Nevis and to use his powers only for proper purposes. These are traditionally described as “fiduciary duties”. If he allows his personal interest to conflict with those duties and he benefits from such conflict… Read More

Are All Politicians Scamps Until Proven Otherwise?

Politician: https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/politician 1 A person who is professionally involved in politics, especially as a holder of an elected office: ‘a veteran communist politician’ ‘a local politician’ 1.1 US A person who acts in a manipulative and devious way, typically to gain advancement within an organization. Scamp:  https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/scamp 1 A person, especially a child, who is mischievous in a likeable… Read More

Watch “Jeffrey Sachs | Keynote 1 | Subjective well-being over the life course” on YouTube

Jeff Sachs delivers one of the keynote addresses on “Economics for the Common Good” at the conference “Subjective well-being over the life course: Evidence and policy implications” held at the London School of Economics and Political Science on 12-13 December 2016.

The conference was organised by OECD, CEPREMAP, What Works Centre for Wellbeing , and the CEP.

Jeff Sachs is an American economist and director of The Earth Institute at Columbia University, where he holds the title of University Professor. He is known as one of the world’s leading experts on economic development and the fight against poverty.

Why should governments care about people’s wellbeing? How would policy change if raising wellbeing was the objective?

Supported by the What Works Centre for Wellbeing, this event was a landmark conference reporting the first results from a collaboration between the London School of Economics Centre for Economic Performance, the CEPREMAP Wellbeing Observatory at the Paris School of Economics, the OECD, and an international consortium of researchers.

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CBI in 60 Minutes:  A Reflection by Patrick Martin, MD

CBI in 60 Minutes:  A Reflection Patrick Martin, MD Citizen & Student January 3, 2017 Actually, the CBI piece on 60 Minutes lasted eighteen minutes; sufficient time to inhale in anticipation of a mauling. It could have been worse. 60 minutes is an influential program.  At times, its content has direct and latent links to government… Read More

“The Monsters Within: Capital, Cancer, and Crisis” by Benjamin C. Wilson

Reproduced from: http://www.binzagr-institute.org/working-paper-no-114/ Binzagr Institute for Sustainable Prosperity Working Paper No. 114 October 2016 The Monsters Within: Capital, Cancer, and Crisis Benjamin C. Wilson Abstract This paper critiques Marx’s use of the vampire as a metaphor for capital, by suggesting that cancer offers political economists a more appropriate lexicon to describe capitalism’s exploitative and destructive nature.… Read More