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From the page: "No wonder everyone wants to be a banker, investor, or [insert beancounter here]. There's no money left in anything else. That's the big problem behind the zombieconomy. We don't reward people for creating, growing, nurturing, or even remixing assets. We just... more
Reviewed by nixande Jul 07, 09:24am ( 3 reviews ) • harvardbusiness.org
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Rated by nixande on Jul 07, 9:24am
From the page: "No wonder everyone wants to be a banker, investor, or [insert beancounter here]. There's no money left in anything else. That's the big problem behind the zombieconomy. We don't reward people for creating, growing, nurturing, or even remixing assets. We just reward them for allocating the same old assets. "
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Rated by kidindigo on Jun 30, 11:53am
If the world's biggest pop star only made $12 million a year from his recordings, why would anyone make serious music? Where did the rest of the money go? Why, straight into record labels' pockets. Did they make better music with it? Nope -- they made Britney and Lady GaGa. And that's how they killed themselves: by underinvesting in quality, to rake in the take.
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Rated by majorwho on Jun 29, 11:29am
Michael Jackson and the Zombieconomy. Umair Haque explains the real problem with the economy. We don't reward people for creating, growing, nurturing, or even remixing assets. We just reward them for allocating the same old assets.
