I haven't maintained a list actively since the last time I was personally active. I had plans to create an opposition research project this time around, but haven't found the time yet.
Advertisement
by Belmaria » Mon Jul 25, 2016 1:18 pm
by Belmaria » Mon Jul 25, 2016 1:26 pm
by Arkolon » Tue Jul 26, 2016 4:16 pm
by Maklohi Vai » Tue Jul 26, 2016 10:07 pm
Arkolon wrote:I'm thinking of adding a more 'mathematical' model for employment, instead of just guessing. In abstract, there is a 'capital stock', which naturally depreciates. The capital stock can be expanded through investment, public capital spending, or the capital account (FDI and the money businesses get from trade). This isn't my opinion (the bit on the capital account I'm admittedly not 100% sure about), it's how capital is typically modeled. The idea is that employment is linked with the capital stock, so more machinery needs more workers, but that, with greater output (GDP), the capital stock per worker becomes greater. Since output per worker as a function of capital per worker resembles a y = sqrt(x) function, I believe this means that the capital per worker as a function of output per worker is a y = x2 function. Basically, a 1% growth in GDP per capita means you need 1.1% more capital to hire an additional worker. I'm thinking of keeping this domain at 0<x<2, 0 and 2 inclusive, so as to limit this model between 0% and 200% of $2,400, the starting GDP per capita.
So, basically, what I'm asking you is what you think the starting unemployment figure should be. 10%? 20%? 30%? 50%?
by Ainin » Tue Jul 26, 2016 11:24 pm
Recipient
Lt. Gen Adin Thems DSC
Representative of the Secretary-General of the United Nations for Elizia
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIALTHE CABINET OF ELIZIADear General,
The Home Office of the Elizian Federation, pursuant to its responsibilities for internal security and the maintenance of peace, requests that personnel of the peacekeeping detachment be dispatched to the Parliament of Elizia to remove the Honourable Mr. Alan Chan from the premises in accordance to lawful orders.
Sincerely,John Chiu______Kevin Katdare
Home Secretary
______President of Elizia
by United Nations for Elizia » Wed Jul 27, 2016 1:15 am
Recipients
The Rt. Hon. Kevin Katdare, President of Elizia
The Hon. John Chiu, Home Secretary
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIALUNITED NATIONS MISSION IN ELIZIADear Sirs,
The United Nations Mission in Elizia, understanding the nature of the situation and similarly believing in the maintenance of peace, will honor the request made by the President and Home Secretary. Personnel of the peacekeeping detachment will be dispatched to the Parliament of Elizia to remove the Honourable Mr. Alan Chan from the premises.
Sincerely,Lt. Gen Adin Thems DSC______
Representative of the Secretary-General of the United Nations for Elizia
Home Secretary
by Britanno 3 » Wed Jul 27, 2016 4:34 am
by Costa Fierro » Wed Jul 27, 2016 6:00 am
by Nariterrr » Wed Jul 27, 2016 6:48 am
An Act to Prohibit and Deter Corruption
| Author: The Hon. Ahmed Corbor (SLP) |
| Sponsors:
An act to prohibit curroption and to find ways to combat corruption.Chapter I - Defining Corruption1. Corruption shall be the act whereby a member of an office of public trust dishonestly or fraudulently conducts himself or herself in office or;
2. mismanages monies and profits granted to his office in the way of bribery or;
3. violates the integrity of his or her office or;
4. encourages the act of corruption and is complacent or complicit in doing it.
5. If a person has committed at least one of the following acts, s/he shall be guilty of corruption.Chapter II - Defining Aspects of Corruption.
§1 - Bribery1. Bribery shall be the act of giving out an illegal bribe.
2. Bribery shall be defined as illegally gifting monetary units or gifts to a person in order to sway their opinion, or violating laws on donating monetary units or gifts to a politician.
3. If a person gifts an illegal bribe, s/he shall be guilty of bribery.
4. If a person receives an illegal bribe, s/he shall be guilty of bribery.
5. Bribery shall be considered a form of corruption of a government offical, all persons complicient in bribery shall also be complicient in curroption.
§2 - Embezzlement, Theft and Fraud1. Embezzlement and theft shall involve a person(s) with access to funds or assets illegally taking control of them.
2. Fraud shall involve using deception to convince the owner of funds or assets to give them up to an unauthorized party.
3. Such acts shall be considered corruption of a government official where applicable.
§3 - Extortion and blackmail1. Extortion and blackmail shall involve the use of threats to advance personal interests. Such matters can be the threat of violence or false imprisonment as well as exposure of an individual's secrets or prior crimes.
2.This includes such behavior as an influential person threatening to go to the media if they do not receive speedy medical treatment (at the expense of other patients) or;
3. threatening a public official with exposure of their secrets if they do not vote in a particular manner, or demanding money in exchange for continued secrecy.
4. If done to a government official or done by a government official, extortion and blackmail shall be considered corruption.
§4 - Abuse of discretion1. Abuse of discretion refers to the misuse of one's powers and decision-making facilities, or;
2. a judge improperly dismissing a criminal case or;
3. customs official using their discretion to allow a banned substance through a port or facility.
3. threatening a public official with exposure of their secrets if they do not vote in a particular manner, or demanding money in exchange for continued secrecy.
4. Abuse of discretion shall be considered corruption.
§5 - Favoritism, nepotism and clientelism1. Favouritism, nepotism, and clientelism shall involve the favouring of someone related to a perpetrator of corruption, such as a friend, family member or member of an association or;
2. hiring or promoting a family member or staff member to a role they are not qualified for, who belongs to the same political party as the official, regardless of merit.
4. Favoritism, nepotism, and clientelism shall be considered acts of corruption.Chapter III - Penalties1. The penalty for grand corruption, whereby it is exposed that a persons corruption caused serious harm to society, government or otherwise, shall be at least twenty years imprisonment to life imprisonment and a fine of no less than three-hundred thousand dollars, as well as a permanent seizure of all corrupted assets and a loss of public trust.
2. the penalty of general corruption, whereby a person is exposed to have committed more than one type of corruption or has repeatedly been corrupted with gross or malicious intent, shall be at least ten years imprisonment to thirty years imprisonment, a fine of no less than two-hundred thousand dollars, and a permanent seizure of all corrupted assets and a loss of public trust.
3. Corruption by bribery, whereby a briber attempts to or succeeds in bribing a government official or if a government official accepts said bribe, shall be punished by no less than five years imprisonment and no more than twenty, a fine of no less than one-hundred thousand dollars, a loss of public confidence and a permanent seizure of all corrupted assets as well as a loss of public trust.
4. General bribery, whereby a person commits bribery to a non-government official, shall be punished by at least two years and at the most ten years imprisonment, a fine of no less than ten-thousand dollars, and a seizure of all bribed assets and a loss of public confidence.
5. Corruption by embezzlement, theft, and fraud, whereby a person attempts to commit embezzlement, theft, and fraud to a government official shall be punished by no less than five years and no more than twenty years imprisonment, a fine of no less than twenty thousand dollars, a seizure of all corrupted assets and a loss of public confidence.
6. Corruption by extortion and blackmail, whereby a person attempts to extort or blackmail a government official, shall be punished by at least five years and no more than twenty years imprisonment, a fine of twenty thousand dollars, a seizure of all corrupted assets and a loss of public confidence.
7. Corruption by abuse of discretion shall be punished by at least two years and no more than ten years imprisonment, a fine of no less than ten-thousand dollars and a loss of public confidence.
8. Corruption by favoritism, nepotism, and clientelism shall be punished by a fine of no more than five thousand dollars and a loss of public confidence.
9. Corruption abroad is liable for prosecution in Elizia, seizure of said assets will be requested.Chapter IV - Detering Curroption
§1 - The Elizian Anti-Corruption Agency1. The Elizian Anti-Corruption Agency shall be responsible for monitoring and deterring corruption.
2. The Elizian Anti-Corruption Agency shall monitor public spending, spending by government official, shall monitor donations and gifts, and conduct reports.
3. The Elizian Anti-Corruption Agencies operating board shall be made up of a board of five members, each member shall be directly chosen by the government after the resignation, removal or death of another. Members of the board shall have a high moral and legal standing, and must remain uninfluenced by politics.
4. The Elizian Anti-Corruption Agency shall, upon complaint, investigate government officials and those suspected of being complicit in corruption, it's meetings shall be purely confidential until a report is drafted and sent to prosecutors.
5. The Elizian Anti-Corruption Agency shall have the right to subpoena any person to testify before the board, and if the board finds that there is evidence for criminal prosecution, the board will notify prosecutors for further questionings.
6. Repeated failure to use the Donations and Spending Log or gross misconduct of it by government officials shall constitute a felony punishable by at least two years imprisonment and a fine of no less than twenty thousand dollars. Such investigations into the validity of Donations and Spendings Logs shall be done by the Elizian Anti-Corruption Agency.
§2 - Spending and Donations Log1. Upon receiving a donation for any reason, a government official shall record that donation into his or her Spendings and Donations Log.
2. All monetary or gift giving transactions shall done by a government official or on his her behalf shall be recorded in his or her Spendings and Donations Log.
3. All government transactions, or transactions taken on the government's behalf, with the exception of those classified by law or order, shall be recorded in the Government Spending Log.
4. All orders or writs shall be written in the appropriate Spending (and Donations) Log.
5. The Spending Log of any government agency shall be available to the people and must be released on request. Personal Spending and Donation Logs of government officals shall be privy to only the Elizian Anti-Corruption Agency, who can release the log at their discretion.
§3 - Campaign Donations1. Campaign donations by private persons to Senators that do not exceed five thousand dollars shall be considered legal, or a gift not exceeding five thousand dollars. Donations can only be done once.
2. Campaign donations by groups or private interests to Senators that do not exceed twenty thousand dollars shall be considered legal, or a gift not exceeding twenty thousand dollars. Donations can only be done once.
3. Any campaign donations exceeding the legal limit shall be deemed illegal and punished as bribery. It shall be the duty of the Elizian Anti-Corruption Agency to investigate them.
4. Campaign donations shall be logged in the Spending and Donations Log of said Senator.
5. Campaigns for offices of Senators shall be publically funded, however, donations can be made to help with campaigning. Campaign contributions must be specifically used for campaigns and only campaigns, failure to comply constitutes theft of public and private assets.
§4 - Donations to Government Officials outside of elections1. Donations to government officials outside of elections shall be legal if and only if such donations does not sway the vote of a government official, such donations cannot exceed more than five thousand.
2. Lobbying a government official during a vote shall be strictly illegal and shall be considered bribery.
4. Asking or receiving donations within the Parliament building shall be strictly illegal and shall be considered bribery.
5. Asking or receiving donations to be elevated to a ministerial office shall be strictly illegal and shall be considered general corruption.
6. Asking or receiving donations from foreign powers or officers shall be strictly illegal and punished as general corruption.
§5 - Corruption Deterance System1. A Corruption Deterrence System shall be set up to monitor the transactions of a government official.
2. If a government official is found to have deposited a large sum of money quickly, acts untransparently, or is in any other way acting ambiguously, the Corruption Deterance System shall notify the Board of the Elizian Anti-Corruption Board, who will investigate.
by Britanno 3 » Thu Jul 28, 2016 10:21 am
Costa Fierro wrote:Goddamnit Britanno, what happened this time?
Ainin wrote:You need to change your flag
by Coconut Isle » Fri Jul 29, 2016 8:53 am
Arkolon wrote:I'm thinking of adding a more 'mathematical' model for employment, instead of just guessing. In abstract, there is a 'capital stock', which naturally depreciates. The capital stock can be expanded through investment, public capital spending, or the capital account (FDI and the money businesses get from trade). This isn't my opinion (the bit on the capital account I'm admittedly not 100% sure about), it's how capital is typically modeled. The idea is that employment is linked with the capital stock, so more machinery needs more workers, but that, with greater output (GDP), the capital stock per worker becomes greater. Since output per worker as a function of capital per worker resembles a y = sqrt(x) function, I believe this means that the capital per worker as a function of output per worker is a y = x2 function. Basically, a 1% growth in GDP per capita means you need 1.1% more capital to hire an additional worker. I'm thinking of keeping this domain at 0<x<2, 0 and 2 inclusive, so as to limit this model between 0% and 200% of $2,400, the starting GDP per capita.
So, basically, what I'm asking you is what you think the starting unemployment figure should be. 10%? 20%? 30%? 50%?
by Arkolon » Fri Jul 29, 2016 9:22 am
by The Sarian » Sat Jul 30, 2016 1:56 am
by South Bourbonstan » Sat Jul 30, 2016 11:11 am
by Arkolon » Sat Jul 30, 2016 11:12 am
South Bourbonstan wrote:Just wondering, I've signed up, does that mean I can take part in the senate?
by South Bourbonstan » Sat Jul 30, 2016 11:42 am
by Collatis » Sun Jul 31, 2016 10:58 am
Malgrave wrote:so has anyone created a version of the Iron Gave yet? I think my senator needs a drink or two.
PRO: social democracy, internationalism, progressivism, democracy,
republicanism, human rights, democratic socialism, Keynesianism,
EU, NATO, two-state solution, Democratic Party, Bernie Sanders
CON: conservatism, authoritarianism, totalitarianism, neoliberalism,
death penalty, Marxism-Leninism, laissez faire, reaction, fascism,
antisemitism, isolationism, Republican Party, Donald Trump
Voting Through The Ages | Voter Guide | The Presidents | Voting Without Borders
by Brandenbourg-Anhalt » Mon Aug 01, 2016 4:21 am
by Arkolon » Mon Aug 01, 2016 3:24 pm
by Belmaria » Mon Aug 01, 2016 3:38 pm
Arkolon wrote:Is foreign direct investment a net increase in capital or does it just represent the changing nature of the ownership of the capital stock?
by Arkolon » Mon Aug 01, 2016 3:52 pm
Belmaria wrote:Arkolon wrote:Is foreign direct investment a net increase in capital or does it just represent the changing nature of the ownership of the capital stock?
I would consider it a net increase, as they are spending money within the national economy, and thus planting some capital of their own within the nation.
by Arkolon » Mon Aug 01, 2016 4:45 pm
by Kamchastkia » Mon Aug 01, 2016 5:10 pm
Arkolon wrote:So basically I'll just informally call it FDI but I think it makes more sense to formally call it the NY in CA = (X-M) + NY, that is net income from abroad.
Advertisement
Users browsing this forum: No registered users
Advertisement