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       #Post#: 136--------------------------------------------------
       Generating electricity from clouds, is it possible
       By: chandna rani Date: September 9, 2023, 3:50 am
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       Wars and grain trade in pre-industrial times It would be wrong
       to attribute the increase in the price of grain, and in
       particular wheat, solely to the war in Ukraine, and therefore to
       the shortage of supply, as standard economic theory suggests.
       Indeed, this result is linked to the prolonged relations between
       markets, speculation and geopolitical tensions within which
       Russia, Ukraine and the Black Sea today play a very unique role.
       The following pages will try to demonstrate Phone Number List
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       thesis. Already at the level of economic
       theory, a fairly general way of getting away from the simple
       explanation in terms of supply and demand is to distinguish
       between crop failure and famine, climatic effects and market
       action. A bad harvest, possibly linked but not necessarily to
       climatic factors (a war can cause it) does not necessarily
       translate into famine. The latter may also be the product of
       commercial speculation.
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       Nobel Prize winner in Economics Amartya Sen built his reputation
       on these distinctions.1. Sen considered his theory to be only
       applicable to advanced market economies; However, for several
       decades now, medievalists and modernists have questioned this
       interpretation, demonstrating that markets contributed to
       triggering famines starting in the 12th century, precisely due
       to the importance of international markets and geopolitical
       components, on the one hand, and the internal political-social
       aspects, on the other.
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