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How can we create a thriving life for us all that doesn't come at
the price of ecological destruction? This book calls to explore our
collective and personal convictions about success and good life. It
challenges the mainstream worldview, rooted in economics, that
equates happiness with pleasure, and encourages greed, materialism,
egoism and disconnection. Drawing on science and ancient Greek
philosophers the author details how we can cultivate our skills for
enjoying life without harming ourselves or others, and can live an
autonomous, creative and connected life. Complementary to our
intellectual understanding, the experiential method of role play
and theatre can powerfully facilitate the exploration of the inner
drivers and hindrances of a thriving life.
How can we create a thriving life for us all that doesn't come at
the price of ecological destruction? This book calls to explore our
collective and personal convictions about success and good life. It
challenges the mainstream worldview, rooted in economics, that
equates happiness with pleasure, and encourages greed, materialism,
egoism and disconnection. Drawing on science and ancient Greek
philosophers the author details how we can cultivate our skills for
enjoying life without harming ourselves or others, and can live an
autonomous, creative and connected life. Complementary to our
intellectual understanding, the experiential method of role play
and theatre can powerfully facilitate the exploration of the inner
drivers and hindrances of a thriving life.
This book offers the first systematic assessment of income
redistribution in Eastern Europe, within a comparative European
perspective, and it demonstrates the future research potential of
microsimulation techniques in this region. The book's chapters are
based on a unique instrument -- EUROMOD: the European tax-benefit
microsimulation model, which has been enlarged to include Estonia,
Hungary, Poland, Slovenia and other countries. Tax-benefit models
such as EUROMOD are computer programmes based on household
micro-data, which calculate each household's disposable income.
Microsimulation can be used to evaluate the impact of current taxes
and benefit policies on individuals' incomes and work incentives.
In addition, the model is designed to answer 'what if' questions
about different policy reforms, allowing the potential effects of
proposed changes to be studied before their actual implementation.
EUROMOD goes one step further in the process of helping policy
design, in allowing international comparisons between EU countries.
This book offers an important demonstration of the effectiveness of
tax-benefit models in presenting complex information in a concise
and comprehensible way. It discusses what the barriers to their
adoption to date have been and it looks at the possibilities
EUROMOD offers to future policy-making in Europe.
This book offers the first systematic assessment of income
redistribution in Eastern Europe, within a comparative European
perspective, and it demonstrates the future research potential of
microsimulation techniques in this region. The book's chapters are
based on a unique instrument -- EUROMOD: the European tax-benefit
microsimulation model, which has been enlarged to include Estonia,
Hungary, Poland, Slovenia and other countries. Tax-benefit models
such as EUROMOD are computer programmes based on household
micro-data, which calculate each household's disposable income.
Microsimulation can be used to evaluate the impact of current taxes
and benefit policies on individuals' incomes and work incentives.
In addition, the model is designed to answer 'what if' questions
about different policy reforms, allowing the potential effects of
proposed changes to be studied before their actual implementation.
EUROMOD goes one step further in the process of helping policy
design, in allowing international comparisons between EU countries.
This book offers an important demonstration of the effectiveness of
tax-benefit models in presenting complex information in a concise
and comprehensible way. It discusses what the barriers to their
adoption to date have been and it looks at the possibilities
EUROMOD offers to future policy-making in Europe.
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