"Yanis Varoufakis is an academic economist, an author, and a prominent contributor to the debates on the recent economic crises in Europe and the United States. Born in Athens, 1961, he moved to England to read Mathematics and Statistics and holds a PhD in Economics from the University of Essex. He is currently Professor of Economic Theory at the University of Athens and Visiting Professor at the Lyndon B. Johnson Graduate School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin. His previous academic appointments include the Universities of Essex, East Anglia, Cambridge, Sydney and Glasgow. His books include:"
Let me boil this down a bit.
Heads in the clouds. So using Valve, with it's particular product (games) and it's type of employee (young) we are going to construct an argument that ends in:
"and it so happens that it constitutes the reason why I am personally excited to be part of Valve: The current system of corporate governance is bunk. Capitalist corporations are on the way to certain extinction. Replete with hierarchies that are exceedingly wasteful of human talent and energies, intertwined with toxic finance, co-dependent with political structures that are losing democratic legitimacy fast, a form of post-capitalist, decentralised corporation will, sooner or later, emerge."
One wonders if people who write things such as Yanis, well, if they've every done anything outside the academic world and pure theory relying on what appears to be on the surface well written arguments that would probably go over the head of Sam Walton or Warren Buffett.
Indeed. I know several young developers and designers whom any games company worth its salt would hire on the spot (and actually, they're all employed by such) who have "come back and talk to us in two years time" memos from Valve. They don't just want great people, they want great people who can self-direct.
Let me boil this down a bit.
Heads in the clouds. So using Valve, with it's particular product (games) and it's type of employee (young) we are going to construct an argument that ends in:
"and it so happens that it constitutes the reason why I am personally excited to be part of Valve: The current system of corporate governance is bunk. Capitalist corporations are on the way to certain extinction. Replete with hierarchies that are exceedingly wasteful of human talent and energies, intertwined with toxic finance, co-dependent with political structures that are losing democratic legitimacy fast, a form of post-capitalist, decentralised corporation will, sooner or later, emerge."
One wonders if people who write things such as Yanis, well, if they've every done anything outside the academic world and pure theory relying on what appears to be on the surface well written arguments that would probably go over the head of Sam Walton or Warren Buffett.