Category: South Africa
- Africa
- African Bank
- Alibaba
- ALSI
- America
- American Debt Crisis
- Antibiotic Resistance
- Apple
- Argentina
- asymmetric information
- Austrian Economics
- Banking Scandal
- Banks
- Basic Income
- BATS
- Behavioral Economics
- Big Data
- Big Pharma
- Bitcoin
- Blockchain
- bonuses
- Book Reviews
- Brexit
- BRIC
- BRICS
- Bruno Iksil
- Buffett Rule
- business news
- Capital in the Twenty-First Century
- Capitalism
- CDO
- CDS
- China
- Cities
- City of London Corporation
- Climate Change
- CMO
- Collateralised Debt Obligations
- Collateralised Mortgage Obligations
- Commodities
- Coronavirus
- Corruption
- Credit Rating
- Credit Rating Downgrade
- Cryptocurrency
- cryptoshares
- Davos 2014
- Deflation
- Dodd-Frank
- EBITDA
- Economic Myths
- Economic Theory
- Economics In Real Life
- Economics News
- Emerging Markets
- Eurozone Debt Crisis
- Exchange Rates
- Facebook IPO
- Featured Posts
- Fed Stress Tests
- FinTech
- Fiscal Deficit
- fiscal policy
- Fixed Rate Mortgages
- Flash Crash
- France
- Freddie Mac
- Free Trade
- FTSE-JSE ALSI
- Game Theory
- Glass-Steagal Act
- Gold
- Gold Standard
- Golden Cross
- Goldman Sachs
- Greek CDS Exposure
- Greek Debt Crisis
- High Frequency Trading
- House Flipping
- hyperinflation
- Iceland
- IMF
- Immigration
- Indicators
- Indices
- inflation
- Infographic
- Insider Trading
- Interest Rate
- Interest Rate Parity
- Interest Rate Risk
- Investing in Art
- Investment Strategies
- Investor Diaries
- IPO
- Iran Sanctions
- ISDA auction
- Japan
- Jim Yong Kim
- JP Morgan
- Just An Observation
- Keynesian economics
- Laffer Curve
- Last Investment Frontier
- Leaving the Eurozone
- Liar's Poker
- LIBOR
- LIBOR collusion scandal
- Liquidity Risk
- Listed Property
- Maps
- Market Mechanism
- Marriage
- MBS
- Medical Aid Schemes
- MF Global
- Michael Lewis
- Microcredit
- Minimum Wage
- monetary policy
- Money
- Mortgage-Backed Securities
- Mortgages
- MTN
- Multi-level Marketing
- NASDAQ
- National Debt
- Net Neutrality
- Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
- Office Politics
- Oil
- Other
- Overpopulation
- p2p lending
- Parastatals
- Penny Stocks
- Personal Finance
- Petrodollar Wars
- Platinum
- Podcast
- Ponzi Scheme
- Poverty
- Prepayments
- Price Controls
- Price Discrimination
- Pyramid Scheme
- Quantitative Easing
- Questions
- Rating Agency
- REITs
- Remittances
- RIM
- Risk On Risk Off
- rollingalpha
- SARB
- Save The Rhino
- Seigniorage
- Short-selling
- Singapore
- Snapchat
- South Africa
- South Africa's Tax System
- Spain
- Statistics
- Story of Money Podcast
- Student Loans
- Subprime Crisis
- Super Tuesday
- Swiss Franc
- tax system
- TGIF
- The Amateur Investor
- The Big Short
- The Reading List
- The Travelling Economist
- Trade Unions
- Uncategorized
- Unemployment
- Unicorns
- Unit Trusts
- US Credit Rating
- US Housing Market
- Variable Rate Mortgages
- Venezuela
- Volatility
- Volker Rule
- Warren Buffett
- Water Crisis
- Wealth Inequality
- World Bank
- Zimbabwe
To Incorporate, Or Not To Incorporate: That Is The Tax Question
A few weeks’ ago, I wrote a post on South Africa’s discrimination against entrepreneurs and small businesses (it was an Open Letter). Since then, I’ve been asked to write something about a choice that faces all entrepreneurs: When do I stop being a sole proprietor and take the leap? For most entrepreneurs, the argument goes something […]
read moreSouth Africa Votes
Today, South Africa goes to the polls. It’s…not exactly positive. The platinum industry strike continues without an apparent end in sight. Unemployment is floating around the 34% mark – higher than anything under apartheid. Julius Malema’s Economic Freedom Fighters loom on the periphery with their scarlet berets and confused manifesto, riding what appears to be […]
read more
South Africa’s Inequality Is Not Racist. Well – not entirely.
Of course apartheid is a serious culprit. But there are other problems as well.
read more
South Africa’s Education System. Or Lack Thereof.
There is an article in this week’s Economist that talks about the growing numbers of South Africa’s poor that are electing to send their children to private schools. And good for them if they’re finding ways to afford it. However. I was a little taken aback by some of the statistics that were being thrown […]
read more