Tag Archives: Hungary

09Mar/26

The Political Economy of Crisis, War Finance, and Inflation

Why the “Money Printer Goes Brrr”: The Ancient Roots of Modern Inflation

March 9, 2026 /Mpelembe Media/ — Inflation, Hyperinflation, and the “Money Printer” Relying on the printing press to fund state expenditures has historically been a primary catalyst for inflation and, in extreme cases, hyperinflation. This phenomenon stretches back to the fall of the Roman Empire, where successive emperors debased the silver Denarius to pay for military and administrative costs, ultimately destroying public faith in the currency. Modern examples of hyperinflation—such as Weimar Germany in 1923, Zimbabwe in 2008, and Venezuela—demonstrate the devastating consequences of unchecked monetary expansion, which annihilates savings, causes basic necessities to become unaffordable, and forces citizens to resort to bartering or foreign currencies

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28Feb/26

Beyond the Hype: 7 Hard Truths About Securing the Modern Decentralized Stack

The 2026 Crypto Compliance Mandate: Navigating MiCA and the End of the Grandfathering Era

28 Feb. 2026 /Mpelembe Media/ —  The July 2026 Deadline and “Passporting” The European Union is fundamentally restructuring its digital asset market through the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA). By July 1, 2026, the transitional “grandfathering” phase will permanently close, meaning any Crypto-Asset Service Provider (CASP) operating without full MiCA authorization will be doing so illegally. While some member states, like the Netherlands and Sweden, opted for much shorter transition periods that have already expired, the July 2026 date is the absolute maximum limit across the EU. Securing this license grants firms EU-wide “passporting” rights, allowing them to serve clients across all 27 member states with a single authorization. Continue reading

03May/25

Perfect storm of tech bros, foreign interference and disinformation is an urgent threat to press freedom

Tom Felle, University of Galway

Media freedom has long been essential to healthy democracy. It is the oxygen that fuels informed debate, exposes corruption and holds power to account. But around the world, that freedom is under sustained attack.

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13May/23

The ‘gay world cup’: why LGBTQ+ audiences love Eurovision

Matt Weaver, University of Portsmouth

In 1956, seven European countries – Belgium, France, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Switzerland and West Germany – gathered in Lugano, Switzerland for the first ever Eurovision Song Contest. The competition was only broadcast in select countries, meaning only a small number of viewers watched Swiss entry Lys Assia win the grand prize with the song Refrain.

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26Oct/22

Four scenarios for a world in disorder

David Bach, International Institute for Management Development (IMD)

Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s recent speech to the Communist Party Congress could be one of the most consequential of the decade. He told the audience – and the world – that his economic growth-crushing zero-COVID policy is here to stay, and that Beijing is more determined than ever to reunify with Taiwan, peacefully if possible and by force if necessary.

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17Oct/22

Surveillance tech is weaponry

By Rand Hammoud, Surveillance Campaigner, Access Now

Surveillance technology is weaponry – it targets, tracks, invades, and decimates – and its unbridled use is a far-reaching, destructive violation of human rights. It is an assault rifle in the sustained global offensive on civic space, and we need a global moratorium on its export, sale, transfer, servicing, and use. Continue reading