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  The Innovative State Kevin Lamarque / Courtesy Reuters The conventional view of what the state should do to foster innovation is simple: it just needs to get out of the way. At best, governments merely facilitate the economic dynamism of the private sector; at worst, their lumbering, heavy-handed, and bureaucratic institutions actively inhibit it. The fast-moving, risk-loving, and pioneering private sector, by contrast, is what really drives the type of innovation that creates economic growth. According to this view, the secret behind Silicon Valley lies in its entrepreneurs and venture capitalists. The state can intervene in the economy—but only to fix market failures or level the playing field. It can regulate the private sector in order to account for the external costs companies may impose on the public, such as pollution, and it can invest in public goods, such as basic scientific research or the development of drugs with little market potential. It should not, however, dire...
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  Governments are scared of tackling the immigration dilemma Rich economies need workers but their voters don’t like migrants Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter. Think about the traditional political economy of Switzerland, and self-destructive nativism is probably not the first description that comes to mind. Yet next week the Swiss, following a campaign by the right-wing Swiss People’s Party,  will vote in a referendum  to cap the national population at 10mn. The move is fiercely opposed by business leaders and, given the country’s falling birth rate, will worsen labour shortages in the future. The vast majority of Swiss immigrants are from rich European countries, particularly Italy and Germany. Blocking economically productive and culturally similar incomers underlines the contradictions between the economic imperative of admitting migrants and the political exigency of resisting ...
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  Read in browser Welcome to a special joint edition of  Going Private  and  The Brink , Bloomberg’s twice-weekly newsletters about private markets and corporate distress. Today, we are bringing you the highlights from the  Bloomberg Global Credit Forum  in New York. If you’re not already on our list,  sign up here . Have feedback? Email us at  goingprivate@bloomberg.net  or at  debtnews@bloomberg.net . End of an era Private credit’s honeymoon phase is drawing to a close, forcing investors to confront the consequences of a boom that has transformed the industry over the past decade.  Participants at the  Bloomberg Global Credit Forum  at our New York HQ on Wednesday appeared to have little doubt about the challenges lying ahead.  “I just believe in the laws of physics,” said  Holly Kim , a co-founder of  Glendon Capital Management .  “I’m not saying they’re going to be wiped out, but on a relative basis...