2nd year electronic engineering student at Southampton university. I'm currently not that involved with EA, but I agree with its philosophy and I'm open to opportunities.
In my free time I like working on ambitious electronics projects, a little programming here and there, and playing the piano.
I've been thinking similar things. A few comments:
I might write a separate post going into a bit more detail at some point.
Here's an interesting (admittedly quite old) paper discussing trends in global poverty: https://pubs.aeaweb.org/doi/pdfplus/10.1257/089533003769204335
The paper points to a great deal of research highlighting that economic growth and strengthened property rights have a strong correlation with the well-being of the poorest.
I would agree that capitalism leads to some seemingly outrageous outcomes, but the question is not one of whether capitalism is fair, but whether there's a better alternative. I'm yet to see compelling evidence that there is (feel free to prove me wrong though!).
Hi Axelle! This is really great timing - I've recently been looking into a closely related project.
I don't have access to the Bloomberg article, but keen to hear your thoughts on some of the data Aviagen has published on their welfare selection program, in particular this report. I was (perhaps naively) given the impression that broiler welfare was actually improving quite fast, e.g. the leg defect rate of the Ross 308 halving from 6% to 3% over the past 10 years, according to Fig 10.
If true, that's ~1bn chickens each year no longer suffering from leg defects!
There's also this paper (also published by Aviagen) that suggests about 30% of their selection focus is on health and welfare traits (Fig 3). Is this misleading?
The project I'm looking into would essentially be working with Aviagen/Cobb to speed up their welfare selection programme through better measurement technology / whatever their current bottlenecks turn out to be. The feasibility of that very much depends on their willingness to cooperate though.
Keen to discuss this more!