Moguls and Mexicans: The American history of cannabis legalisation

Medical marijuana is now legal in 22 US states, as well as the District of Columbia; in Colorado, Washington and Alaska, it’s legal to use the drug recreationally. America’s relationship with cannabis has come full circle, from miracle ingredient in patent medicine, through “Assassin of Youth” and threat to Christian virginity, and back again. This demon weed has, in its time, been called an indicator of the ruinous effects of immigration on employment opportunities, been hailed as a vital part of a wartime economy, and brought in $50m in tax revenue. It’s a change in attitudes that can be seen in popular culture, law, and international affairs; a story that takes in presidents, media moguls and Mexican revolutionaries.

Hemp (a high-growing form of cannabis, low in psychoactive constituents) was once a major crop for the fledgling American nation, and remained so up until the Second World War. The fact it could be used to produce a psychoactive drug was almost beside the point (though far from ignored); it was a source of rope and fabric, two important products to the global maritime trade. George Washington and Thomas Jefferson both grew it on their land.

Cannabis (along with heroin, cocaine and morphine) remained legally available in the US

When legislation was brought in to control the use of cannabis around the turn of the last century, it was a recognisable form of business regulation, intended to protect consumers against mislabelled and adulterated pharmaceuticals. While cannabis (along with heroin, cocaine and morphine) remained legally available in the US, the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 required that its presence in any measure be clearly labelled – a move intended to combat its use as a secret ingredient in the patent medicines beloved of 19th century salesmen.

As David F Musto, Professor of the History of Medicine at Yale, put it in his book The American Disease: Origins of Narcotic Control: “Not even the reformers claimed, in the pre-World War I hearings and debates over a federal anti-narcotic act, that cannabis was a problem of any major significance in the United States.”

Reefer madness
Real fear of the drug didn’t emerge until the 1920s, when many violent crimes in the southwestern states were attributed to Mexican immigrants and their recreational use of marijuana. This link between cannabis and violent behaviour was actually imported from Mexico itself. As Isaac Campos, author of Home Grown: Marijuana and the Origins of Mexico’s War on Drugs, points out, behaviour resulting from drug use is dependent on one’s psychology and setting. “In Mexico, where virtually everyone believed that marijuana caused madness, and where the drug was used in very violent environments (primarily prisons and soldiers’ barracks), violent reactions and bizarre behaviour appear to have resulted from some cannabis use”, he says. “Once circulating in the United States, these ideas were utilised and elaborated upon by propagandists to secure prohibitionist legislation.”

By 1931, 29 states had outlawed cannabis. The federal government encouraged them to sign up to its Uniform States Narcotic Act, which sought to standardise legal control of drugs across the country. The act was strongly supported by Harry J Anslinger, the first commissioner of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics (FBN). With reported drug cases proliferating, he hoped the states could relieve the FBN of some of the financial burden of pursuing the offenders and allow it to get back to “the hard stuff” (as he called it) of catching heroin smugglers.

Anslinger launched a media campaign designed to put the fear of the demon weed into the American public. He linked the use of ‘reefer’ to violence, murder and sexual promiscuity. He was willing to call on racism, sexism and xenophobia to make his case, while at the same time fabricating figures that ‘showed’ the FBN had successfully driven down rates of drug use where it had combated them. In one typically inflammatory statement, he warned: “There are 100,000 total marijuana users in the US, and most are Negroes, Hispanics, Filipinos and entertainers. Their Satanic music, jazz and swing result from marijuana use. This marijuana causes white women to seek sexual relations with Negroes, entertainers and any others.”

He found support in media baron William Randolph Hearst, whose newspapers dubbed cannabis “the Assassin of Youth”. In 1933, his Los Angeles Examiner warned its readers: “Murder Weed Found Up and Down Coast – Deadly Marihuana [sic] Dope Plant Ready for Harvest That Means Enslavement of California Children”.

Their Satanic music, jazz and swing result from marijuana use

The reasons for Hearst’s particular drive to see cannabis outlawed – if there were any beyond social conservatism and a print baron’s nose for moral outrage – have been much debated. It’s been suggested it was the result of a conspiracy between himself, the wealthy DuPont family and others who feared low-cost hemp fibre would threaten their interests in timber and nylon. However, David Nissen, in his biography of the media baron, points out that, as the owner of a major newsprint organisation already in debt to Canadian suppliers, Hearst could only stand to benefit from a new, cheaper source of paper.

Martin A Lee, in his book Smoke Signals: A Social History of Marijuana – Medical, Recreational, and Scientific, makes the perhaps more astute point that Hearst had “harboured an animus towards Mexicans ever since Pancho Villa occupied [his] 800,000-acre ranch in Chihuahua in 1916 and seized some cattle-grazing land”.

Whatever the truth, Hollywood was soon in on the act, turning out a string of low-budget shockers about the dangers of marijuana. The 1936 exploitation drama Tell Your Children (now better known by its mocking re-release title, Reefer Madness) told a typical tale of various young jazz types being transformed into boggle-eyed murderers by the vile effects of pot. In the words of Lee, the films “epitomised the synchronicity among Washington, Hollywood, and mainstream media in the war against cannabis”.

And it was a war they won. Despite lacking any scientific data to show a correlation between cannabis use and violent crime, Anslinger and his supporters convinced Congress of the drug’s dangers. After holding only two one-hour hearings, Congress passed the Marihuana [sic] Tax Act of 1937. This effectively criminalised cannabis, limiting legal possession to those few who paid excise duty for its medical or industrial use. Not only was the cost of growing hemp now prohibitive, producers were only allowed to produce plants without leaves, buds or flowers – a feat described by one environmental historian as “horticulturally impossible”. The effect of the act, despite Anslinger’s promises, was to wipe out the US domestic hemp industry.

Cannabis on display for recreational use at dispensaries in Colorado
Cannabis on display for recreational use at dispensaries in Colorado

Victory, crackdown and acceptability
Hemp growers enjoyed a brief reprieve during the Second World War; the crop was needed for ship ropes, engine oil and parachutes, and the US Department of Agriculture was happy to pump subsidies into planting more than 300,000 acres of the stuff. True, this so-called ‘ditch weed’ wouldn’t have done much for those looking to get high, but the irony can’t have been lost on the farmers who had seven years earlier been cautioned and reprimanded by Tell Your Children as they filed in to see the 1942 propaganda film Hemp for Victory.

But the reprieve was short-lived. After the war, with supply lines to Asia re-established, US hemp plantations were dug up – though law enforcement officials would spend the next decade or so chasing down the narcotics stemming from these once-legal sites.

The Boggs Act of 1952 and the Narcotics Control Act of 1956 introduced minimum federal sentences for a number of drug-related offences, including the smuggling, sale and possession of cannabis. Nearly 500 people were arrested under the former act on the single night of January 4-5, 1952, while the latter meant a first-time offender found in possession of cannabis could expect to receive a sentence of two to 10 years and a potential fine of $20,000.

Things slackened slightly as cannabis  became an emblem of the counter-culture movement

Things slackened slightly in the 1960s as cannabis not only became an emblem of the counter-culture movement, but also found popularity among the white upper-middle classes. Against this relaxed cultural backdrop, Presidents Kennedy and Johnson commissioned fresh reports into the drug’s effects. The Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice reported in 1967 that the Marihuana Tax Act “raises an insignificant amount of revenue and exposes an insignificant number of marijuana transactions to public view, since only a handful of people are registered under the Act [sic]. It has become, in effect, solely a criminal law, imposing sanctions upon persons who sell, acquire, or possess marijuana”.

In 1969, the US Supreme Court ruled the Marihuana Tax Act was unconstitutional. The following year, Congress passed the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act, which repealed the earlier act and classified cannabis separately from other narcotics. In 1972, the National Commission on Marihuana and Drug Abuse found that cannabis possession should be decriminalised. Its report concluded “the actual and potential harm of use of the drug is not great enough to justify intrusion by the criminal law into private behaviour”.

Nation versus state
Though President Nixon rejected the finding of the commission (recognising it went against the mood of Congress), over the decade, Alaska, California, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Minnesota, Ohio and Oregon all decriminalised possession, and punishments were relaxed in most other states. In California, an adult found in possession of less than an ounce could now expect no more than a $100 fine, a citation and to have their drugs taken off them.

But federal regulation moved against this growing liberality. Reacting in part to the emergence of powerful conservative parents’ groups, Ronald Reagan signed into law the Anti-Drug Abuse Act, and the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984. While they provided funds for drug education and treatment, the new laws also raised federal penalties for cannabis possession and dealing.

The federal government continued this hard line on drug policy through the ‘tough on crime’ era of the 1980s and 90s. George Bush Sr thought the drug issue “so important, so threatening” that he made it the subject of his first live presidential address, in 1989. While cannabis was not directly named in the speech (Bush instead pointed to the more alarming threats of heroin, crack cocaine and PCP), there can have been no doubt that it stood on the other side of the line he drew in his “War on Drugs”.

Campos points out this language brings with it the popular acceptance that wartime requires sacrifice and the surrendering of traditional rights: “Thus, in the same way that a real war supposedly justifies torture or secret surveillance, declaring war on drugs has helped to justify erosions in civil liberties, imperial forays into foreign countries, the militarisation of domestic police forces, and so forth.”

Democrats’ fear of being labelled soft on crime had been the impetus behind the 1986 law that introduced mandatory minimum sentences for drug offences. That same fear may well have been on President Clinton’s mind as he continued Bush’s crusade. In 1994, he signed the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, which increased funding for anti-drug efforts and introduced harsher sentences. Cannabis seizures reached an all-time high in 1999.

A Colombian policeman stands guard next to marijuana packages. The US gives millions of dollars to Colombia each year as part of its War on Drugs
A Colombian policeman stands guard next to marijuana packages. The US gives millions of dollars to Colombia each year as part of its War on Drugs

Deep breath
All this was in marked contrast to what was happening on a state level. The passing of the Compassionate Care Act in 1996 made California the first state to legalise the sale and purchase of cannabis for medical use. State citizens could now possess up to eight ounces without a doctor’s recommendation, and a system of state-licensed dispensaries was established (though such outlets were not allowed to operate for profit). Federal and state law clashed, and, in 2005, the Supreme Court ruled state law did not prevent Congress outlawing medicinal cannabis.

Despite this, the general mood seemed set that the use of cannabis among adults was no longer a priority concern. The Department of Justice issued new guidelines in 2009 that said: “It will not be a priority to use federal resources to prosecute patients with serious illnesses or their caregivers who are complying with state laws on medical marijuana.”

Between 1996 and 2012, 18 states legalised medical marijuana, and, in 2012, Colorado and Washington became the first to legalise recreational use. Citizens of the former, aged 21 or over, can now buy up to an ounce of marijuana (with a 30 percent tax) from regulated shops and grow up to six plants in their own homes. Far from the outbreaks of crime and debauchery predicted by Anslinger 80 years previously, Slate reported in January 2015 that drug-related crime in Colorado had either remained the same or dropped since the prohibition on recreational cannabis use was lifted.

More importantly, from an economic standpoint, Colorado’s monthly tax revenue from cannabis in the first year of legal sales ($6.5m) was just over a third of what the state made from tobacco ($18.8m) and over 150 percent of what it made from alcohol ($4.5m). “Colorado took in about $53m in tax revenue from sales of recreational marijuana in the last year”, says Sreekar Jasthi, an economic analyst for NerdWallet. While that’s lower than the top-end predictions of over $70m, it’s still enough that, per a 1992 constitutional amendment limiting how much the state can take from tax payers, the Colorado government may now have to refund every adult citizen $7.63.

Colorado’s tax revenue from cannabis was just over a third of what the state made from tobacco

While an end to prohibition does not mean an end to the illegal drugs market – Jasthi points out that “illegal marijuana still costs significantly less than legal pot” – NerdWallet’s analysis suggests the US could gain over $3bn in state and local taxes each year from the federal legalisation of cannabis.

And that’s before factoring in the potential benefit of dropping the prohibition on the growing of hemp. The country’s retail sales of hemp-based products exceed $300m a year, despite the US being the only industrialised nation that does not allow industrial production of the crop. Canadian growers planted an estimated 45,000 acres in 2013, knowing their largest export market would be the US.

In February, Alaska became the third state in which cannabis could be legally purchased for recreational use. Though marijuana legalisation advocates face resistance from some quarters (the Washington-based Safe Streets pressure group is suing Colorado’s governor over the issue, while DEA Special Agent Matt Fairbanks warned Utah’s state senate that rabbits and other animals may become absent minded if allowed to graze on legally grown weed), Jasthi says they “are gaining steam through these bills”.

With similar laws set to come into effect in Oregon and Washington, DC later this year, the US seems in the mood to reconsider its relationship with one of its oldest crops.

Beer madness? Indonesia’s president attacks commodity

According to the Asian Development Bank, Indonesia’s GDP growth rate had slowed to five percent in 2014, while net exports and fixed investment had also stagnated. So, when Joko Widodo, known to many as Jokowi, came to power last October, he had a sizeable task on his hands to elevate the country’s sluggish economy. Nevertheless, being the first businessman to hold the post, both Indonesians and international onlookers were hopeful – particularly given the smooth political transition that ensued.

Indonesia’s development has been slow

Upon election, Jokowi promised to redirect capital from fuel subsidies into the investment of much-needed infrastructure projects, especially within the aviation sector. Yet, almost six months later, Indonesia’s development has been slow and measures to reduce both the budget deficit and domestic demand have not yet provided the economic impetus needed.

And now, in stark opposition to his agenda for boosting business, Jokowi has implemented a ban on the sale of beer in convenience stores.

Home to the largest population of Muslims in the world, the market for beer in Indonesia is already limited. This latest measure, which has been supported by a number of Islamic groups, will put further pressure on the industry. As of next month, the sale of beer will be permitted only in supermarkets, meaning that large producers, such as Diageo and PT Multi Bintang Indonesia, are likely to feel the strain relatively quickly.

Last year, the sale of beer increased by 11 percent, thus indicating an industry that showed growth and promise, which further brings the president’s latest move into question. “Losing this channel will mean a big decline in sales for leading beer manufacturers,” Yulia Fransisca, a senior analyst at Euromonitor International told Bloomberg. “The government will continue to be pressurized to create more restrictions on alcoholic drinks by Islamic groups in the country.”

Gene therapy could eradicate cancer and heart disease

Eradicating the most deadly inherited diseases is a hugely important area of scientific research, but one that has posed considerable hurdles. Scientists have been desperately trying to develop new methods of treating such things as heart disease, diabetes and cancer for many years, but much of their research has gone towards treating the illnesses rather than preventing them. At the same time, big pharmaceutical companies have been competing to be the first to market with revolutionary – and hugely lucrative – new drugs.

A significant development in the field of biotechnology emerged at the start of this year – one that could lead to a radical change in the way these diseases are battled. It may even help prevent them occurring in the first place.

At the end of January, British pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca announced it would be undertaking a research programme to develop medicines that would target genes that cause many of the most lethal diseases around. The company is using a method known as CRISPR (Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats), sometimes called ‘genetic scissors’. AstraZeneca hopes medicines can be developed that better fight diseases by removing the genes that cause them, while also providing cheaper and more efficient treatments.

It is one of the biggest developments in the area of biotechnology
in decades

In a statement to reporters, AstraZeneca’s Mene Pangalos, Head of Innovative Medicines and Early Development, said the technology could prove to be a powerful way of studying disease: “CRISPR is a simple yet powerful tool that enables us to manipulate genes of potential importance in disease pathways and examine the impact of these modifications in a highly precise way.”

The news came weeks after Swiss-based drug manufacturer Novartis announced it had signed deals with two leading US biotechnology companies (Intellia Therapeutics and Caribou Biosciences) to develop CRISPR technologies.

What is CRISPR?
Scientists have been researching human genes ever since the decoding of the human genome was completed in 2000. The project gave hope to many researchers that, one day, they could discover the genes that caused specific diseases, helping them prevent and treat illnesses.

In late 2013, a breakthrough in genetic editing was announced: a team of researchers led by Jennifer Doudna at the University of California, Berkeley, unveiled the CRISPR technique. Since then, scientists around the world have been looking at ways to harness this method to help discover whether diseases ranging from Down’s syndrome to types of cancer could be eliminated.

AstraZeneca is the first major pharmaceutical company to officially commit considerable amounts of money and resources to developing CRISPR. The scheme is being conducted in collaboration with the UK’s Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, as well as California’s Innovative Genomics Initiative, and the Broad Institute and Whitehead Institute in Massachusetts.

It’s thought many other pharmaceutical firms are also looking at utilising the technology so they can create cheaper, more efficient and effective drugs for a whole range of illnesses. According to AstraZeneca’s Lorenz Mayr, the Vice President leading the project, the technology was a major breakthrough on a scale not seen for decades: “You can’t stop the science. It is one of the biggest developments in the area of biotechnology in decades”, he told the BBC.

Ethical issues
However, despite the potential of the breakthroughs, many people are voicing concerns over the ethical issues of gene editing. London-based Professor Robin Lovell-Badge, of the National Institute for Medical Research, told The Independent after the unveiling of CRISPR in 2013: “The techniques are amazing and it was very appropriate to highlight them and begin the debate about how they should be used in humans. But it is far too early to contemplate using these methods to alter the human germline [sperm, eggs and embryos]. Indeed, it would be illegal to do so in the UK and many other countries.

“However, what is clear is that the new methods deserve proper consideration and debate, and not just either hype or condemnation, so that the wonderful opportunities they present can be applied sensibly and with public support.”

Harvard University’s Professor George Church – one of the first scientists to successfully use CRISPR in human and mouse embryos – told The Independent a public conversation over the ethics of the process was necessary. “Talking about the future is better than letting it sneak up on us. We need to do more of this or we will be left with very limited vocabulary in the space between positive and negative hype”, he said.

Despite this, some feel the benefits far outweigh the potential ethical issues. Dr Dagan Wells, an IVF scientist at the University of Oxford, told the paper: “If this new technique succeeds in allowing perfectly targeted correction of abnormal genes, eliminating safety concerns, then the exciting prospect is that treatments could be developed and applied to the germline, ridding families and all their descendants of devastating inherited disorders.

“It would be difficult to argue against using it if it can be shown to be as safe, reliable and effective as it appears to be. Who would condemn a child to terrible suffering and perhaps an early death when a therapy exists, capable of repairing the problem?”

Out in the open
AstraZeneca’s public announcement is aimed at allowing an open platform for researchers to explore the possibilities of CRISPR technology. Mayr told the Financial Times: “The field is moving so fast that developing CRISPR behind closed doors wouldn’t work. This is a true collaboration in which the results will go into the public domain, in keeping with our ‘open innovation’ approach to R&D.”

While there remain ethical considerations that need to be discussed, developing the technology in the open in the way AstraZeneca is doing is surely the best way of seeing just how powerful this new method of treating diseases is.

With scientists feverishly working on ways they can prevent diseases through editing genes and big pharmaceutical companies starting to invest heavily in the technology, it seems a major revolution in healthcare is imminent. The implications of being able to prescribe medicines that are specifically tailored to people will drastically improve their effectiveness, while it will also bring down prices, helping to eradicate some of the biggest killers in the world.

Google hires Wall Street’s most powerful woman

The 28-year Morgan Stanley veteran has been appointed Google’s chief financial officer, taking on the same position she previously held at the financial institution. Porat, once called the most powerful woman on Wall Street, is now the highest ranking woman at the world’s largest web search provider, and the latest figure to make the shift into the tech industry.

Start-ups are increasingly looking for business people to help their companies grow

Silicon Valley has strengthened economically over the last few years and the relaxed culture is slowly becoming the more attractive option to Wall Street’s hierarchical decision making. “Just the thought of walking into a tall building in a suit or high heels and going to meetings where you’re discussing a regulated industry where it’s increasingly difficult to innovate — most of the people I talk to don’t find that prospect appealing”, said Martha Josephson, a partner at executive recruiting firm Egon Zehnder, speaking to The New York Times.

Porat’s move follows the example of Anthony Noto who last year left Goldman Sachs to become CFO of Twitter. Imran Khan, former Credit Suisse tech banker, took up a position at Snapchat as their chief strategist. Another Morgan Stanley female executive, Mary Meeker, moved to Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers four years ago, while Sarah Friar formerly worked at Goldman Sachs before moving to Square Inc. Start-ups are increasingly looking for business people to help their companies grow, with the driven work ethic of financial workers seen as an attractive asset.

Speaking in a statement, Porat said: “Growing up in Silicon Valley, during my time at Morgan Stanley and as a member of Stanford’s Board, I’ve had the opportunity to experience firsthand how tech companies can help people in their daily lives.”

Compassion can be fostered in our species, and economic models

Today’s mainstream economic models are based on two fundamental assumptions: first, humans are essentially selfish actors who act rationally to advance their own utility (so-called homo economicus); but, second, as Adam Smith’s metaphor of an “invisible hand” was intended to suggest, self-regarding behaviour can inadvertently advance the common good. Both assumptions are patently false.

In order to address pressing global problems like climate change and inequality, the predominant economic models must be rethought, incorporating other motivational systems that can induce different human behaviours. Such realistic models, based on empirical research in psychology and the neurosciences, would allow societies to cultivate their sense of compassion and build a new kind of ‘caring economics’ that reflects more fully what it is to be human.

Neuroscientific studies have shown that humans can be motivated by care and systems of affiliation just as easily as they can be by power and achievement or consumption and desire. After all, we have evolved to be able to form stable relationships, build trust and care for children, all of which requires a capacity for compassion and empathy. Once we recognise that these caring motivational systems are common to all humans – indeed, most are shared with other animals – the world begins to look very different.

Humans tend to find it easy to empathise with and care about members of their ‘in-group’

Empathy and compassion
It is important, however, to distinguish between basic empathic responses and a more universal capacity for compassion. Empathy alone does not necessarily prompt pro-social behaviour; empathising with the suffering of another may not drive you to help that person. In fact, empathy can result in distress, which may even lead to withdrawal or burnout.

Compassion, by contrast, is concern for another person that is linked to a strong motivation to alleviate their suffering. If, say, a mother sees her child crying after a fall, she may first empathise with the child, feeling its pain and sadness. But, rather than succumbing to feelings of distress, she will take the child in her arms to soothe and comfort it.

Both empathy and compassion seem to come naturally to humans. But both responses are fragile, and can be quelled or reversed by a large number of factors – including the degree to which we identify with the person who is suffering.

Humans tend to find it easy to empathise with and care about members of their ‘in-group’ – people with whom they share features, whether real or socially constructed, like race, gender, age, or religious affiliation. Empathy and care towards out-group members does not come quite as easily. Such universal or global compassion – caring about people who are very different from us – probably requires the involvement of higher cognitive functions, and thus may be unique to humans.

It may also require some training. After all, living in a world that assumes we are homo economicus can encourage selfish habits. Fortunately, research suggests that such habits can be broken.

Brain train
The largest such study is the recently completed ReSource Project, in which my
colleagues and I subjected almost 300 people, over 11 months, to an intense mental-training programme, developed by a team of experienced mediation teachers, scientists, and psychotherapists.

The goal was to cultivate a broad range of mental capacities and social skills, including attention, mindfulness, self-awareness, perspective-taking on others, empathy, compassion, and the ability to cope with difficult emotions like anger or stress. Progress was assessed by measuring changes in participants’ brains, hormones, health, behaviour, and subjective sense of wellbeing.

The project’s preliminary results reinforce a key finding of previous, smaller studies: just as we can strengthen and transform a muscle through physical exercise, we can develop our brain and behavioural capacities – from attention and emotional regulation to trust and donation behaviour – through regular mental training.

Of course, mental exercises must be honed to develop particular skills and behaviours; mindfulness practice alone is not adequate to improve, say, socio-cognitive skills. And lasting changes occur only after a prolonged period of regular training. But, with the right approach, it may well be possible to foster the kind of altruistic and pro-social behaviours that are needed to improve global cooperation.

Encouraging care
On the basis of these findings, and those from other psychological, neuroscientific and economic studies, my colleagues and I are now working with the president of the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, Dennis Snower, to formulate new motivation-based computational models of economic decision-making. These models will enable us to make clear, testable predictions about expected monetary-exchange behaviour in an economic context, including in addressing common-good problems. In fact, several of these experiments are already underway.

The secular, ethical mental-training exercises used in the ReSource Project could be applied in businesses, political institutions, schools (for both teachers and students), and healthcare settings – in short, in all areas where people experience high levels of stress and related phenomena. Young children, in particular, could benefit considerably from such training programmes, which could enable them to use mental skills and compassion to regulate stress and emotions.

Policymakers should take the lead in promoting this science-based approach to learning and working, such as by redesigning institutions to emphasise collaboration. Several governments – including that of the United Kingdom – have developed so-called ‘nudge units’, which seek to encourage people to make better choices for themselves and society by providing subtle hints, cues and other suggestions.

A lack of compassion is arguably the cause of many of humankind’s most devastating failures. Our success in tackling the enormous challenges we face will depend not only on our willingness to work actively and cooperatively to advance the common good, but also on our ability to foster the attributes needed to do so.

Tania Singer is Director of the Department of Social Neuroscience at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences.

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2015.

Boxing match to be most expensive in history

It’s the stand-off that fans have been waiting for; some said it would never happen, although all hoped for the day that the announcement was made. The world’s best boxers, pound-for-pound, will finally come head-to-head on May 2 in Las Vegas, home of the biggest fight-nights in history.

Ticket sales, which range from $1,000 to $10,000, are expected to generate $74m, more than the $60m made from this year’s Super Bowl – despite at a capacity of 16,000, the MGM Grand has four times fewer seats than the host of Super Bowl XLIX, the University of Phoenix Stadium. Soon after going on sale, tickets have become increasingly difficult to purchase, particularly as few are available to the general public.

In total, the match is estimated to earn $500m

That’s just the ticket sales. According to BBC Sport, HBO and Showtime will be charging a record $99.95 to watch the bout. While on the other side of the Atlantic, following a fierce scramble with other networks, Sky Sports Box Office has been awarded the exclusive live rights to broadcast the greatly-anticipated fight in the UK. British pay-per-view customers will give £24.95, £10 more than the price charged to watch the Mayweather vs. Ricky Hatton fight in 2007. It is predicted that the total profit earned from pay-per-view will amount to $250m, obliterating the previous record of $150m, which was set by Mayweather’s fight with Canelo Alvarez in 2013.

“I’ve never been around a fight that everyone is talking about like this one, people are counting down the days. Mayweather v Pacquiao is up there with Muhammad Ali v George Foreman as a worldwide event – and it’s the biggest Sky Sports fight ever,” boxing expert and columnist, Glenn McCrory, told Sky Sports News. The plethora of channels and digital outlets belonging to Sky Sports will cover the build-up to the fight, including press conferences and the training camps of both fighters.

In total, the match is estimated to earn $500m, making it the most lucrative fight of all time. With all of the hype, anticipation and steep prices required to witness Mayweather vs. Pacquiao fans hope that it will be a knock-out fight, rather than a knock-out within the early rounds.

Costa Rica runs only on renewable energy

Costa Rica is setting a high bar for environmental awareness, not only for the region, but also for the globe. As multiple countries struggle with their ever-growing carbon footprint, this central American country is making considerable reductions to its pollution output.

Recently the state-run Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) released a statement announcing that since the beginning of the year, the nation has relied solely on environmentally-friendly energy. As a result of heavy rainfall, Costa Rica has not needed to use fossil fuels to fulfil its electricity needs.

As a result of heavy rainfall, Costa Rica has not needed to use
fossil fuels

Hydroelectricity has been generated by the country’s four reservoirs, Arenal, Cachi, La Angostura and Pirrís, which have all surpassed the ICE’s estimates for this quarter. Other renewable sources have also been used to achieve this feat, such as wind, biomass, solar and geothermal power, although not to the same degree.

According to the Green Energy Leaders report published by WWF, “In the Latin American region, [Costa Rica] is the cleanest country in terms of a range of factors: energy consumption per unit of GDP; carbon intensity in energy conversion processes; impacts over air and water pollution related to energy production; and amount of emissions for electricity produced.”

Costa Rica has been making strides in the field of renewable energy, with this milestone being the latest in a string of achievements for reducing its carbon impact. In 2014, 80 percent of the nation’s electricity requirements were produced by hydropower, while plans for a $958m geothermal energy plant were also unveiled. Enhancing geothermal energy is an important step in Costa Rica’s plan to use 100 percent renewable energy by 2021, as droughts could hinder this objective. As such, it seems this small Latin American nation is on target to reach its enviable task.

Google makes a play for television advertising market

Nielsen is the world’s leading source for television ratings; it has allowed advertising executives to capture viewing habits and audience size ever since it was founded in 1950. Now there is a new competitor attempting to break this monopoly, and a sizeable one at that – Google.

Fiber can monitor the frequency with which commercials are seen

Currently Google’s set top box, Fiber, provides broadband internet and television services to a growing number of areas in the US. The tech powerhouse has announced that it will be rolling out a new system for tracking television advertising via Fiber, thereby providing more accurate data from a larger pool of viewers. Google Fiber will enable targeted advertising for audiences based on their viewing history, although users will have the option to opt-out.

Fiber can monitor the frequency with which commercials are seen, and so allows local businesses to pay only for the number of times their advertisement is viewed on a given television, as well as providing a maximum limit. Additionally, programming that has been recorded will have the latest advertisements transposed when the recording is watched. Full details of how the system works have not yet been revealed.

The tracking system is being implemented in Kansas City first, with plans to expand if proven successful with both Fiber users and advertisers.

“Fiber TV ads will be digitally delivered in real time and can be matched based on geography, the type of program being shown (sports, news, etc.), or viewing history,” the company explains in a blog post seen in advance by AdWeek.”We’re excited to see how this test progresses, and we’re looking forward to hearing from local businesses and viewers along the way.”

In a similar way to how internet advertising has changed in recent years by targeting relevant audiences through an individual’s viewing history, this latest move by Google unveils a similar method that could change the way we watch television forever.

Singapore’s controversial leader Lee Kuan Yew dies

The man that turned Singapore from a small colonial British port city into one of the wealthiest countries in the world has passed away at 91. Lee Kuan Yew led the country for over three decades after it gained independence from British rule in 1959. During his time in charge, Lee implemented a pro-business strategy that turned Singapore into the leading economic centre in Asia.

Lee’s modernising achievements have caused an outpouring of tributes from
world leaders

Encouraging foreign investment in the country, Lee oversaw a period where money poured into building an Asian economic powerhouse. Internationally renowned businesses like Google and Proctor & Gamble based their Asian operations there, while the city-state also acted as a key regional shipping port.

He was criticised in some quarters for an authoritarian streak, often using the courts to silence critics and interfering in citizens’ private lives. He restricted the freedom of the press preventing any dissenting voices to his rule, while he also famously banned chewing gum. There were even accusations of social engineering through a state-instigated match-making agency – the Social Development Unit – that encouraged the country’s most intelligent to marry and have children.

However, Lee’s modernising achievements have caused an outpouring of tributes from world leaders. US President Barack Obama described him as a “true giant of history”, adding that he would be “remembered for generations to come as the father of modern Singapore and as one of the great strategists of Asian affairs.”

Lee’s son, Lee Hsien Loong, is now the current Prime Minister of Singapore, and offered an emotional tribute announcing the passing of his father. “He fought for our independence, built a nation where there was none, and made us proud to be Singaporeans. We won’t see another man like him.”

Women to thank for China’s tech boom

As the world’s largest digital retail market and one of its largest economies, China is experiencing a boom in e-commerce. This is, in part, being driven by urban women who are more digitally addicted than their western counterparts. Research by SapientNitro suggests 75 percent of these middle-class women control home budgets and 30 percent are millionaires. China’s domestic market has grown considerably in recent years and is particularly attractive to women aged 25 to 35, 115 million of whom contribute $3trn annually to the marketplace. The research states that the average ‘wired woman’ in China owns as many as five devices each, with 15 percent preferring to give up seeing their families for a month than give up their smartphones.

A report by The Economist found that an increasing number of financially-empowered women, fuelled by technology, independence and anonymity, are driving the explosive growth of China’s e-commerce. Speaking in a statement, editor of the report, Laurel West said: “Women are controlling spending in a variety of categories where you would expect them to, such as clothing and accessories, cosmetics, and groceries. But they also have an increasing influence in bigger ticket items such as electronics. Many brands are realising this and making efforts to better understand what is important to female consumers.”

This influence was evident in 2014, when singles day generated $9.34bn in 24 hours, compared to $4.16bn spend in the US during Black Friday and Cyber Monday combined. These results led Alibaba founder Jack Ma to personally thank China’s women on national TV for their involvement. A report by Bain & Company states that the amount that online shoppers in the country have spent since 2009 has grown more than 70 percent annually, with 2012’s figure of ¥1.3trn expected to rise to ¥3.3trn this year.

Shadowless skyscrapers come to London

With increasingly less room on the ground, cities are moving up into the skies in order to provide much sought-after working and living space. Yet the problem this rising trend presents is the darkness shed over those below. In an innovative solution to this urban problem, London-based architects from the global firm, NBBJ, have unveiled designs for a pair of ‘shadowless’ skyscrapers.

Using the computer-modelling software Rhinoceros, NBBJ has designed two buildings that work together to reflect sunlight – thereby minimising the shadows cast below. One of the two structures is clad with curved glass that is precisely angled towards the sun using algorithms. The meticulously designed facade follows the solar path throughout the day, regardless of the time of year. The location of such buildings is therefore vital in the planning process so as to achieve the desired illuminating effect.

“One of NBBJ’s principle concerns is public spaces and how the public use and interact with them. The no shadow tower reframes the tall buildings debate from the number of towers planned to now focus on placemaking, human interaction and the impact at street level. The key to getting tall buildings right is at the skyline level and the base, ensuring quality public realm,” Christian Coop, NBBJ’s design director told The New Economy.

Conceptual designs have so far been created for the Greenwich peninsula in south-east London. “More skyscrapers is something of an inevitability. We’re not going back to an agrarian lifestyle,” Daniel Safarik, a spokesperson at the Council of Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat told Wired. With the growing number of tall structures casting shadows on urban areas, NBBJ’s design could feature along the skyline of major cities around the world. By inputting data relevant to each site, the ‘shadowless’ structure can be built anywhere.

Mario goes mobile: Nintendo to rethink its strategy

Last year’s disappointing sales have prompted Kyoto-based Nintendo to revaluate its current strategy. In January, the forecasted group operating profit for FY 2014 was downgraded by half of its previous estimate to $165m. Nintendo has long refused to go mobile, fearing the volatile pricing for content aimed at tablets and smartphones. Yet the consumer electronics company can no longer turn its back on the growing mobile app trend, which has been named as the biggest market in the gaming world for 2015 by Newzoo’s Quarterly Global Games Market Update.

The consumer electronics company can no longer turn its back on the growing mobile
app trend

Nintendo has teamed up with Tokyo mobile app developers, DeNA, to develop and operate games for its new platforms. In order to ensure the quality gaming experience that Nintendo is known for, original games will be designed specifically for mobile app platforms, rather than converting existing games. Yet, Nintendo fans will find familiar faces in the newly created settings, with popular gaming icons featuring throughout the new series.

During a press conference on March 17, it was announced that the games are still in early development stages, with some due to be released later on this year; although no indications have been given in regards to which titles will feature in Nintendo’s portfolio.

A joint statement made by the two firms reads, “The alliance is intended to complement Nintendo’s dedicated video game systems business and extend Nintendo’s reach into the vast market of smart device users worldwide. Under the alliance, DeNA will also be able to strengthen its gaming business at a global scale by leveraging Nintendo’s IP.”

As part of the new partnership between the two companies, a capital alliance has also been formed. According to the press release, Nintendo will acquire 10 percent of DeNA’s total outstanding stock for approximately 22bn yen. DeNA will spend the equivalent amount, which buys around 1.24 percent of Nintendo shares.