Technology creates jobs as much as it destroys them

Matt Ridley

It’s a good thing we don’t all have to dig the fields by hand My Times column is on technology and jobs: Bill Gates voiced a thought in a speech last week that is increasingly troubling America’s technical elite — that technology is about to make many, many people redundant. Advances in software, he said, […]

The good news you don’t hear about diseases

Matt Ridley

Malaria, TB and Aids are in steady retreat My Times column is on malaria, TB and Aids — all in steady decline, a fact that officials and journalists seem reluctant to report:   There’s a tendency among public officials and journalists, when they discuss disease, to dress good news up as bad. My favourite example […]

Smoking (and European regulation) kills

Matt Ridley

E-cigarettes deserve encouragement as a lesser evil My Times column is on harm reduction, Swedish snus and e-cigarettes: Is this the end of smoking? Not if the bureaucrats can help it. Sweden’s reputation for solving policy problems, from education to banking, is all the rage. The Swedes are also ahead of the rest of Europe […]

The sceptics are right. Don’t scapegoat them.

Matt Ridley

Floods and gales in the UK are not evidence of climate change This is my column in the Times this week. I have added some updates in the text and below.   In the old days we would have drowned a witch to stop the floods. These days the Green Party, Greenpeace and Ed Miliband […]

Science discovers new ignorance about the past

Matt Ridley

Genes generate new mysteries about prehistory My recent Times column on new discoveries in the history of our species: It is somehow appropriate that the 850,000-year-old footprints found on a beach in Norfolk last May, and announced last week, have since been washed away. Why? Because the ephemeral nature of that extraordinary discovery underlines the […]

Do people mind more about inequality than poverty?

Matt Ridley

Few people know that global inequality is falling and so is poverty My Times column this week was on the facts behind the inequality debate: The Swedish data impresario Hans Rosling recently asked some British people to estimate the average number of births per woman in Bangladesh and gave them four possible answers. Just 12 […]

Cherry picking and the tale of the Siberian larch trees

Matt Ridley

Stephen McIntyre responds to Keith Briffa’s allegations This is Stephen McIntyre’s response to me, commenting on the letters from Professor Keith Briffa to the Times in response to my column on the widespread problem of withheld adverse data. It makes very clear that my account was accurate, that my account was mischaracterized by Professor Briffa […]

Why is polygamy declining?

Matt Ridley

President Hollande’s affair and the triumph of human monogamy My recent Times column was on human monogamy: The tragic death of an Indian minister’s wife and the overdose of a French president’s “wife” give a startling insight into the misery that infidelity causes in a monogamous society. In cultures like India and France, it is […]

China’s one-child policy was inspired by western greens

Matt Ridley

A missile scientist and the “Limits to Growth” As China’s one-child policy comes officially to an end, it is time to write the epitaph on this horrible experiment — part of the blame for which lies, surprisingly, in the West and with green, rather than red, philosophy. The policy has left China with a demographic […]

The real risks of cherry picking scientific data

Matt Ridley

The sin of omission of inconvenient results My Times column is on the dangers of omitting inconvenient results: Perhaps it should be called Tamiflugate. Yet the doubts reported by the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee last week go well beyond the possible waste of nearly half a billion pounds on a flu drug that […]

1 43 44 45 46 47 89