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The Motley Fool April 7, 2010 Matt Koppenheffer |
Is This Economics Nobel Laureate Wrong? Paul Krugman is looking at financial reform the wrong way. |
BusinessWeek August 6, 2009 Roben Farzad |
Bernanke, Flying by the Seat of His Pants In Fed We Trust: Ben Bernanke's War on the Great Panic, by David Wessel, is an engrossing look at the central bank's swift reaction to the crisis, and how it is wielding its power. |
The Motley Fool October 20, 2008 John Reeves |
How to Fix Our Economy Here are three policy prescriptions that have been put forward by Paul Krugman, Nouriel Roubini, and other economists. |
Finance & Development June 1, 2006 Arvind Subramanian |
Economist as Crusader An interview with economist Paul Krugman whose Age of Diminished Expectations and Peddling Prosperity filled the gap between the boringly descriptive genre of up-and-down economics books and sensationalist and shallow airport economics books. |
Finance & Development September 2011 G. Chris Rodrigo |
The Big and the Small Picture Why economics is split into two realms. |
The Motley Fool March 1, 2007 Matt Koppenheffer |
Quick Take: Greenspan's Prescient Call What was Greenspan really saying this time? People can no better decipher Greenspan's double-talk today than they could when he was the chairman of the Federal Reserve. |
BusinessWeek January 13, 2011 Peter Coy |
Economics' Newest Thinking Comes from the Old Masters John Maynard Keynes and Friedrich Hayek, who battled over the Depression, are getting a fresh look as the Long Slump lingers on. |
BusinessWeek November 12, 2009 Chris Farrell |
Books: John Cassidy's How Markets Fail Blind faith in the markets, says John Cassidy, author of How Markets Fail: The Logic of Economic Calamities, caused the financial meltdown. We can avert future calamities via 'reality-based economics' |
BusinessWeek September 17, 2009 Chris Farrell |
The Redemption of Keynes Rediscovering the man whose ideas helped avert economic collapse. |
The Motley Fool April 11, 2008 Chuck Saletta |
The Next Unsustainable Asset Bubble As long as the first response to any financial stress is a quick infusion of cheap money, the formation of the next bubble is a virtual certainty. |
BusinessWeek August 27, 2009 Peter Coy |
The Fed: Low Rates as Far as Bernanke Can See Why the Federal Reserve's policy of keeping short-term interest at historic lows has such broad support. |
The Motley Fool October 26, 2010 Nick Kapur |
Dear Paul Krugman: Enough Already! The economist needs to get some new arguments, or just get over himself. |
BusinessWeek July 22, 2010 Miller & Kennedy |
The Uncertainty Principle: Not Sure? Don't Spend Doubts about new regulation and the fate of the economy have corporations playing it safe. |
Registered Rep. October 24, 2005 Halah Touryalai |
Bernanke Nomination Applauded by Brokerage Industry With the nomination of Ben Bernanke to chairman of the Federal Reserve Board -- likely the most powerful banking job in the world -- President Bush hit the nail on the head, say brokerage industry officials, as well as brokers. |
BusinessWeek October 25, 2004 Peter Coy |
Nobel Winners Without Much Impact The work of economists Prescott and Kydland win praise for insight, but not practicality. |
The Motley Fool December 7, 2009 Alyce Lomax |
The Daily Walk of Shame: Keynesians Many Keynesian economists are softpedaling the idea that our gigantic -- and growing -- deficit and public debt are highly dangerous. Shame on them, and on anyone who believes there's anything sustainable about the faux economic "growth" we're now seeing. |
Finance & Development March 2011 Atish Rex Ghosh |
Residual Brilliance A conversation with economist Robert Solow. |
U.S. Banker November 2005 |
Finding the Country's Next Alan Greenspan The former Fed chairman's stewardship of the economy has taken on an almost biblical meaning. Succeeding, never mind outperforming, him will be anything but easy. |
The Motley Fool February 24, 2009 Alyce Lomax |
Bernanke Calls a Bottom Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke reveals the results of his peek into his economic crystal ball, declaring that our economy could be on the road to recovery in 2010. |
BusinessWeek November 22, 2004 Peter Coy |
The Trade Gap: How Long Can It Go On? The rapid growth of the U.S. trade deficit has sparked vociferous debate -- and fresh research -- among international economists. Some see it as sustainable, but most believe the U.S. spree must soon end |
The Motley Fool June 10, 2009 Alex Dumortier |
The Recession Is (Almost) Over -- What Now? Nobel-winning economist Paul Krugman said he expects the U.S. recession to end by September. |
U.S. Banker September 2009 Joseph Rosta |
Is the Dollar Fading as No. 1 Reserve Currency? Not yet, but if it happens expect high inflation and interest rates, and less U.S. appetite for credit. But smaller banks could gain footing as funding costs rise at large domestic institutions. |
Salon.com March 16, 2001 Andrew Leonard |
Bush's shaky hand The president's loose talk of recession and hype for his tax cut have economists worried he'll wreck the economy. |
BusinessWeek October 14, 2010 Peter Coy |
The U.S. Economy: Stuck in Neutral The U.S. won't be able to export its way out of this slump as a global currency war looms. |
The Motley Fool December 18, 2007 Tom Hutchinson |
Is Stagflation Making a Comeback? Stagflation, left for dead in the '70s, could be upon us once again. |
Reason October 2007 Bryan Caplan |
The 4 Boneheaded Biases of Stupid Voters American economists have a love-hate relationship with systematic bias. Out of all the complaints that economists lodge against laymen, four families of beliefs stand out: the anti-market bias, the anti-foreign bias, the make-work bias, and the pessimistic bias. |
The Motley Fool September 17, 2008 Alex Dumortier |
Has a Run on Goldman and Morgan Begun? NYU economics professor Nouriel Roubini may have been right. We could very well be witnessing the death throes of the modern U.S. investment bank. |
BusinessWeek December 20, 2007 James C. Cooper |
No Recession, But... Most experts polled expect growth, however meager, in 2008. A few predict rougher times. |
The Motley Fool June 30, 2010 Eric Dutram |
Three ETFs To Own If Paul Krugman Is Right A profile of three ETFs that may be interesting plays if Nobel-prize winning economist Paul Krugman's predictions are correct. |
Finance & Development March 2009 Prakash Loungani |
Seeing Crises Clearly A profile and short interview with New York University economics professor Nouriel Roubini. |
BusinessWeek June 10, 2010 Jessica Silver-Greenberg |
Time to Slip into Something Less Comfortable? The bearish forecasters who rose to fame in the market crash of 2008 have, for the most part, not surrendered their pessimism. Their moment could be coming back around. |
BusinessWeek October 24, 2005 Rich Miller |
Wanted: Fed Chief With Foreign Flair With so much U.S. debt held overseas, Greenspan's successor must be a diplomat. |
BusinessWeek January 7, 2009 Michael Mandel |
Economic Recovery: What the Economists Say Harvard's Rogoff says economists deserve a portion of the blame for this crisis. |
Finance & Development December 2010 |
Fun & Games A profile of economic theorist Avinash Dixit. |
Salon.com April 5, 2001 Damien Cave |
The world according to Paul Economist du jour Paul Krugman weighs in on the China standoff, California's energy crisis and whether the economy has hit rock bottom... |
The Motley Fool November 17, 2006 Mike Norman |
The Passing of a Giant Great economist Milton Friedman is gone, but his theories and those of another giant, John Maynard Keynes, live on. |
The Motley Fool May 14, 2010 Chris Hill |
Nouriel Roubini on White Swans and Financial Reform Thoughts on the euro, Greece, and financial reform from the man known as Dr. Doom in his new book "Crisis Economics: a Crash Course in the Future of Finance." |
BusinessWeek November 25, 2009 Jane Sasseen |
The Slow Road to Jobs In recent recessions, employment has taken longer and longer to return. Why this lag may be the longest |
BusinessWeek April 8, 2010 |
Book Excerpt: Roger Lowenstein's "The End of Wall Street" The Street isn't dead - but a certain laissez-faire idea of it is. So argues Lowenstein in his new book. |
BusinessWeek October 2, 2006 Peter Coy |
Stocks Can Handle The Housing Chill The numbers are scary. But history shows that the market can shrug them off. |
BusinessWeek March 13, 2006 Michael Mandel |
Do I Deserve A Wedgie? A Feb. 13 economics cover story provoked a lively, ongoing Web discussion. |
The Motley Fool December 16, 2009 Alyce Lomax |
Bernanke's the Man (of the Year)? Would you name the Fed Chief 2009's Person of the Year? |
Finance & Development March 1, 2003 Jeremy Clift |
The Lab Man How experimental economics emerged from the shadows: an interview with Nobel Prize winner Vernon L. Smith |
BusinessWeek April 8, 2010 Miller & Kennedy |
Global Inflation Is Low--and Falling The world economy has struggled back onto its feet, but pricing power is still dangerously low, risking a Japan-style deflationary malaise. |
The Motley Fool August 7, 2009 Matt Koppenheffer |
The Massive Macroeconomic Crisis The recent economic calamity has highlighted major problems with macroeconomic theory. |
BusinessWeek November 20, 2006 Mandel & Dunham |
Can Anyone Steer This Economy? Global forces have taken control of the economy. And government, regardless of party, will have less influence than ever |
Registered Rep. June 1, 2008 |
What Recession? Some economists say a U.S. recession may have been averted, as the markets and some economic indicators seem to have improved since March. |
BusinessWeek December 17, 2009 Rich Miller |
Sunny, with a Chance of Relapse Strong growth or tepid bounceback? Economists ring in 2010 |
BusinessWeek June 23, 2010 Peter Coy |
Five Options for Tackling Trade With China The U.S. needs much more than an exchange-rate "head fake" from Beijing to correct the glaring trade imbalance. Policies must be challenged |
Finance & Development December 2009 William White |
Modern Macroeconomics Is on the Wrong Track The former Bank for International Settlements chief economist argues that the global economic crisis should prompt a rethinking of macroeconomic analysis |