Paul Krugman tells it like it is:.
And Krugman is not alone.
Krugman has talked about this before.
Paul Krugman, American economist and Professor at Princeton University.
Paul Krugman: Regulate institutions that"act like banks" similarly to banks.[176].
Paul Krugman: Regulate institutions that"act like banks" similarly to banks.
The above deficit-scold was none other than Paul Krugman, writing in 2003.
Krugman might have dodged a bullet in 2016,
had he followed that tack.
American economist Paul Krugman has been awarded the 2008 Nobel prize for economics.
Krugman said India though has become a much“better
place to do business” than it was earlier.
Paul Krugman of the New York Times has also noticed
and offers his hope that this trend continues.
(like the U.S.) is a country that Paul Krugman thinks is immune from this type of thing.
Yet this is what ObamaCare proposes to do with health insurance,
and Paul Krugman thinks this is just dandy.
However, my sense of disgust must be more finely
honed than Bob's(who has publicly challenged Krugman to a debate).
He tweeted,“The Nobel prize winning economist, Paul Krugman confirms what we have been saying for over two years now.
My target is Krugman's"The iPhone Stimulus" which recently appeared
in his regular New York Times column of September 14, 2012.
Krugman noted,“The scientists wanted to find out what would
happen to these seeds if they took a ride to the Moon.
I'm reminded of this by Krugman's Monday column in which he asserts that there is a Republican
economic theory of unemployment.
Paul Krugman, the Nobel Prize[winner] in economics, once wrote:"Productivity
is not everything, but in the long run, it is almost everything.
Before getting into history and the historian's tool kit, however,
let me point out that Krugman and Greenspan were following time-honoured traditions
in making erroneous predictions.
Before getting into history and the historian's tool kit, however,
let me point out that Krugman and Greenspan were following time-honored traditions
in making erroneous predictions.
In all of this debate, there are those like Paul Krugman who claim the fears of a debt crisis are
fantasies of right-wing idiots or liars.
In March 2009, Krugman explained that a major difference in this situation is
that the causes of this financial crisis were from the shadow banking system.
The escape hatch Krugman has provided himself is to say that the threat of a bond strike,
and the ensuing inflation, will help our depressed economy;
Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman predicted a series of depressions in his The Return of Depression Economics(1999),
based on"failures on the demand side of the economy.
Nobel Prize winning economist Paul Krugman predicted a series of depressions in his Return to Depression Economics(2000),
based on"failures on the demand side of the economy.".
Rather than heeding the advice of Krugman and others to simply print our troubles away
and/or raise taxes on“the rich,” the responsible thing to do is cut spending.
Krugman has won the Nobel Prize in economics,
and is a Princeton professor, so, maybe, it is not exactly like criticizing a mentally handicapped person to take him on.
Nobel laureate Paul Krugman has in a tweet questioned this flawed thinking
saying how wrong it was to imagine that slashing corporate taxes would lead to a huge surge in investments.
According to Paul Krugman,“Over all,
the 1982 tax increase undid about a third of the 1981 cut; as a share of GDP, the increase was substantially larger than Mr. Clinton's 1993 tax increase.”.