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Nobel laureate Paul Krugman, a longtime New York Times columnist, wrote about a change he’s seen in Americans over the last two decades as he published his final column in the newspaper. “What ...
Paul Robin Krugman (/ ˈ k r ʊ ɡ m ə n / ⓘ KRUUG-mən; [4] [5] born February 28, 1953) [6] is an American economist who is the Distinguished Professor of Economics at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He wrote as a columnist for The New York Times from 2000 to 2024. [7]
In a recent Wall Street Journal poll, over 50% of surveyed voters said Trump was "best able to handle" the economy, compared to around 40% of voters who said Harris was more able.
Kamala Harris' plan to crack down on price gouging sparked accusations of communism from some conservatives, but others rallied around the idea.
Shortly after its publication, Newsweek called it "the best primer around on recent U.S. economic history." [1] In the book Krugman covers the US productivity slowdown that has occurred since the 1970s, changes in the ideology among economists, and offers critiques of both conservative supply side economics and liberal support for government intervention in the form of "strategic policy". [1]
The Great Unraveling: Losing Our Way in the New Century is a book by American economist and Nobel laureate Paul Krugman, consisting of a collection of his columns for The New York Times (and some for Slate and Fortune).
Economist and Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman has declared victory over inflation. “The war on inflation is over,” he said in a recent tweet. “We won, at very little cost.”
Paul Krugman, in The New York Times, said that White Rural Rage discusses the process of technological change and its effects on rural areas "in devastating, terrifying and baffling detail." Agreeing with the authors' thesis, he wrote that "while white rural rage is arguably the single greatest threat facing American democracy, I have no good ...