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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 past 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 New Keynesian economist who is the Distinguished Professor of Economics at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He was a columnist for The New York Times from 2000 to 2024. [7]
But government deficits don’t exactly work like household debt, as New York Times columnist and Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman contends in his May 13 offering. The big, bad number ...
Economist Paul Krugman argues that voters who cast ballots for President-elect Trump’s “terrible” economic agenda are going to get “brutally scammed.” Krugman joined The New Republic’s ...
The collected columns were concerned mainly with the U.S. economy in the early 2000s, and about the economic and foreign policies of the George W. Bush administration. [2] [3] The book was third on the New York Times Best Seller list for the week of October 5, 2003, [4] and remained on the best-seller list for eight weeks. [5]
Sunday Review is the opinion section of The New York Times. It contains columns by a number of regular contributors (such as David Brooks and Paul Krugman), and usually includes editorials, which are opinion pieces written by the Editorial Board. [1]
Ballooning U.S. debt has stirred growing alarm on Wall Street, but economist Paul Krugman isn't worried and said you shouldn't be either. In a New York Times op-ed on Thursday, the Nobel laureate ...
The term originated with the Nobel laureate, Princeton economist and The New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, [1] and is a reference to the "Great Compression", an earlier era in the 1930s and the 1940s when incomes became more equal in the US and elsewhere. [2]