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Search Result for “Government debt”

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BUSINESS

What America's Economy Needs from Trump

Business, Joseph Stiglitz, Published on 21/11/2016

» Donald Trump's astonishing victory in the United States presidential election has made one thing abundantly clear: too many Americans feel left behind. It is not just a feeling; many Americans really have been left behind. It can be seen in the data no less clearly than in their anger. And an economic system that doesn't "deliver" for large parts of the population is a failed economic system. So what should President-elect Trump do about it?

BUSINESS

A better economic plan for Japan

Business, Joseph Stiglitz, Published on 26/09/2016

» It's been a quarter-century since Japan's asset bubble burst -- and a quarter-century of malaise as one "lost decade" has followed another. Some of the criticism of its economic policies is unwarranted. Growth is not an objective in itself; we should be concerned with standards of living.

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OPINION

Wealth gap ushers in premature deaths

News, Joseph Stiglitz, Published on 12/12/2015

» This week, Angus Deaton will receive the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics “for his analysis of consumption, poverty and welfare”. Deservedly so. Indeed, soon after the award was announced in October, Mr Deaton published some startling work with Ann Case in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences — research that is at least as newsworthy as the Nobel ceremony.

OPINION

Europe bombards Greek democracy

News, Joseph Stiglitz, Published on 02/07/2015

» The crescendo of bickering and acrimony within Europe might seem to outsiders to be the inevitable result of the bitter endgame playing out between Greece and its creditors. In fact, European leaders are finally beginning to reveal the true nature of the ongoing debt dispute, and the answer is not pleasant: It is about power and democracy much more than money and economics.

OPINION

Solidarity key to Europe's future

News, Joseph Stiglitz, Published on 09/06/2015

» European Union leaders continue to play a game of brinkmanship with the Greek government. Greece has met its creditors' demands far more than halfway. Yet Germany and Greece's other creditors continue to demand that the country sign on to a programme that has proven to be a failure, and that few economists ever thought could, would, or should be implemented.

OPINION

Greece didn't fail, but the EU's debt moralising did

News, Joseph Stiglitz, Published on 06/02/2015

» When the euro crisis began a half-decade ago, Keynesian economists predicted that the austerity that was being imposed on Greece and the other crisis countries would fail. It would stifle growth and increase unemployment — and even fail to decrease the debt-to-GDP ratio.