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Search Result for “financial crisis”

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OPINION

More shock therapy for neoliberalism

Oped, Joseph Stiglitz, Published on 09/04/2022

» The fallout from Russia's invasion of Ukraine has reminded us of the unforeseeable disruptions constantly confronting the global economy. We have been taught this lesson many times. No one could have predicted the Sept 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, and few anticipated the 2008 financial crisis, the Covid-19 pandemic, or Donald Trump's election, which resulted in the United States turning toward protectionism and nationalism.

BUSINESS

Beyond secular stagnation

Business, Joseph Stiglitz, Published on 08/09/2018

» The term "secular stagnation" became popular in the United States as World War II was drawing to a close. Economist Alvin Hansen (and many others) worried that, without the stimulation provided by the war, the economy would return to recession or depression. There was, it seemed, a fundamental malady.

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OPINION

Why tax cuts for rich solve nothing

News, Joseph Stiglitz, Published on 01/08/2017

» Although America's right-wing plutocrats may disagree about how to rank the country's major problems -- for example, inequality, slow growth, low productivity, opioid addiction, poor schools, and deteriorating infrastructure -- the solution is always the same: lower taxes and deregulation, to "incentivise" investors and "free up" the economy. President Donald Trump is counting on this package to make America great again.

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OPINION

Globalisation failing the world's people

News, Joseph Stiglitz, Published on 08/08/2016

» Fifteen years ago, I wrote a little book, entitled Globalisation and its Discontents, describing growing opposition in the developing world to globalising reforms. It seemed a mystery: people in developing countries had been told that globalisation would increase overall well-being. So why had so many people become so hostile to it?

OPINION

New realities shape young minds

News, Joseph Stiglitz, Published on 28/03/2016

» Something interesting has emerged in voting patterns on both sides of the Atlantic: young people are voting in ways that are markedly different from their elders. A great divide appears to have opened up, based not so much on income, education or gender as on the voters' generation.

BUSINESS

What's Holding Back the World Economy?

Business, Joseph Stiglitz, Published on 15/02/2016

» Seven years after the global financial crisis in 2008, the world economy continued to stumble in 2015. According to the UN report "World Economic Situation and Prospects 2016", the average growth rate in developed economies has declined by more than 54% since the crisis. Some 44 million people are unemployed in developed nations, about 12 million more than in 2007, while inflation has reached its lowest level since the crisis.

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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

Young Americans 'Fed Up' with country's economy

News, Joseph Stiglitz, Published on 16/09/2015

» At the end of every August, central bankers and financiers from around the world meet in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, for the US Federal Reserve's economic symposium. This year, the participants were greeted by a large group of mostly young people, including many African- and Hispanic-Americans.

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

US feuds with AIIB over power fears

News, Joseph Stiglitz, Published on 17/04/2015

» While the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank are poised to hold their annual meetings, the big news in global economic governance will not be made in Washington DC in the coming days. Indeed, key news was made last month, when the UK, Germany, France and Italy joined more than 30 other countries as founding members of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB). The $50 billion AIIB, launched by China, will help meet Asia's enormous infrastructure needs, which are well beyond the capacity of today's financial institutions.