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Blog
Not Just a Greek Problem
Dimitri Papadimitriou was interviewed for Ian Masters’ “Background Briefing” segment regarding Greece’s place in the eurozone debt crisis, the inevitability of default (“… it’s going to happen much sooner than we think”), and other issues. Listen here. -
Working Paper No. 687
Access to Markets and Farm Efficiency
This paper presents an empirical investigation of the relationship between the spread, spatially and temporally, of market institutions and improvements in the productivity and efficiency of farmers. The data used in this study were collected over two decades in a sample of rice farms in the Bicol Region of the Philippines. Our estimates reveal a […] -
Working Paper No. 686
Estimating the Impact of the Recent Economic Crisis on Work Time in Turkey
This paper provides estimates of the impact of the recent economic crisis on paid and unpaid work time in Turkey. The data used in this study come from the first and only time-use survey available at the national level. Infrequency of collection of time-use data in Turkey does not allow us to make a direct […] -
Blog
The End (of the Euro) Is Near
Dimitri Papadimitriou writes in the Huffington Post about two different “endgame” scenarios for the euro: The collapse of the euro project will break in one of two ways. Most likely, and least desirable, is that nations will leave the euro in a coordinated dissolution which might ideally resemble an amicable divorce. As with most divorces, [...] -
Blog
Conventional approach to central banking needs revision
Brookings issued a report yesterday, called Rethinking Central Banking, by a group of high-profile economists including Eichengreen, Rajan, Reinhart, Rogoff and Shin. The group – called the Committee on International Economic Policy and Reforms – argues that the conventional approach to central banking needs to be rethought. The neat separation between price stability and other [...] -
Blog
A Graphical Play in Three Acts
Since graphical information manages to fail less spectacularly at getting people to change their minds, here are three graphs; one addressing what we ought (not) to do, one addressing what we are doing, and the other what we can do. The first comes from the IMF, compiling 30 years of evidence showing that fiscal contraction [...] -
Blog
The power of moral framing
Here is an excerpt from the most important article you will read this year, by George Lakoff: Here’s how public intimidation by framing works. The mechanism of intimidation is framing, not just the use of words or slogans, but rather the changing of what voters take as right as a matter of principle. Framing is [...] -
Summary No. 3
Summary Fall 2011
In this issue, papers focus on the prospects for US economic growth, including jobs programs and other public-sector initiatives; the euro and sovereign-debt crises in the eurozone, as well as global economic tensions between emerging market and industrialized economies; the nature of global finance and its role in real world economies; the impact of government […] -
Blog
UK report proposes ring-fencing of retail banking
The final report from the Independent Banking Commission (IBC), otherwise known as “the Vickers report,” was published yesterday. There are no big surprises here, and the share prices of UK banks actually increased somewhat. The report supports and strengthens the Basel proposals already underway, and maintains its previous proposal to “ring-fence” the retail part of [...] -
Blog
The American Bits and Pieces Act
The AJA is DOA. Via Politico: “House Republicans may pass bits and pieces of President Barack Obama’s jobs plan, but behind the scenes, some Republicans are becoming worried about giving Obama any victories — even on issues the GOP has supported in the past.” For Thomas Masterson’s extensive treatment of the proposed American Jobs Act [...] -
Blog
Off the Charts
“Through several recessions and recoveries, inflation-adjusted GDP rose almost in tandem with a line of predicted growth expectations. But in November 2007, something changed. Real GDP dropped down from what was expected by more than 11 percent, and, as this summer’s data has shown, it hasn’t returned to its pre-recession trend. The unusual slump has [...] -
Blog
The American Jobs Act. sigh.
Well, I commented last night on President Obama’s speech to Congress on WGXC, my local radio station. I thought it worth putting down my thoughts on silicon, since I’ve already done all the thinking about it. First of all, I thought that the delivery was one of the better that I’ve heard from President Obama [...]