Dean Baker | TalkMarkets | Page 20
Co-Director at Center for Economic and Policy Research
Dean Baker co-founded CEPR in 1999. His areas of research include housing and macroeconomics, intellectual property, Social Security, Medicare and European labor markets. He is the author of several books, including "Getting Back to Full Employment: A Better ...more

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The Fed’s Bubble Promotion Strategy And Current Fed Policy
The economic data provide a pretty good case for leaving interest rates where they are or possibly even lowering them. After all, if there are no realistic fears of inflation, why shouldn’t the Fed put its foot on the accelerator?
The Old Which Way Is Up Problem In Economics
Economists can’t even agree on answers to the most basic questions, like is an economy suffering from too little demand or too much demand. It is like a weatherperson telling us that we don’t know whether to expect severe drought or record floods.
Robert Samuelson Is Unhappy That We Have Evidence Based Economics
We clearly are not seeing this constraint. There are still millions of unemployed or underemployed workers who would like full-time jobs. This means that the concern about balanced budgets is needlessly keeping these people unemployed.
Will A Drying Up Of Tech Capital Lessen Inequality?
The huge capitalizations of many start-ups has allowed a small number of people to get very rich, however it is not clear that their valuations bore any resemblance to their value to the economy.
France’s Good Housekeeping Seal Of Approval: Productivity Champions
In the United States, people work longer hours and get higher income than people in Europe. There is a simple story where we might expect that the higher income is used to avoid household work.
John Carney Warns WSJ Readers That Bernie Sanders May Return Wall Street To The 1990s
In a Wall Street Journal column earlier this week, John Carney warned readers that the financial transactions tax (FTT) proposed by Senator Bernie Sanders “promises a smaller, slower market offering lower returns to investors.
Strike Three For The Congressional Budget Office? Social Security Retirement Income Projections
Yesterday the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) corrected an error that it made in projecting the share of earnings that will be replaced by Social Security for those nearing retirement. An error which never should have been made.
The Pent-Up-Demand For Quits
It seems plausible to me that the quit rate should be elevated for a period of time to compensate for the unusually low quit rate of prior years. If someone wants to tell me why this is wrong, I’m listening.
With Inflation Well Below Targets And Interest Rates Near Record Lows, The Washington Post Wants To Reduce The Deficit
We have such clear warning signs of imminent disaster. I should probably also point out that the interest burden measured as a share of GDP (net of money refunded from the Fed) is at the lowest level since before World War II.
Budget Deficit Mania And The Congressional Budget Office
The CBO forecasts don’t look exactly like the sky is falling end of the world stuff, they do show that the debt and deficit will both rise as a share of GDP.
Breaking Up The Big Banks Is Easy
We can argue whether downsizing the big banks is a good policy. The arguments posed by Eisman are reasonable. But we should not have to worry about whether downsizing is possible. We know how to do it if we want to.
Lower Oil Prices Aren’t All Bad
World financial markets appear to be in a panic, partly over events in China, and partly over the plunge in oil prices.
Robert Samuelson And The Great Stock Crash Of 2015
Robert Samuelson wades into the turf on the explanations for the recent worldwide stock plunge in his column today. Most of what he says is actually pretty reasonable, but the framing doesn’t make much sense.
305 to 317 of 317 Posts
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