Dean Baker | TalkMarkets | Page 11
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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Airline Executives Have Problems With Arithmetic
Are airlines sure that people wouldn't pay more to be safer?
Nonsense About China That “Everyone” Knows
The long and short is the story that the pandemic taught us some lesson about relying on China is utter nonsense, with no foundation in reality.
Debt And Deficits With The Coronavirus
The issue is whether the additional demand created by a government deficit is exceeding the economy’s ability to produce goods and services, leading to inflation.
Basic Economics For Economic Columnists: A Depression Is A Process, Not An Event
With the economy going into a shutdown mode for at least month, and possibly quite a bit longer, we’re again hearing the cries from elite economics columnists about a Second Great Depression.
The Great Failure Of Donald Trump’s Big Tax Cut
The fact that Donald Trump’s tax cut did not produce the investment and growth that was promised is widely known.
Can Coronavirus Force Policy Types To Think Clearly About Intellectual Property?
It will be hard to decide the most Trumpian moment in his dealing with the coronavirus pandemic, but my nomination is Trump’s meeting with executives from several pharmaceutical companies, where he discussed developing a vaccine.
Coronavirus, The Stock Market, And The Economy
While the spread of the coronavirus gives us very good reason to worry about the state of the economy, the plunge in the stock market does not.
Do Stockholders Look Forward To A Decade Of Very Low Returns?
In spite of completely missing the crash of the stock bubble in 2000-2002 and the housing bubble in 2007-2010, people tend to think that the big actors in the stock market have great insight into the economy’s prospects.
Technology, Patents, And Inequality: An Explanation That Even Economists Can Understand
It will be a huge step forward when we can get economists and others involved in debates on inequality that it is our policy on technology that drives inequality, not the technology itself.
Yes, It's Monday Morning And Robert Samuelson Is Worried About Budget Deficits
The larger deficit was a good thing. It has helped to boost the economy, reduce the unemployment rate, and give workers more bargaining power to secure wage gains.
The Crushing Burden Of Japan's Debt And Other Scare Stories For Small Children
If the U.S. economy does fall into recession it seems the only obstacle to a large fiscal stimulus will be political, not any actual economic constraint.
The Future Of Trade Deals
As we look to the future of trade agreements we must recognize that the concept of “free trade” has little relevance, except as part of a sales pitch.
Trade Deals Are About Increasing Protectionist Barriers
The notion that global economic integration amounts to human progress had a good run. But a new era is underway in which national interests take primacy over collective concerns.
Simple Economics That Most Economists Don’t Know
Economists are continually developing new statistical techniques, at least some of which are useful for analyzing data in ways that allow us to learn new things about the world.
China Has Hugely Outgrown The U.S. Under Trump
This is one in the "whose is bigger?" category; which country has added the most to their GDP over the last three years.
Declining Labor Shares Of GDP Are Not The Story Of Inequality
Tthe fall in the labor share has occurred in this century. In fact, I would say that it is really a Great Recession story, where the loss in shares is overwhelmingly the result of the weak labor market in the years 2008-2012.
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