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BusinessWeek November 10, 2003 Peter Coy |
The Boom: What Went Wrong A review of nobel laureate economist Joseph E. Stiglitz's new book The Roaring Nineties: A New History of the World's Most Prosperous Decade |
Finance & Development December 2009 Prakash Loungani |
The People's Professor "The most misunderstood man in America" -- that's what Newsweek called Joseph Stiglitz in an article this year. The 2001 Nobel laureate in economics "can't get any respect at home," the magazine said. |
BusinessWeek October 9, 2006 Peter Coy |
One World, Two Blueprints "Making Globalization Work" gives a creative look at how globalization can improve the lot of poor nations. |
Reason March 2003 Charles Oliver |
Global Speculators A billionaire and a Nobel laureate want to fix international trade agencies. Why bother? |
BusinessWeek January 14, 2010 James Pressley |
The Meltdown According to Stiglitz Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz argues in his new book that Obama's response to the financial crisis was far too timid. |
Knowledge@Wharton |
Economist Joseph Stiglitz and His Discontents In a timely book, issued in a period when protests against the process of globalization continue to spread across the globe, and Stiglitz musters some impressive ammunition for his indictment of the IMF. But his salvo may mask some gaps in his reasoning. |
BusinessWeek November 24, 2003 Robert Kuttner |
Harping On The Deficit May Undo The Dems I hope the Democratic candidates for President are in touch with Joseph E. Stiglitz, the 2001 Nobel prize co-winner in economics. Stiglitz has challenged a premise that has become like holy writ: the idea that deficit reductions caused the boom of the 1990s. |
CIO February 15, 2003 |
Off the Shelf The defining nature of globalization is that it involves everyone. One ignores Joseph Stiglitz's book Globalization and Its Discontents at one's peril... If you believe that intuition is a skill that can be honed with practice, Gary Klein's Intuition at Work may help... etc. |
Inc. October 2003 Mike Hofman |
Those Weren't the Days? Clinton economist Joseph E. Stiglitz ponders his legacy. |
Finance & Development March 1, 2003 Jeremy Clift |
The Lab Man How experimental economics emerged from the shadows: an interview with Nobel Prize winner Vernon L. Smith |
Finance & Development June 2011 |
Rethinking Economics in a Changed World Three Nobel laureates discuss what the global crisis has taught us. |
Knowledge@Wharton |
Hand-to-Hand Combat: Can Competitive Markets Knock Out Central Planning? Brink Lindsey's "Against the Dead Hand: The Uncertain Struggle for Global Capitalism" is a hard-hitting, richly documented defense of free markets that blames central planning for crippling an emerging global marketplace. |
Reason Aug/Sep 2000 Virginia Postrel |
Impure Thoughts Waiting for perfectly "clean" opportunities to apply your principles means you could lose them altogether. The IMF, taxes and wealth distribution, Sierra Club and tourism in Hawaii. |
The Motley Fool October 5, 2011 Prabhat Sakya |
What the Gurus Say About the Eurozone Crisis Three experts explain how a eurozone calamity might be averted. |
Finance & Development March 2006 |
Book Reviews Illicit: How Smugglers, Traffickers, and Copycats are Hijacking the Global Economy by Moises Naim... Fair Trade for All: How Trade Can Promote Development by Joseph E. Stiglitz and Andrew Charlton... etc. |
BusinessWeek December 29, 2010 Miller & Kennedy |
Suddenly, the U.S. Is Where the Optimism Is While the U.S. economy may prove surprisingly strong in 2011, the cost of that growth could be increased friction with other countries. |