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BusinessWeek September 17, 2009 Chris Farrell |
The Redemption of Keynes Rediscovering the man whose ideas helped avert economic collapse. |
The Motley Fool November 17, 2006 Mike Norman |
The Passing of a Giant Great economist Milton Friedman is gone, but his theories and those of another giant, John Maynard Keynes, live on. |
Finance & Development September 2011 G. Chris Rodrigo |
The Big and the Small Picture Why economics is split into two realms. |
The Motley Fool August 2, 2010 Gerard Torres |
Fight Club: Economist Edition Intellectual scuffling among economists covers up a lack of economic thought. |
BusinessWeek May 6, 2010 Peter Coy |
How Do You Stave Off a Slump? Have Uncle Sam Play the Market A startling way for softening the next big economic blow. |
Reason January 2005 |
Hayek for the 21st Century Biographer Bruce Caldwell discusses F.A. Hayek's (author of The Road to Serfdom) enduring lessons about bad economic planning, distributed information, and the liberating power of choice. |
Reason October 2001 Deirdre McCloskey |
Persuade and Be Free A new road to Friedrich Hayek: The intellectual defenses of a new age of libertarianism need sweet talk, a unity of word and number, story and metaphor, on the lips of free men and women. The story of Hayek's astonishing life and work says just that... |
Finance & Development December 2009 William White |
Modern Macroeconomics Is on the Wrong Track The former Bank for International Settlements chief economist argues that the global economic crisis should prompt a rethinking of macroeconomic analysis |
The Motley Fool November 17, 2006 Brian Lawler |
So Long, Milton Milton Friedman, perhaps the best-known academic economist of modern times, died yesterday at the age of 94. |
Finance & Development December 1, 2001 Anand Chandavarkar |
A Fresh Look at Keynes: Robert Skidelsky's Trilogy Keynes is widely recognized as the dominant economist of the past century. A recent scholarly biography by Robert Skidelsky evaluates how well his reputation has stood the test of time. |
BusinessWeek November 12, 2009 Chris Farrell |
Books: John Cassidy's How Markets Fail Blind faith in the markets, says John Cassidy, author of How Markets Fail: The Logic of Economic Calamities, caused the financial meltdown. We can avert future calamities via 'reality-based economics' |
BusinessWeek January 7, 2009 Michael Mandel |
Economic Recovery: What the Economists Say Harvard's Rogoff says economists deserve a portion of the blame for this crisis. |
BusinessWeek April 12, 2004 Christopher Farrell |
John Maynard Keynes: Capitalism's Savior Keynesian fiscal theories altered forever government's role in the economy. |
Reason July 2007 Steven Horwitz |
Leftists for Hayek Socialism After Hayek by Theodore A. Burczak examines what happens when a socialist applies the insights of Austrian economics. |
Financial Advisor February 2007 Richard B. Wagner |
Planners In The Church Of The Holy CFP? In making financial planning a profession, are planners emulating the right professionals? |
Finance & Development December 2009 Lipsky et al. |
Books New books By Gillian Tett, Robert Skidelsky, Anand Chandavarkar, and Jean-Pierre Chauffour on the financial crisis, Keynesian economics, and development issues are reviewed |
Reason January 2005 |
30 Years Ago in Reason The GOP is in fact a chicken whose head has been cut off... The common denominator among [previous Nobel laureates] is their general acceptance of the Keynesian framework... etc. |
BusinessWeek February 17, 2011 Mike Dorning |
Obama's Budget and Its Discontents To Republican free-market purists, Obama's 2012 budget priorities smack of Keynesian interventionism. |
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 |
HBS Working Knowledge February 7, 2007 Thomas K. McCraw |
Dividends from Schumpeter's Noble Failure Although Harvard economist Joseph Schumpeter's book, Business Cycles, was a failure, the book developed Schumpeter's thinking on capitalism and ultimately changed the practice of business history. Here is an excerpt from the book. |
HBS Working Knowledge May 1, 2006 Jim Heskett |
Who Will Cast a Longer Shadow on the 21st Century: Friedman or Galbraith? A reflection about the influence of two economists, John Kenneth Galbraith and Milton Friedman. |
Reason March 2007 Brian Doherty |
The Life and Times of Milton Friedman Remembering the 20th century's most influential libertarian. Reviewing Milton Friedman's life and career as an economist and polemicist, one can find a story of unexpected, unprecedented success promoting ideas that pushed against the Zeitgeist and in many ways managed to change it. |
Finance & Development June 2011 Sam Ouliaris |
What Are Economic Models? How economists try to simulate reality |
BusinessWeek November 5, 2007 Michael Mandel |
The Even-Keel Economy Today sharp shocks in one sector, like housing, don't necessarily lead to broader downturns. |
BusinessWeek October 25, 2004 Peter Coy |
Nobel Winners Without Much Impact The work of economists Prescott and Kydland win praise for insight, but not practicality. |
The Motley Fool October 20, 2008 John Reeves |
How to Fix Our Economy Here are three policy prescriptions that have been put forward by Paul Krugman, Nouriel Roubini, and other economists. |
BusinessWeek November 20, 2006 Mandel & Dunham |
Can Anyone Steer This Economy? Global forces have taken control of the economy. And government, regardless of party, will have less influence than ever |
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. |
BusinessWeek February 20, 2006 |
"Economists Suffer from Physics Envy" In search of a better economics theory, MIT's Andrew Lo says evolutionary dynamics could shed light on why investors behave as they do |
The Motley Fool August 4, 2010 Morgan Housel |
Roundtable: Keynes vs. Hayek! Who Was Right? Fool analysts chime in. |
The Motley Fool December 7, 2009 Alyce Lomax |
The Daily Walk of Shame: Keynesians Many Keynesian economists are softpedaling the idea that our gigantic -- and growing -- deficit and public debt are highly dangerous. Shame on them, and on anyone who believes there's anything sustainable about the faux economic "growth" we're now seeing. |
Reason October 2007 Bryan Caplan |
The 4 Boneheaded Biases of Stupid Voters American economists have a love-hate relationship with systematic bias. Out of all the complaints that economists lodge against laymen, four families of beliefs stand out: the anti-market bias, the anti-foreign bias, the make-work bias, and the pessimistic bias. |
BusinessWeek November 7, 2005 Michael Mandel |
What's So Good About Growth Read "The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth" to understand the links between technological, economic, and moral progress. |