Smart card and Paul Krugman: Difference between pages

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Difference between pages)
Content deleted Content added
Blanked the page
 
sorting material into correct chronological order
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{pp-semi-protect|small=yes|expiry=1 month}}
{{Current-related|person|Nobel Prize in Economics|date=October 2008}}
{{Infobox_Economist
<!-- Scroll down to edit this page -->
<!-- Economist Category -->
| school_tradition = [[Neo-Keynesian economics]]
| color = #B0C4DE
| image_name = Paul Krugman at the German National Library in Frankfurt.jpg
| image_caption = Paul Krugman at the [[German National Library]] in [[Frankfurt am Main]]
| name = Paul Krugman
| birth = {{birth date and age|mf=yes|1953|2|28}}
| death =
| nationality = {{flag|United States}}
| field = [[Macroeconomics]]
| influences =
| opposed =
| influenced =
| contributions = International Trade Theory, New Trade Theory
| prizes = [[Nobel Prize in Economics]] (2008)
}}
'''Paul Robin Krugman''' ({{pron-en|ˈkɹuɡmən}}; born February 28, 1953) is a 2008 [[Nobel Prize]]-winning American [[economist]], [[columnist]], author, and [[intellectual]].<ref>[http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=4314 ''Foreign Policy'': Top 100 Public Intellectuals]. May 2008. Accessed 10-13-08. Krugman ranks in their top 100 list. </ref> He is a professor of economics and international affairs at [[Princeton University]] who has since 2000 written a twice-weekly column for ''[[The New York Times]]''.

Krugman is well-known in academia for his work in trade theory. His best-known work provides a model in which firms and countries produce and trade because of [[economies of scale]]. He was a critic of the "[[New Economy]]" of the late 1990s. Krugman criticized the [[fixed exchange rate]]s in [[East Asia|East]] and [[Southeast Asia]], and [[Thailand]]'s economic policies before the [[1997 East Asian financial crisis]]. Just before the [[1998 Russian financial crisis]], he criticized investors such as [[Long-Term Capital Management]] whose profits depended on the maintenance of fixed exchange rates. Krugman is generally considered a [[Neo-Keynesian economics|neo-Keynesian]] economist,<ref>''[[The New York Times]]'', [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/11/education/11economics.html "In Economics Departments, a Growing Will to Debate Fundamental Assumptions"]. Retrieved July 11, 2007.</ref> with his views outlined in his books such as ''Peddling Prosperity''. Krugman's ''International Economics: Theory and Policy'' is a standard [[textbook]] on international economics that explains [[currency crisis|currency crises]] and [[New Trade Theory]]. In 1991, he was awarded the [[John Bates Clark Medal]] by the [[American Economic Association]]. According to the [[Research Papers in Economics]] project, he is among the 50 most influential economists in the world today. In 2008, he won the [[Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/14/business/14nobel.htm|title=Krugman Wins Nobel Prize for Economics|date=2008-10-13|publisher=[[The New York Times]]|accessdate=2008-10-13}}</ref>

Krugman is generally considered a political [[Social liberalism|liberal]] or [[Progressivism|progressive]]. He is an ardent critic of the [[George W. Bush administration]] and its foreign and domestic policy. Unlike many economic [[Pundit (politics)|pundits]], he is regarded as an important scholarly contributor by his peers.<ref name="Clark"/><ref name="Prince"/> He has written over 200 scholarly papers and 20 books—both academic and non-academic.<ref>''[[The New York Times]]'', [http://www.nytimes.com/ref/opinion/KRUGMAN-BIO.html "Columnist Biography: Paul Krugman"]. Retrieved April 15, 2007.</ref>

== Economist career==
He earned his B.S. in economics from [[Yale University]] in 1974 and his [[Ph.D.]] from [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology|MIT]] in 1977. From 1982 to 1983, he spent a year working at the [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan]] [[White House]] as a staff member of the [[Council of Economic Advisers]]. He has taught at [[Yale University]], MIT, [[UC Berkeley]], the [[London School of Economics]], and [[Stanford University]] before joining the faculty of [[Princeton University]] in 2000. He is a member of the [[Group of Thirty]] international economic body.

When [[Bill Clinton]] came into office in 1993, he considered Krugman for a leading post; Krugman was flown out for a meeting in [[Arkansas]]. Krugman's outspokenness was reported to be "the main reason the Clinton administration didn't offer him a job."<ref name=Hirsch>{{cite news|title=A Nobel-Bound Economist Punctures the C[onventional] W[isdom]--and Not a Few Big-Name Washington Egos|last=Hirsh|first=Michael |date=4 March 1996|publisher=[[Newsweek]]|accessdate=2008-10-13}}</ref> Krugman says he would not have been interested in such a job; he told ''Newsweek'', "I'm temperamentally unsuited for that kind of role. You have to be very good at people skills, biting your tongue when people say silly things."<ref name=Hirsch/>

In his New York Times blog, Krugman scathingly denounced speculation he had been offered or would accept any position in a Hillary Clinton administration, stating that he was "temperamentally unsuited to politics".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/01/30/ |title=2008 January - Paul Krugman - Op-Ed Columnist - New York Times Blog |publisher=Krugman.blogs.nytimes.com |date= |accessdate=2008-10-13}}</ref>

Krugman was awarded the [[Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences|Nobel Prize in economics]], the sole awardee for 2008, for his pioneering work on the [[New Trade Theory]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/10/13/paul-krugman-wins-economics-nobel/?em |title=Paul Krugman Wins Economics Nobel - Economix Blog - NYTimes.com |publisher=Economix.blogs.nytimes.com |author=Catherine Rampell |date=October 13, 2008, 7:50 a.m. |accessdate=2008-10-13}}</ref> In the words of the prize committee, "By having integrated economies of scale into explicit general equilibrium models, Paul Krugman has deepened our understanding of the determinants of trade and the location of economic activity."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/economics/laureates/2008/ecoadv08.pdf |title=Microsoft Word - sciback_cover_ek_2008_FINAL.doc |date= |format=PDF |accessdate=2008-10-13}}</ref>

=== Theories ===
In the early 1990s, he helped popularize the argument made by [[Laurence Lau (economist)|Laurence Lau]] and [[Alwyn Young]], among others, that the growth of economies in East Asia was not the result of new and original economic models, but rather increased capital and labor inputs, which did not result in an increase in [[total factor productivity]]. His prediction was that future economic growth in East Asia would slow as it became more difficult to generate economic growth from increasing inputs.

In the 1990s, Krugman focused on what can be described as policy economics, which he attempted to explain to the general audience in such works as ''Peddling Prosperity'' and columns attacking what he described as "policy entrepreneurs" who were focused single-mindedly on particular solutions, which they proposed to solve every conceivable crisis. He was critical of industrial policy (an approach Clinton later dropped under the influence of [[Robert Rubin]] and [[Lawrence Summers]]) and argued in favor of free trade. (He writes on p. xxvi of his book ''The Great Unraveling'' that "I still have the angry letter [[Ralph Nader]] sent me when I criticized his attacks on globalization.")

=== Author and journalist===
Krugman wrote first for ''[[Fortune (magazine)|Fortune]]'' and ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]'', later for ''[[The Harvard Business Review]]'', ''[[Foreign Policy (magazine)|Foreign Policy]]'', ''[[The Economist]]'', ''[[Harper's Magazine|Harper's]]'', and ''[[Washington Monthly]]''. Krugman said that to answer what he called Pop Internationalism, "I would have to write essays for non-economists that were clear, effective, and entertaining."<ref>(Krugman 1996a, Introduction)</ref>

Since January 2000, Krugman has contributed a twice-weekly column to the Op-Ed page of the ''New York Times'', which has made him, in the words of the ''[[Washington Monthly]]'', "the most important political columnist in America... he is almost alone in analyzing the most important story in politics in recent years — the seamless melding of corporate, class, and political party interests at which the Bush administration excels."<ref name="monthly">{{cite web|last=Confessore|first=Nicholas|title=Comparative Advantage|publisher=Washington Monthly|month=December | year=2002|accessdate=2007-02-05|url=http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2001/0212.confessore.html}}</ref> In 2007, he began supplementing his ''Times'' column with a [[blog]]. In introducing it, he wrote, "Many of the posts will be supplements to my regular columns; I’ll be using this space to present the kind of information I can’t provide on the printed page – especially charts and tables, which are crucial to the way I think about most of the issues I write about."<ref>{{cite web| last =Krugman| first =Paul | title =Introducing This Blog | publisher =[[The New York Times]]| date =September 18, 2007| url =http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/09/18/introducing-this-blog/| accessdate = 2007-09-19}}</ref><ref>[http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2001/0212.confessore.html ''Washington Monthly'' profile] from December 2002</ref>

In September, 2003, Krugman published a collection of his columns under the title, ''The Great Unraveling''. Taken as a whole, it was a scathing attack on the Bush's administration's economic and foreign policies. His main argument was that the large deficits generated by the Bush administration—generated by decreasing taxes, increasing public spending, and fighting a war in Iraq — were in the long run unsustainable, and would eventually generate a major economic crisis. The book was a best-seller.<ref>{{cite web|title ="The Great Unraveling: Losing Our Way in the New Century"|publisher =Powell's Books | url =http://www.powells.com/biblio/61-0393326055-0 | accessdate =2007-11-22}}</ref><ref>[http://www.economist.com/displaystory.cfm?story_id=2208841 ''The Economist'' - The one-handed economist] Paul Krugman and the controversial art of popularising economics, November 13, 2003</ref><ref>[http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/12699486/paul_krugman_on_the_great_wealth_transfer/print Krugman, Paul. "The Great Wealth Transfer."] Rolling Stone. November 30, 2006</ref>

In 2007, Krugman published ''[[The Conscience of a Liberal]]''. The book is a history of wealth and income gaps in the US in the 20th century. The book documents that the gap between rich and poor declined greatly in mid-century, then widened in the last two decades to levels higher than those in the [[Gilded Age]] of the 1920s. Most economists (including Krugman) have regarded the late-20th century divergence as resulting largely from changes in technology and trade, but Krugman writes that government policies had played a much greater role both in reducing the gap in the 1930s through 1970s and in widening it in the 1980s through the present. He rebuked the Bush administration for policies that currently widen the gap between the rich and poor. Krugman proposed a "new [[New Deal]]", which included placing more emphasis on social and medical programs and less on national defense.<ref>Oct 17 2007- Krugman [http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=07/10/17/1352236 On Healthcare, Tax Cuts, Social Security, the Mortgage Crisis and Alan Greenspan], in response to [[Alan Greenspan]]'s [http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=07/09/24/1412226 Sept 24 appearance] with [[Naomi Klein]] on ''[[Democracy Now!]]''</ref> The book was praised in outlets such as the New York Review of Books,<ref>November 22, 2007- Tomansky, Michael [http://www.nybooks.com/articles/20813 The Partisan]</ref> but it was attacked by such organizations as the libertarian Von Mises institute, where it was argued to be overly political and virtually without ideologically-sympathetic economic content.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mises.org/story/2872 |title=The Conscience of Paul Krugman - David Gordon - Mises Institute |publisher=Mises.org |date= |accessdate=2008-10-13}}</ref>

In 2008, amid the [[subprime mortgage crisis]] in the US, Krugman predicted that housing prices would drop 25% overall and up to 50% in locations such as [[Miami]] or Los Angeles.<ref>{{cite web|title=How bad is the mortgage crisis going to get? |url=http://money.cnn.com/2008/03/14/news/economy/krugman_subprime.fortune/?postversion=2008031705|accessdate=2008-03-17}}</ref>

=== Controversies ===
==== Working for Enron ====
Krugman was one of many economists to serve as a consultant for an advisory board for [[Enron]]; he did this in 1999, being paid $37,500<ref name="EnronFAQ">Paul Krugman, [http://www.princeton.edu/~pkrugman/enronfaq.html "My Connection With Enron, One More Time"], Retrieved March 28, 2007.</ref> before ''[[New York Times]]'' rules required him to resign when he took a job as a columnist in 2000. He stated later the consulting was to offer, "Enron executives briefings on economic and political issues", and that it had required him to, "spend four days in [[Houston, Texas|Houston]]."<ref name="EnronFAQ"/>

However, when the story of Enron's corporate scandals broke, critics accused him of having a conflict of interest and the job of having been a bribe to control media coverage, charges he denies forcefully. He points out that in columns written before and after the scandal, he disclosed his past Enron relationship when he wrote about the company.<ref name="EnronFAQ" /><ref>Paul Krugman, [http://www.princeton.edu/~pkrugman/enron.html "Me and Enron"]. Retrieved March 28, 2007.</ref> He was critical of the company: he was one of the first writers to argue that deregulation of the California energy market had led to market-manipulation by energy companies (in a column in the'' New York Times'' on December 10, 2000 called "California Screaming"); Enron was the largest in this market; he criticized it directly in August 17, 2001. He writes in ''The Great Unraveling'' (p. 26) that

:I was no more perceptive than anyone else; during the bull market years [of the late 1990s] some people did send me letters claiming that major corporations were cooking their books, but - to my great regret - I ignored them. However, when Enron - the most celebrated company of its time, lauded as the very model of a modern business enterprise - blew up, I immediately saw the implications: if such a famous and celebrated company could have been a [[Ponzi scheme]], it was very unlikely that the rest of U.S. business was squeaky clean. In fact, it quickly became clear, the bubble years were both the cause and effect of an epidemic of corporate malfeasance.

His first column on the epidemic was published in ''The New York Times'' on February 1, 2002 with the title, "Two, Three, Many?"

==== Criticism of his commentaries ====
The journalist [[James Fallows]] spoke of his "gratuitous spleen," and Clinton commerce secretary Jeffrey Garten complained that "He behaves like someone with a massive chip on his shoulder."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.j-bradford-delong.net/Economists/paulkrugman.html|title=Newsweek, The Great Debunker: A Nobel-bound Economist Punctures the CW - and Not a Few Big-Name Washington Egos}}</ref>

In his [[May 22, 2005]] farewell column, ''New York Times'' ombudsman [[Daniel Okrent]] stated: "Op-Ed columnist Paul Krugman has the disturbing habit of shaping, slicing and selectively citing numbers in a fashion that pleases his acolytes but leaves him open to substantive assaults."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://archive.salon.com/politics/war_room/2005/06/02/krugman/index.html|title=Salon.com, The War Room: Did Krugman win by T.K.O.?}}</ref> Okrent did not initially provide specific examples for his view, but a few days later was drawn from retirement into an email back-and-forth with Krugman, publicly hosted by the new ombudsman's column, wherein he offered specific instances.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://uggabugga.blogspot.com/2005/06/krugman-vs-okrent-over-at-new-york.html|title=Uggabugga: Krugman vs Okrent}}</ref> Okrent's chief complaint (which may have been prompted by conservative commentator [[Donald Luskin]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.poorandstupid.com/2004_03_14_chronArchive.asp#107933587796571319|title=The Conspiracy to Keep You Poor and Stupid: "It's the Economic Lies, Stupid"}}</ref>) was that in a May 2004 column, Krugman inappropriately mixed numbers from the Establishment and Household employment data, without explaining to readers that these two surveys use differing, and incompatible, methods. Krugman, in fact, did not use any Household data. He did provide a number (based on Census data) for the necessary monthly job creation in order for employment to pace population growth.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://delong.typepad.com/sdj/2005/05/why_oh_why_cant_12.html|title=The Semi-Daily Journal of Brad DeLong: Why Oh Why Can't We Have a Better Press Corps? (Danny Okrent Jumps the Shark Once Again Edition)}}</ref> However, this form of "mixing" data sources is not uncommon (The same methodology is used in numerous government and journalistic documents, including the Bush Administration's 2004 Economic Report of the President).<ref>[http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/09feb20040900/www.gpoaccess.gov/usbudget/fy05/pdf/2004_erp.pdf 2004 Economic Report of the President] The relevant number appears on p. 94 of the document, which is p. 99 of the PDF file.</ref> The administration assumed a slightly lower rate of "adult non-elderly" population growth, but nonetheless came up with a similar number: 110k per month, against Krugman's 140k.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://delong.typepad.com/sdj/2006/08/mix_and_match.html|title=The Semi-Daily Journal of Brad DeLong: "Mix and Match"}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://publiceditor.blogs.nytimes.com/2005/05/31/|title=NYT Public Editor's Journal 31 May 2005: "Paul Krugman Responds..."}}</ref> Okrent stated he consulted reader mail to identify what he called Krugman's "mis-hits."<ref> [http://publiceditor.blogs.nytimes.com/2005/05/31/new-public-editor-hosts-paul-krugman-daniel-okrent-debate/#more-17 "New Public Editor..."], NYT Public Editor's Journal 31 May 2005:</ref>

Krugman's critics have accused him of employing what they called a "shrill" rhetorical style.<ref name="monthly" /><ref name="ferrara">[[Peter Ferrara]], [[National Review]], [http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/comment-ferrara082201.shtml The Hysterical Opposition''], August 22, 2001. Retrieved March 28, 2007.</ref><ref>Jack Shafer, [[Slate (magazine)|Slate]], [http://www.slate.com/id/2065829 ''Raines-ing in Andrew Sullivan'']</ref> Economist [[J. Bradford DeLong]] and other Krugman supporters responded by creating the website [[Shrillblog]].

Economist [[Daniel B. Klein]] published during 2008 a paper in ''[[Econ Journal Watch]]'' that reviews and criticizes Krugman's columns for the ''New York Times''. Klein contends that Krugman's "social-democratic impetus sometimes trumps people's interests, notably poor people's interests... Krugman has almost never come out against extant government interventions, even ones that expert economists seem to agree are bad, and especially so for the poor."<ref>Daniel B. Klein with Harika Anna Bartlett, [http://www.econjournalwatch.org/pdf/KleinBarlettCharacterIssuesJanuary2008.pdf "Left Out: A Critique of Paul Krugman Based on a Comprehensive Account of His New York Times Columns, 1997 through 2006"], ''Econ Journal Watch'' 5:1, 109-133.</ref>

In the 2008 Presidential campaign, Krugman came under criticism from liberal bloggers after he offered repeated criticism of the supporters of Democratic candidate [[Barack Obama]] for the possibility of generating an Obama cult.<ref>Krugman, Paul. [http://nytimes.com/2008/02/11/opinion/11krugman.html "Hate Springs Eternal"]. ''[[The New York Times]]''. [[February 11]], [[2008]].</ref>

=== Awards ===
*1991, [[American Economic Association]], [[John Bates Clark Medal]]<ref name="Clark"> [[Avinash Dixit]], The Journal of Economic Perspectives, Vol. 7, No. 2 (Spring, 1993), pp. 173-188, [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0895-3309(199321)7%3A2%3C173%3AIHOPKW%3E2.0.CO%3B2-T '' In Honor of Paul Krugman: Winner of the John Bates Clark Medal''], Retrieved March 28, 2007.</ref>
*2002, [[Editor and Publisher]], Columnist of the Year<ref name="Mojo2005">[[Mother Jones]], [http://www.motherjones.com/radio/2005/08/krugman_bio.html ''Paul Krugman''], August 7, 2005. Retrieved March 28, 2007.</ref>
*2004, Fundación Príncipe de Asturias (Spain), [[Prince of Asturias Awards]] in Social Sciences, the "European Pulitzer"<ref name="Prince"> [http://www.fundacionprincipedeasturias.org/ing/04/premiados/trayectorias/trayectoria786.html ''Paul Krugman''], 2004. Retrieved March 28, 2007.</ref>
*2004, Doctor of Humane Letters ''honoris causa'', [[Haverford College]][http://www.haverford.edu/publicrelations/news/krugman.html]
*2008, [[Nobel Prize in Economics]] - for his contributions to [[New Trade Theory]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/economics/laureates/2008/ |title=Nobel Prize in Economics |publisher=Swedish Academy |accessdate=2008-10-13}}</ref> He became the twelfth person awarded the [[John Bates Clark Medal]], to be awarded the Nobel prize.<ref>
{{cite web
|url=http://ideas.repec.org/top/top.person.all.html
|title=Top 5% Authors, as of September 2008
|date=2008-09
|publisher=[[Research Papers in Economics]]
|accessdate=2008-10-13}}
</ref>

== Personal ==
Krugman was born into a [[Jewish]] family and grew up on [[Long Island]]. He is married to [[Robin Wells (professor)|Robin Wells]], a fellow professor at Princeton, his second wife. He has no children.<ref>Paul Krugman, [http://www.pkarchive.org/personal/Strangelove.html "Your questions answered"], blog, January 10, 2003, retrieved December 19, 2007</ref><ref>Paul Krugman, [http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/12/19/about-my-son/"About my son", ''New York Times'' blog, December 19, 2007</ref>

== Bibliography ==
=== Authored or coauthored ===
*''The Conscience of a Liberal'' (October 2007) (ISBN 978-0393060690).
*''Economics: European Edition'' (with Robin Wells and Kathryn Graddy, Spring 2007) (ISBN 0-7167-9956-1).
*''Macroeconomics'' (with Robin Wells, February 2006) (ISBN 0-7167-6763-5). Also available with student CDR (March 2006) (ISBN 0-7167-6767-8).
*[http://www.worthpublishers.com/krugmanwellsnew/main.htm ''Economics''] (with Robin Wells, December 2005) (ISBN 1-57259-150-1)
*''Krugman Wall Street Journal Sub Card'' (???) {ISBN 0-7167-6697-3}
*''Microeconomics'' (with Robin Wells, March 2004) (ISBN 0-7167-5997-7). Also available with student CDR (with Robin Wells, November 2004) (ISBN 0-7167-6700-7) or with study guide (with Robin Wells, December 2004) (ISBN 0-7167-6699-X).
*''The Great Unraveling: Losing Our Way in the New Century'' (September 2003) (ISBN 0-393-05850-6)
**A book of his ''New York Times'' columns, many of them dealing with Bush economic policies, some dealing with the economy in general.
*''International Economics: Theory and Policy (7th Edition)'' (2006) (ISBN 0-321-29383-5)
*''The New Trade Agenda (Foreign Affairs Editors' Choice)'' (December 2001) (ISBN 0-87609-302-0)
*''Fuzzy Math: The Essential Guide to the Bush Tax Plan'' (May 4, 2001) (ISBN 0-393-05062-9)
*''The Spatial Economy - Cities, Regions and International Trade'' (with [[Masahisa Fujita]], Anthony Venables) July 1999, MIT press ISBN 0262062046
*''The Return of Depression Economics'' (May 1999) (ISBN 0-393-04839-X)
**Considers the long economic stagnation of Japan through the 1990s, the [[Asian financial crisis]], and problems in Latin America.
*''The Accidental Theorist and Other Dispatches from the Dismal Science'' (May 1, 1998) (ISBN 0-393-04638-9)
**A collection of Krugman's articles for various publications regarding the economy.
*''International Economics'' (March 1998) (ISBN 0-673-52186-9)
*''The Age of Diminished Expectations, Third Edition'' (August 8, 1997) (ISBN 0-262-11224-8)
*''Competitiveness'' (January 1, 1997)
*''Pop Internationalism'' (March 1, 1996a) (ISBN 0262112108)
*''Self Organizing Economy'' (February 1, 1996b) (ISBN 087609177X)
*''Emu and the Regions'' (December 1995) (ISBN 1567080383)
*''Development, Geography, and Economic Theory (Ohlin Lectures)'' (September 15, 1995) (ISBN 0-262-11203-5)
*''Peddling Prosperity: Economic Sense and Nonsense in an Age of Diminished Expectations'' (April 1, 1995) (ISBN 0393312925)
**History of economic thought from the first rumblings of revolt against [[Keynesian economics]] to the present, for the layman.
*''Foreign Direct Investment in the United States (3rd Edition)'' (February 1, 1995) (ISBN 0-88132-204-0)
*''World Savings Shortage'' (September 1, 1994) (ISBN 0881321613)
*''What Do We Need to Know About the International Monetary System? (Essays in International Finance, No 190 July 1993)'' (ISBN 0881650978)
*''Currencies and Crises'' (June 11, 1992) (ISBN 0-262-11165-9)
*''Geography and Trade (Gaston Eyskens Lecture Series)'' (August 1991) (ISBN 0-262-11159-4)
*''The Risks Facing the World Economy'' (July 1991) (ISBN 1-56708-073-1)
*''Has the Adjustment Process Worked? (Policy Analyses in International Economics, 34)'' (June 1, 1991) (ISBN 0-88132-116-8)
*''Rethinking International Trade'' (April 1, 1990) (ISBN 0-262-11148-9)
*''Trade Policy and Market Structure'' (March 30, 1989) (ISBN 0-262-08182-2)
*''Exchange-Rate Instability (Lionel Robbins Lectures)'' (November 2, 1988) (ISBN 0-262-11140-3)
*''Adjustment in the World Economy'' (August 1987) (ISBN 1-56708-023-5)
*''Strategic Trade Policy and the New International Economics'' (January 1986) (ISBN 0-262-11112-8)
*''Market Structure and Foreign Trade: Increasing Returns, Imperfect Competition, and the International Economy'' (May 1985) (ISBN 0262081504)
*''[[The Theory of Interstellar Trade]]'' (1978)

=== Edited or coedited ===
*''Currency Crises (National Bureau of Economic Research Conference Report)'' (September, 2000) ISBN 0226454622
*''Trade with Japan : Has the Door Opened Wider? (National Bureau of Economic Research Project Report)'' (March 1995) ISBN 0226454592
*''Empirical Studies of Strategic Trade Policy (National Bureau of Economic Research Project Report)'' (April, 1994) ISBN 0226454606
*''Exchange Rate Targets and Currency Bands'' (October 1991) ISBN 0521415330

== References ==
{{reflist|2}}

== External links ==
{{wikiquote}}
* [http://topics.nytimes.com/top/opinion/editorialsandoped/oped/columnists/paulkrugman/ ''New York Times'' Paul Krugman index of columns]
*Paul Krugman's [http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com The Conscience of a Liberal Blog]
*[http://princeton.academia.edu/PaulKrugman Paul Krugman's page on Academia.edu]
*[http://krugmanonline.com KrugmanOnline.com] features books by Paul Krugman.
* [http://www.pkarchive.org/ The Unofficial Paul Krugman Archive] contains most if not every (pre Times Select) article written by Paul Krugman.
* [http://www.princeton.edu/~pkrugman/ Paul Krugman (Princeton)] - placeholder
* [http://web.mit.edu/krugman/www/ Paul Krugman (MIT)] archives of his Slate and Fortune columns plus other writings 1996-2000
*{{worldcat id|id=lccn-n84-238684}}
*[http://dmoz.org/Science/Social_Sciences/Economics/People/Krugman,_Paul/ Open Directory Project - ''Paul Krugman''] directory category
* {{imdb name|id=1862259|name=Paul Krugman}}
* [http://ideas.repec.org/e/pkr10.html IDEAS/RePEc]
* [http://www.nybooks.com/articles/20813 Michael Tomasky essay on Krugman's ''The Conscience of a Liberal''] from ''[[The New York Review of Books]]''

=== Media ===
*Video: Open Mind Interview, 2002: [http://www.archive.org/details/openmind_ep1590 Part One, 2002],[http://www.archive.org/details/openmind_ep1591 Part Two]
* [http://select.nytimes.com/packages/khtml/2005/09/19/opinion/20050919_KRUGMAN_FEATURE.html Video: "Meet Paul Krugman"], ''New York Times'' biographical video interview, Sept. 19, 2005
* [http://nysoundposse.com/2006/06/event-new-class-war-in-america-061306.html Audio: The New Class War In America] featuring [[Amy Goodman]], Paul Krugman, [[Greg Palast]] and [[Randi Rhodes]] recorded on June 13, 2006 at [http://www.nysec.org The New York Society for Ethical Culture], mp3 format, [http://www.archive.org/details/krugman-class-war Video: alternate]
*[http://fora.tv/2007/09/11/Paul_Krugman_Conscience_of_a_Liberal Video: Paul Krugman speaks at the World Affairs Council - Sept. 2007]
*[http://www.liberadio.com/2007/10/27/liberadio-podcast-october-22-2007-dr-beardy-i-presume-an-interview-with-paul-krugman/ Audio: Unterview] by Paul "Dr. Beardy" Krugman on [http://www.liberadio.com Liberadio(!)] with Mary Mancini and Freddie O'Connell, October 22, 2007
*[http://www.theyoungturks.com/story/2007/10/29/11047/657 Video: Iinterview with The Young Turks on Air America Radio], October 29, 2007
*[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XhvG_fD0HA Video: About housing bubble], December 14, 2007
*[http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-782159081457451178&hl=en Video: The Conscience of a Liberal] (November 3, 2007) - lecture from Mr. Krugman's 2007 book tour.

{{Nobel laureates in economics 2001-2025}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Krugman, Paul}}
[[Category:1953 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Economists]]
[[Category:International economists]]
[[Category:American economists]]
[[Category:American bloggers]]
[[Category:American columnists]]
[[Category:American essayists]]
[[Category:American foreign policy writers]]
[[Category:American political writers]]
[[Category:Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni]]
[[Category:New York Times people]]
[[Category:Regional science]]
[[Category:United States Council of Economic Advisors]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Econometric Society]]
[[Category:People from Long Island]]
[[Category:People from Nassau County, New York]]
[[Category:Enron]]
[[Category:American liberal activists]]
[[Category:Princeton University faculty]]
[[Category:Trade economists]]
[[Category:Yale University alumni]]
[[Category:Jewish American writers]]
[[Category:Nobel_laureates_in_Economics]]

[[ar:بول كروغمان]]
[[bn:পল ক্রুগম্যান]]
[[ca:Paul Krugman]]
[[cs:Paul Krugman]]
[[da:Paul Krugman]]
[[de:Paul Krugman]]
[[el:Πωλ Κρούγκμαν]]
[[es:Paul Krugman]]
[[et:Paul Krugman]]
[[fr:Paul Krugman]]
[[he:פול קרוגמן]]
[[ko:폴 크루그먼]]
[[it:Paul Krugman]]
[[la:Paulus Krugman]]
[[lb:Paul Krugman]]
[[nl:Paul Krugman]]
[[ja:ポール・クルーグマン]]
[[no:Paul Krugman]]
[[pl:Paul Krugman]]
[[pt:Paul Krugman]]
[[ro:Paul Krugman]]
[[ru:Кругман, Пол]]
[[sk:Paul Krugman]]
[[sh:Paul Krugman]]
[[fi:Paul Krugman]]
[[sv:Paul Krugman]]
[[vi:Paul Krugman]]
[[tr:Paul Krugman]]
[[uk:Круґман Пол]]
[[zh:保羅·克魯格曼]]

Revision as of 17:46, 13 October 2008

Paul Krugman
Nationality United States
Academic career
FieldMacroeconomics
School or
tradition
Neo-Keynesian economics
ContributionsInternational Trade Theory, New Trade Theory

Paul Robin Krugman (Template:Pron-en; born February 28, 1953) is a 2008 Nobel Prize-winning American economist, columnist, author, and intellectual.[1] He is a professor of economics and international affairs at Princeton University who has since 2000 written a twice-weekly column for The New York Times.

Krugman is well-known in academia for his work in trade theory. His best-known work provides a model in which firms and countries produce and trade because of economies of scale. He was a critic of the "New Economy" of the late 1990s. Krugman criticized the fixed exchange rates in East and Southeast Asia, and Thailand's economic policies before the 1997 East Asian financial crisis. Just before the 1998 Russian financial crisis, he criticized investors such as Long-Term Capital Management whose profits depended on the maintenance of fixed exchange rates. Krugman is generally considered a neo-Keynesian economist,[2] with his views outlined in his books such as Peddling Prosperity. Krugman's International Economics: Theory and Policy is a standard textbook on international economics that explains currency crises and New Trade Theory. In 1991, he was awarded the John Bates Clark Medal by the American Economic Association. According to the Research Papers in Economics project, he is among the 50 most influential economists in the world today. In 2008, he won the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences.[3]

Krugman is generally considered a political liberal or progressive. He is an ardent critic of the George W. Bush administration and its foreign and domestic policy. Unlike many economic pundits, he is regarded as an important scholarly contributor by his peers.[4][5] He has written over 200 scholarly papers and 20 books—both academic and non-academic.[6]

Economist career

He earned his B.S. in economics from Yale University in 1974 and his Ph.D. from MIT in 1977. From 1982 to 1983, he spent a year working at the Reagan White House as a staff member of the Council of Economic Advisers. He has taught at Yale University, MIT, UC Berkeley, the London School of Economics, and Stanford University before joining the faculty of Princeton University in 2000. He is a member of the Group of Thirty international economic body.

When Bill Clinton came into office in 1993, he considered Krugman for a leading post; Krugman was flown out for a meeting in Arkansas. Krugman's outspokenness was reported to be "the main reason the Clinton administration didn't offer him a job."[7] Krugman says he would not have been interested in such a job; he told Newsweek, "I'm temperamentally unsuited for that kind of role. You have to be very good at people skills, biting your tongue when people say silly things."[7]

In his New York Times blog, Krugman scathingly denounced speculation he had been offered or would accept any position in a Hillary Clinton administration, stating that he was "temperamentally unsuited to politics".[8]

Krugman was awarded the Nobel Prize in economics, the sole awardee for 2008, for his pioneering work on the New Trade Theory.[9] In the words of the prize committee, "By having integrated economies of scale into explicit general equilibrium models, Paul Krugman has deepened our understanding of the determinants of trade and the location of economic activity."[10]

Theories

In the early 1990s, he helped popularize the argument made by Laurence Lau and Alwyn Young, among others, that the growth of economies in East Asia was not the result of new and original economic models, but rather increased capital and labor inputs, which did not result in an increase in total factor productivity. His prediction was that future economic growth in East Asia would slow as it became more difficult to generate economic growth from increasing inputs.

In the 1990s, Krugman focused on what can be described as policy economics, which he attempted to explain to the general audience in such works as Peddling Prosperity and columns attacking what he described as "policy entrepreneurs" who were focused single-mindedly on particular solutions, which they proposed to solve every conceivable crisis. He was critical of industrial policy (an approach Clinton later dropped under the influence of Robert Rubin and Lawrence Summers) and argued in favor of free trade. (He writes on p. xxvi of his book The Great Unraveling that "I still have the angry letter Ralph Nader sent me when I criticized his attacks on globalization.")

Author and journalist

Krugman wrote first for Fortune and Slate, later for The Harvard Business Review, Foreign Policy, The Economist, Harper's, and Washington Monthly. Krugman said that to answer what he called Pop Internationalism, "I would have to write essays for non-economists that were clear, effective, and entertaining."[11]

Since January 2000, Krugman has contributed a twice-weekly column to the Op-Ed page of the New York Times, which has made him, in the words of the Washington Monthly, "the most important political columnist in America... he is almost alone in analyzing the most important story in politics in recent years — the seamless melding of corporate, class, and political party interests at which the Bush administration excels."[12] In 2007, he began supplementing his Times column with a blog. In introducing it, he wrote, "Many of the posts will be supplements to my regular columns; I’ll be using this space to present the kind of information I can’t provide on the printed page – especially charts and tables, which are crucial to the way I think about most of the issues I write about."[13][14]

In September, 2003, Krugman published a collection of his columns under the title, The Great Unraveling. Taken as a whole, it was a scathing attack on the Bush's administration's economic and foreign policies. His main argument was that the large deficits generated by the Bush administration—generated by decreasing taxes, increasing public spending, and fighting a war in Iraq — were in the long run unsustainable, and would eventually generate a major economic crisis. The book was a best-seller.[15][16][17]

In 2007, Krugman published The Conscience of a Liberal. The book is a history of wealth and income gaps in the US in the 20th century. The book documents that the gap between rich and poor declined greatly in mid-century, then widened in the last two decades to levels higher than those in the Gilded Age of the 1920s. Most economists (including Krugman) have regarded the late-20th century divergence as resulting largely from changes in technology and trade, but Krugman writes that government policies had played a much greater role both in reducing the gap in the 1930s through 1970s and in widening it in the 1980s through the present. He rebuked the Bush administration for policies that currently widen the gap between the rich and poor. Krugman proposed a "new New Deal", which included placing more emphasis on social and medical programs and less on national defense.[18] The book was praised in outlets such as the New York Review of Books,[19] but it was attacked by such organizations as the libertarian Von Mises institute, where it was argued to be overly political and virtually without ideologically-sympathetic economic content.[20]

In 2008, amid the subprime mortgage crisis in the US, Krugman predicted that housing prices would drop 25% overall and up to 50% in locations such as Miami or Los Angeles.[21]

Controversies

Working for Enron

Krugman was one of many economists to serve as a consultant for an advisory board for Enron; he did this in 1999, being paid $37,500[22] before New York Times rules required him to resign when he took a job as a columnist in 2000. He stated later the consulting was to offer, "Enron executives briefings on economic and political issues", and that it had required him to, "spend four days in Houston."[22]

However, when the story of Enron's corporate scandals broke, critics accused him of having a conflict of interest and the job of having been a bribe to control media coverage, charges he denies forcefully. He points out that in columns written before and after the scandal, he disclosed his past Enron relationship when he wrote about the company.[22][23] He was critical of the company: he was one of the first writers to argue that deregulation of the California energy market had led to market-manipulation by energy companies (in a column in the New York Times on December 10, 2000 called "California Screaming"); Enron was the largest in this market; he criticized it directly in August 17, 2001. He writes in The Great Unraveling (p. 26) that

I was no more perceptive than anyone else; during the bull market years [of the late 1990s] some people did send me letters claiming that major corporations were cooking their books, but - to my great regret - I ignored them. However, when Enron - the most celebrated company of its time, lauded as the very model of a modern business enterprise - blew up, I immediately saw the implications: if such a famous and celebrated company could have been a Ponzi scheme, it was very unlikely that the rest of U.S. business was squeaky clean. In fact, it quickly became clear, the bubble years were both the cause and effect of an epidemic of corporate malfeasance.

His first column on the epidemic was published in The New York Times on February 1, 2002 with the title, "Two, Three, Many?"

Criticism of his commentaries

The journalist James Fallows spoke of his "gratuitous spleen," and Clinton commerce secretary Jeffrey Garten complained that "He behaves like someone with a massive chip on his shoulder."[24]

In his May 22, 2005 farewell column, New York Times ombudsman Daniel Okrent stated: "Op-Ed columnist Paul Krugman has the disturbing habit of shaping, slicing and selectively citing numbers in a fashion that pleases his acolytes but leaves him open to substantive assaults."[25] Okrent did not initially provide specific examples for his view, but a few days later was drawn from retirement into an email back-and-forth with Krugman, publicly hosted by the new ombudsman's column, wherein he offered specific instances.[26] Okrent's chief complaint (which may have been prompted by conservative commentator Donald Luskin[27]) was that in a May 2004 column, Krugman inappropriately mixed numbers from the Establishment and Household employment data, without explaining to readers that these two surveys use differing, and incompatible, methods. Krugman, in fact, did not use any Household data. He did provide a number (based on Census data) for the necessary monthly job creation in order for employment to pace population growth.[28] However, this form of "mixing" data sources is not uncommon (The same methodology is used in numerous government and journalistic documents, including the Bush Administration's 2004 Economic Report of the President).[29] The administration assumed a slightly lower rate of "adult non-elderly" population growth, but nonetheless came up with a similar number: 110k per month, against Krugman's 140k.[30][31] Okrent stated he consulted reader mail to identify what he called Krugman's "mis-hits."[32]

Krugman's critics have accused him of employing what they called a "shrill" rhetorical style.[12][33][34] Economist J. Bradford DeLong and other Krugman supporters responded by creating the website Shrillblog.

Economist Daniel B. Klein published during 2008 a paper in Econ Journal Watch that reviews and criticizes Krugman's columns for the New York Times. Klein contends that Krugman's "social-democratic impetus sometimes trumps people's interests, notably poor people's interests... Krugman has almost never come out against extant government interventions, even ones that expert economists seem to agree are bad, and especially so for the poor."[35]

In the 2008 Presidential campaign, Krugman came under criticism from liberal bloggers after he offered repeated criticism of the supporters of Democratic candidate Barack Obama for the possibility of generating an Obama cult.[36]

Awards

Personal

Krugman was born into a Jewish family and grew up on Long Island. He is married to Robin Wells, a fellow professor at Princeton, his second wife. He has no children.[40][41]

Bibliography

Authored or coauthored

  • The Conscience of a Liberal (October 2007) (ISBN 978-0393060690).
  • Economics: European Edition (with Robin Wells and Kathryn Graddy, Spring 2007) (ISBN 0-7167-9956-1).
  • Macroeconomics (with Robin Wells, February 2006) (ISBN 0-7167-6763-5). Also available with student CDR (March 2006) (ISBN 0-7167-6767-8).
  • Economics (with Robin Wells, December 2005) (ISBN 1-57259-150-1)
  • Krugman Wall Street Journal Sub Card (???) {ISBN 0-7167-6697-3}
  • Microeconomics (with Robin Wells, March 2004) (ISBN 0-7167-5997-7). Also available with student CDR (with Robin Wells, November 2004) (ISBN 0-7167-6700-7) or with study guide (with Robin Wells, December 2004) (ISBN 0-7167-6699-X).
  • The Great Unraveling: Losing Our Way in the New Century (September 2003) (ISBN 0-393-05850-6)
    • A book of his New York Times columns, many of them dealing with Bush economic policies, some dealing with the economy in general.
  • International Economics: Theory and Policy (7th Edition) (2006) (ISBN 0-321-29383-5)
  • The New Trade Agenda (Foreign Affairs Editors' Choice) (December 2001) (ISBN 0-87609-302-0)
  • Fuzzy Math: The Essential Guide to the Bush Tax Plan (May 4, 2001) (ISBN 0-393-05062-9)
  • The Spatial Economy - Cities, Regions and International Trade (with Masahisa Fujita, Anthony Venables) July 1999, MIT press ISBN 0262062046
  • The Return of Depression Economics (May 1999) (ISBN 0-393-04839-X)
    • Considers the long economic stagnation of Japan through the 1990s, the Asian financial crisis, and problems in Latin America.
  • The Accidental Theorist and Other Dispatches from the Dismal Science (May 1, 1998) (ISBN 0-393-04638-9)
    • A collection of Krugman's articles for various publications regarding the economy.
  • International Economics (March 1998) (ISBN 0-673-52186-9)
  • The Age of Diminished Expectations, Third Edition (August 8, 1997) (ISBN 0-262-11224-8)
  • Competitiveness (January 1, 1997)
  • Pop Internationalism (March 1, 1996a) (ISBN 0262112108)
  • Self Organizing Economy (February 1, 1996b) (ISBN 087609177X)
  • Emu and the Regions (December 1995) (ISBN 1567080383)
  • Development, Geography, and Economic Theory (Ohlin Lectures) (September 15, 1995) (ISBN 0-262-11203-5)
  • Peddling Prosperity: Economic Sense and Nonsense in an Age of Diminished Expectations (April 1, 1995) (ISBN 0393312925)
    • History of economic thought from the first rumblings of revolt against Keynesian economics to the present, for the layman.
  • Foreign Direct Investment in the United States (3rd Edition) (February 1, 1995) (ISBN 0-88132-204-0)
  • World Savings Shortage (September 1, 1994) (ISBN 0881321613)
  • What Do We Need to Know About the International Monetary System? (Essays in International Finance, No 190 July 1993) (ISBN 0881650978)
  • Currencies and Crises (June 11, 1992) (ISBN 0-262-11165-9)
  • Geography and Trade (Gaston Eyskens Lecture Series) (August 1991) (ISBN 0-262-11159-4)
  • The Risks Facing the World Economy (July 1991) (ISBN 1-56708-073-1)
  • Has the Adjustment Process Worked? (Policy Analyses in International Economics, 34) (June 1, 1991) (ISBN 0-88132-116-8)
  • Rethinking International Trade (April 1, 1990) (ISBN 0-262-11148-9)
  • Trade Policy and Market Structure (March 30, 1989) (ISBN 0-262-08182-2)
  • Exchange-Rate Instability (Lionel Robbins Lectures) (November 2, 1988) (ISBN 0-262-11140-3)
  • Adjustment in the World Economy (August 1987) (ISBN 1-56708-023-5)
  • Strategic Trade Policy and the New International Economics (January 1986) (ISBN 0-262-11112-8)
  • Market Structure and Foreign Trade: Increasing Returns, Imperfect Competition, and the International Economy (May 1985) (ISBN 0262081504)
  • The Theory of Interstellar Trade (1978)

Edited or coedited

  • Currency Crises (National Bureau of Economic Research Conference Report) (September, 2000) ISBN 0226454622
  • Trade with Japan : Has the Door Opened Wider? (National Bureau of Economic Research Project Report) (March 1995) ISBN 0226454592
  • Empirical Studies of Strategic Trade Policy (National Bureau of Economic Research Project Report) (April, 1994) ISBN 0226454606
  • Exchange Rate Targets and Currency Bands (October 1991) ISBN 0521415330

References

  1. ^ Foreign Policy: Top 100 Public Intellectuals. May 2008. Accessed 10-13-08. Krugman ranks in their top 100 list.
  2. ^ The New York Times, "In Economics Departments, a Growing Will to Debate Fundamental Assumptions". Retrieved July 11, 2007.
  3. ^ "Krugman Wins Nobel Prize for Economics". The New York Times. 2008-10-13. Retrieved 2008-10-13.
  4. ^ a b Avinash Dixit, The Journal of Economic Perspectives, Vol. 7, No. 2 (Spring, 1993), pp. 173-188, In Honor of Paul Krugman: Winner of the John Bates Clark Medal, Retrieved March 28, 2007.
  5. ^ a b Paul Krugman, 2004. Retrieved March 28, 2007.
  6. ^ The New York Times, "Columnist Biography: Paul Krugman". Retrieved April 15, 2007.
  7. ^ a b Hirsh, Michael (4 March 1996). "A Nobel-Bound Economist Punctures the C[onventional] W[isdom]--and Not a Few Big-Name Washington Egos". Newsweek. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  8. ^ "2008 January - Paul Krugman - Op-Ed Columnist - New York Times Blog". Krugman.blogs.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2008-10-13.
  9. ^ Catherine Rampell (October 13, 2008, 7:50 a.m.). "Paul Krugman Wins Economics Nobel - Economix Blog - NYTimes.com". Economix.blogs.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2008-10-13. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  10. ^ "Microsoft Word - sciback_cover_ek_2008_FINAL.doc" (PDF). Retrieved 2008-10-13.
  11. ^ (Krugman 1996a, Introduction)
  12. ^ a b Confessore, Nicholas (2002). "Comparative Advantage". Washington Monthly. Retrieved 2007-02-05. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  13. ^ Krugman, Paul (September 18, 2007). "Introducing This Blog". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-09-19.
  14. ^ Washington Monthly profile from December 2002
  15. ^ ""The Great Unraveling: Losing Our Way in the New Century"". Powell's Books. Retrieved 2007-11-22.
  16. ^ The Economist - The one-handed economist Paul Krugman and the controversial art of popularising economics, November 13, 2003
  17. ^ Krugman, Paul. "The Great Wealth Transfer." Rolling Stone. November 30, 2006
  18. ^ Oct 17 2007- Krugman On Healthcare, Tax Cuts, Social Security, the Mortgage Crisis and Alan Greenspan, in response to Alan Greenspan's Sept 24 appearance with Naomi Klein on Democracy Now!
  19. ^ November 22, 2007- Tomansky, Michael The Partisan
  20. ^ "The Conscience of Paul Krugman - David Gordon - Mises Institute". Mises.org. Retrieved 2008-10-13.
  21. ^ "How bad is the mortgage crisis going to get?". Retrieved 2008-03-17.
  22. ^ a b c Paul Krugman, "My Connection With Enron, One More Time", Retrieved March 28, 2007.
  23. ^ Paul Krugman, "Me and Enron". Retrieved March 28, 2007.
  24. ^ "Newsweek, The Great Debunker: A Nobel-bound Economist Punctures the CW - and Not a Few Big-Name Washington Egos".
  25. ^ "Salon.com, The War Room: Did Krugman win by T.K.O.?".
  26. ^ "Uggabugga: Krugman vs Okrent".
  27. ^ "The Conspiracy to Keep You Poor and Stupid: "It's the Economic Lies, Stupid"".
  28. ^ "The Semi-Daily Journal of Brad DeLong: Why Oh Why Can't We Have a Better Press Corps? (Danny Okrent Jumps the Shark Once Again Edition)".
  29. ^ 2004 Economic Report of the President The relevant number appears on p. 94 of the document, which is p. 99 of the PDF file.
  30. ^ "The Semi-Daily Journal of Brad DeLong: "Mix and Match"".
  31. ^ "NYT Public Editor's Journal 31 May 2005: "Paul Krugman Responds..."".
  32. ^ "New Public Editor...", NYT Public Editor's Journal 31 May 2005:
  33. ^ Peter Ferrara, National Review, The Hysterical Opposition, August 22, 2001. Retrieved March 28, 2007.
  34. ^ Jack Shafer, Slate, Raines-ing in Andrew Sullivan
  35. ^ Daniel B. Klein with Harika Anna Bartlett, "Left Out: A Critique of Paul Krugman Based on a Comprehensive Account of His New York Times Columns, 1997 through 2006", Econ Journal Watch 5:1, 109-133.
  36. ^ Krugman, Paul. "Hate Springs Eternal". The New York Times. February 11, 2008.
  37. ^ Mother Jones, Paul Krugman, August 7, 2005. Retrieved March 28, 2007.
  38. ^ "Nobel Prize in Economics". Swedish Academy. Retrieved 2008-10-13.
  39. ^ "Top 5% Authors, as of September 2008". Research Papers in Economics. 2008-09. Retrieved 2008-10-13. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  40. ^ Paul Krugman, "Your questions answered", blog, January 10, 2003, retrieved December 19, 2007
  41. ^ Paul Krugman, [http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/12/19/about-my-son/"About my son", New York Times blog, December 19, 2007

External links

Media