Oct 20th 2014 Comment Who Killed the Nokia Phone? Technology companies cannot achieve success simply by pleasing their board of directors or even striking multi-million-dollar deals with partners. This is the most important lesson in Nokia’s fall. A column by Pekka Nykänen.
Oct 16th 2014 Comment The ECB’s Faulty Weapon Though QE might work in a debtor economy with a flexible financial system like the US, it could backfire in a creditor economy with a conservative financial system. This is the real argument against QE in the eurozone. A column by Daniel Gros.
Oct 14th 2014 Comment Why the Fed Will Go Faster A continued rise in the inflation rate in 2015 would not be surprising; the Fed might raise the federal funds rate more rapidly and to a higher year-end level than its recent statements imply. A column by Martin Feldstein.
Oct 13th 2014 Comment Disciplining the Sharing Economy Trading goods, services, and labor directly via online platforms is becoming big business. This needs a certain legal framework. A column by Ayesha Khanna.
Oct 13th 2014 Comment The Rise of the Robots What really matters is whether the jobs outside of the robot-computer economy – jobs involving people’s mouths, smiles, and minds – will remain valuable and in high demand. A column by J. Bradford DeLong.
Oct 10th 2014 Comment The New Philosophers The stimulus-versus-austerity debate is an old one. Today, ideological questions about fairness and responsibility are trumping pragmatic discussion of the best way forward for everyone. A column by Harold James.
Sept 29th 2014 Comment Paying for Productivity Stagnating middle-class wages and family incomes are a major factor behind the US economy’s slow recovery from the 2007/09 recession, and pose a threat to long-term growth and competitiveness. A column by Laura Tyson.
Sept 26th 2014 Comment Markets’ Rose-Tinted World In the next few months, the buoyant optimism pervading financial markets may prove to be justified. Unfortunately, it is more likely that investors’ outlook is excessively rosy. A column by Mohamed A. El-Erian.
Sept 24th 2014 Comment The Greater Depression In 2007, nobody foresaw the decline in growth rates and potential output that statistical and state agencies are now baking into their estimates. It is time to call what is happening by its true name. A column by J. Bradford DeLong.
Sept 23rd 2014 Comment The exaggerated Death of Inflation Ultimately, a central bank’s anti-inflation policies can work only within the context of a macroeconomic and political framework that is consistent with price stability. A column by Kenneth Rogoff.
Sept 19th 2014 Comment Are we asking too much from Central Banks? Central Banks have saved the world from a Great Depression but they are not superhuman. Maybe we are asking too much and maybe they are trying too hard to please us. A column by Charles Wyplosz.
Sept 18th 2014 Comment The Government Europe Deserves? The top-jobs in the EU have been reallocated. Obviously, the heads of government don't want anyone who could push integration further. A column by Daniel Gros.