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Update: WHAT IS A BANK ? Nobel prize Economy for American Paul Krugman, his NYT blog
Update:
Paul Krugman: What is a bank ? VIDEO EXPLAINER
How did a few failed banks add up to a financial meltdown?
Nobelprize.org original page with photo of Nobel Prize
Read the Blog of Paul Krugman NewYorkTimes
The conscience of a Liberal (1873 comments)
Worthwhile British Initiative
Dr. Krugman
Congratulations from NP readers and France.
I find it refreshing to get out of uncertainty
and "is the future predictable" discussions
into concrete action torwards economic fears;
creating the new economy for Middle class.
A bientot, merci solarlife
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Paul Krugman
The American Paul Krugman received the Economy nobel prize 2008 for his work on commerce and finance. Krugman started his career at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), later Princeton University, New York Times columnist .
Francais
Le prix Nobel d'économie a été attribué lundi 13 octobre à l'Américain Paul Krugman, pionnier de la nouvelle théorie du commerce et de la finance internationaux, pour ses travaux sur les échanges commerciaux, a annoncé l'Académie royale suédoise des sciences
Espagnol
Un nobel crítico con Bush
El estadounidense Paul Krugman gana el Nobel de Economía
AP Associated Press
Krugman has been a harsh critic of the Bush administration and the Republican Party in The New York Times, where he writes a regular column and has a blog called "Conscience of a Liberal."
He has come out forcefully against John McCain during the economic meltdown, saying the Republican candidate is "more frightening now than he was a few weeks ago" and earlier that the GOP has become "the party of stupid
Paul Krugman wins Nobel economics prize
and praises Gordon Brown
Paul Krugman, an American professor, has been awarded the Nobel prize for economics - hours after writing that Gordon Brown might have saved the world financial system. ???
Krugman, professor at Princeton University
Permanent columnist of the New York Times,
In the NY Times he outlined the economic policies of the Bush administration,and repeatedly attacked bush economy. At the beginning of the eighties, he advised U.S. President Ronald Reagan, ten years later he belonged to the team of the then presidential candidate Bill Clinton.
Mr Krugman, who teaches at Princeton University, was given the accolade for his work on trade patterns and the geography of economic activity.Announcing the $1.4 million (£816,231) prize, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said : "What are the effects of free trade and globalisation? What are the driving forces behind worldwide urbanisation? Paul Krugman has formulated a new theory to answer these questions."
"He has thereby integrated the previously disparate research fields of international trade and economic geography."
Mr Krugman, 55, is also a columnist for the New York Times. In his Monday column , he endorsed Mr Brown's £500 billion bail-out plan for the British banking industry, contrasting it favourably with the American Government's scheme.
Mr Krugman asked: "Has Gordon Brown, the British Prime Minister, saved the world financial system?"
He went on: "Mr Brown and Alistair Darling, the chancellor of the Exchequer ... have defined the character of the worldwide rescue effort, with other wealthy nations playing catch-up."
He praised the British Government for having acted with "stunning speed" to address the financial crisis, again contrasting Mr Brown's efforts with those of Henry Paulson, the US Treasury Secretary.
"This combination of clarity and decisiveness hasn't been matched by any other Western government, least of all our own," he wrote.
US Bush bail-out a failure, direct cash injection UK style is the way
Despite initially basing the US plan on buying up "toxic" mortgage debts, Mr Paulson has since suggested that he may follow Mr Brown in injecting money directly into the banks as fresh capital. Several European leaders are also expected to announce similar plans.
Krugman a longterm critcs of Bush economy
The full title of Mr Krugman's award is the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Science. It was not one of the original prizes and has been given out since 1968. It was the last of this year's prizes to be announced.
The Academy explained that while "traditional trade theory assumes that countries are different and explains why some countries export agricultural products whereas others export industrial goods," Mr Krugman has sought to show why "worldwide trade is in fact dominated by countries which not only have similar conditions, but also trade in similar products."
Crowd Power
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SOLARLIFE
FRENCH RIVIERA MONACO LONDON, France -
ClizBiz
Denver, Colorado, United States -
dubyadubyatwo
Roselle, New Jersey, United States -
lildbsnack
Portland, Oregon, United States











Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (14)
at 06:10 on October 13th, 2008
Thanks very much for your post. I think we alredy have this post on the site. Can you please write your story in the previous post.
at 06:14 on October 13th, 2008
Thanks for your advice, I will not do so, when it comes to economy the competence is solarlife
at 06:28 on October 13th, 2008
Thanks. You could add something interesting in the previous post with your economic competence.
at 06:36 on October 13th, 2008
Thanks for bridging Sanjay, I will do so. When it comes to economy, surprisals are to expect.
at 06:41 on October 13th, 2008
SOLARLIFE, I like this story. It's good stuff. He is a good writer. Unfortunately I find his beard makes him look a bit shifty! How's that for prejudice?
at 07:12 on October 13th, 2008
gerrypopplestone..he looks a bit shifty, well I would say like a real professor, I uploaded a second image, the beard however does not go.
at 09:02 on October 13th, 2008
dubyadubyatwo thanks for sidebar image report "Paul Krugman", good photo thanks
at 10:54 on October 13th, 2008
Clizbiz, thanks for sidebar image report "Paul Krugman", excellent photos
at 16:50 on October 13th, 2008
SOLARLIFE, I like this story. It's good stuff.
A good place to read about the difference between classical economics and the current model of neo-classical economics is Professor Mason Gaffney's website, here. His book, The Corruption of Economics is excellent too.
at 01:03 on October 14th, 2008
Maired Sullivan...read also Professor Mason Gaffney, thanks for Flag "Nobel prize winner Krugman", this morning US government followed his recommendation to change to a europe style us bailout: US to unveil $250bn Europe-style banking bail-out, recomended by US Nobel Prize winner Krugman.... I downloaded the PDF file of Mason Gaffney 16 pages documenting the history of money up to now crash 2008, worth reading. Thanks
at 19:28 on October 26th, 2008
An Open Letter to Paul Krugman
Dear Paul:
Forgive my rudeness in calling you by your first name. I have been reading your writings in New York Times, Slate and other fine publications for years. I even read your book "The Conscience of a Liberal." I have gotten to know you so well that, I feel, we could be on a first name basis. Besides, if we are to create a class-less, hierarchy-free society, calling you Professor Krugman would instantly create a deplorable hierarchy — perhaps falsely indicating that you might know more about economics than I do. We simply cannot encourage such elitist hubris.
Now that we have established that in our class-less Utopian society everybody's opinion is equally valid, I am compelled to offer you mine about what you should do about that Nobel Prize thingie. Hopefully, you will take my advise a bit more seriously than that damnable Bush-Cheney administration has taken yours.
Paul, as a matter of principle, you should reject that Nobel Prize.
That's right. You should just flat-out tell those Swedes that you don't want that prize. It just wouldn't be the right thing to do, considering your progressive ideals.
First of all, it's just not fair that only you should get this prize this year when there are hundreds of thousands of other economists in this world. Honoring only one person in this way is a totally non-egalitarian thing to do. Either we should honor them all or none at all. We are fighting for equality and justice in this society; not giving Nobel Prize to everyone creates Haves and Have-nots, and we just can't tolerate that.
Second of all, a white man like you getting the prize — again! — is racist and sexist to the max. I just checked out the list of laureates in economics since 1969 and almost all of them are white men!! (There were two names — Amartya Sen and Arthur Lewis — who appeared to be non-white, but that just proves tokenism, you know! It has never been awarded to a woman.) Why do we see heterosexual, white men chosen so often? Why don't we ever see any black lesbians getting this prize? Paul, I want you to make a statement against this institutional racism and sexism; and reject this symbol of discrimination and marginalization.
Third of all, the amount of money — $1.4 million — that Riksbank is offering is obscene. Who deserves that kind of money anyway, when coal miners in third world countries — many of them barely 14 years old — don't make even $30 per month — and they are the ones risking their lives every day! As you have pointed out in your writings, the gap between the rich and the poor is rapidly widening. You getting that $1.4 million will only make the situation worse. I know you are a man of principles. If you wanted to make millions you could have easily chosen a crass and tasteless career, something like a Wall Street CDO structurer. I mean, you certainly had the brains. And the right pigmentation. And the right pair of chromosomes. But, no. You instead chose the noble profession of teaching. You have worked long and hard to build your moral authority; don't destroy it in a nano-second by succumbing to the temptation of money. Love of money is the root of all evil. If you accept this monstrously large sum of money, you will forever lose all moral authority to talk about the unfairness and inequality in the society. If you lose that moral authority, who will rail against all the greed and injustice in this increasingly oligarchic society? Who will stand up to corporate plutocrats? Those damnable conservatives tried to drag your name through mud when the news came out that your worked as a consultant for an advisory board for Enron. I am pretty sure that you handled the conflicts of interest in the Enron affair adequately, but why hand your critics further fuel now to blow-torch your reputation? Should your reputation get tarnished, who, pray tell, will be our champion? Who will battle evil media-types like Bill O'Reilly and Rush Limbaugh?
Fourth of all, the selection process employed by Riksbank was neither transparent nor democratic. I mean, I never got to vote on that decision! What right does Riksbank have to hand out this prize without getting the people involved? It might be Riksbank's money, but we the people should have the final say in how it gets doled out. But no. Riksbank doesn't want to do the morally correct thing. They want to exclude everybody but their pals from the decision-making process. This is just like Dick Cheney and his buddies cutting back-room deals to divvy-up Iraq spoils. It smells of favoritism; it smells of cronyism; it just stinks. Paul, would you ever go hunting with Cheney and his buddies? If the answer is no, then please don't accept the prize that was bestowed by this elitist and exclusionary committee.
Fifth of all, the prize sends a wrong message to the society. We agree that you worked hard all your life. You went to MIT, you got your Ph.D. You didn't drop acid like some bozos in the 70s. (At least, a quick googling on your name didn't turn up any such dirt.) You were studying your ass off while others were partying like crazy. Now you got the Nobel Prize and they don't. That's just not fair. Do you know what message it sends? That if you work hard in life, you can achieve things that others can't! That's a nasty and brutish message to send. Conservatives say things like that, not liberals like you! Radicals of the right believe in this "every man to himself" bullshit (and they don't even apologize for the non-PC nature of the phrase), not enlightened progressives like you!! Defenders of inequality believe in this myth about individualistic bootstrapping, not a seasoned class warrior like you!!!
Sixth of all, the prize perpetuates the shameful legacy of colonization and imperialism. Almost all of the laureates have been from the first-world countries. Don't you know that the vast majority of humanity lives in third-world countries. To systematically exclude people from poor countries from participating in the intellectual dialogue means further polarization. If people from third-world countries don't win such prizes often enough, what kind of role models will kids there have growing up? Won't they fall prey to false prophets? No wonder religious radicalization is rampant in countries from Somalia to Afghanistan. Paul, by the mere act of accepting this prize you will be promoting global terrorism. And many of these terrorists also subjugate women. So you will be participating in women's subjugation too.
Seventh of all, you accepting this prize will lead to global warming. You and your loved ones will be traveling to Stockholm in an airplane that will be consuming hydrocarbons — yes the same hydrocarbons that pollute the environment and prop up the dictatorial regimes. Now, you could ask Al Gore about how many carbon offsets that you will need to buy for your flight to Stockholm — and he should know for sure — but that still won't make it morally acceptable in the current economic environment. Just when millions of people worldwide are losing their jobs due to the worsening credit crunch, Nobel prize-winners feasting on a sumptuous dinner makes for a sad spectacle. Why don't we just take the money that will be spent on your travel and spend it on installing solar panels in Sub-Saharan Africa instead? That will allow the disadvantaged African children to power up their One-Laptop-Per-Child laptops and that should go a long way towards bridging the digital divide. Isn't that what we liberals should want, after all?
To summarize, by accepting this Nobel Prize you will promote racism, sexism and inequality; suppress democracy; encourage terrorism; subjugate women; and cause global warming. Paul, I want you to stand up for your liberal values and reject this prize. If you do that, you will be a bigger hero for your liberal fans who read your newspaper columns so lovingly. With one act of sacrifice, you will enhance the moral authority of the liberal philosophy that puts people first and money last. Liberals will rejoice and celebrate. Given your passion for reducing inequality, you will be a shoo-in for the newly created post of the Wealth Redistribution Czar under the Obama administration.
Paul, after all my exhortations against doing so, it's still your decision to make. If you decide to go ahead and accept the prize, I will understand. I mean, $1.4 million is a lot of dough to walk away from. Besides, aren't moral principles all relative to begin with? And since when has hypocrisy become such a big crime?
If you accept the prize, you will be richer by several hundred thousand dollars even after paying taxes at the top marginal rate. I know you have often said that the rich don't pay enough in taxes. Paul, this will be your shining moment to do things differently. Unlike other rich people, I am sure, you will write an extra check to the US Treasury because you believe, in the heart of your hearts, that the marginal tax rate on the rich should be higher. You will show your critics that you are a man of principles who puts his money where is mouth is — even though you came up somewhat short of your ideals in accepting the prize in the first place. A couple of hundred thousand dollars that you would voluntarily contribute to the US Treasury, in addition to your obligatory taxes, would go a long way towards paying for the universal health-care program. We are the only rich country in the world that doesn't have that health-care safety net. While we are on the topic of single payer universal health-care system, let me tell you how eagerly I am awaiting the arrival of such a system. It wouldn't come a day sooner for me. Recently, my immoral and greedy insurance company refused to pay for my bariatric surgery — they want me to exercise instead. Imagine their gall in holding me responsible for my own health! I don't like to exercise and, frankly, I shouldn't have to. I would rather watch Oprah in my free time — which I have a lot of since I don't like to work much either. Paul, don't you agree that it's my fundamental right to get a free bariatric surgery? And all those rich people should be taxed more to pay for it. Furthermore, the cost of my bariatric surgery is such an infinitesimally small fraction of the funds that go to the military-industrial complex. Rather than wasting money on propping up dictators and tyrants around the world, it's time we started investing in America and my bariatric surgery is a fine place to start as any other.
Now we come to the topic that is near and dear to your heart. You have talked passionately about a need to promote a broadly shared prosperity. You will be happy to know that there are others who agree with you whole-heartedly and would love to share in your new-found prosperity. Even after paying for all the taxes and whatnot, you will still be left with a lot of money. Please take a look around — there are others in the society who will have much less. They certainly deserve your help. The case in point - your's truly. I bought a house in New Jersey — not that far from yours — at the height of the housing bubble. My real estate agent told me that housing prices always go up and I believed him. Then the evil bank people lent me the money when they knew I will never be able to make the mortgage payments once the teaser rate expires. That's what I call predatory lending and the regulators did nothing to protect me from these greedy and evil bankers. I am truly a victim of this lending fraud. Unlike Senator Chris Dodd I was never invited to be part of "Friends of Angelo" VIP clientele program and therefore never got a sweetheart deal on my mortgage. Paul, I am asking you — no I am begging you — to help out your fellow being who is down on his luck. I will drive my hybrid car to your house to collect the cash. Even a little bit would help. I am upside down on my home for $100,000. If you could just take care of that little deficit, I can start building equity in my home. After all, I too deserve to live the American Dream.
Love and peace!
Sincerely,
Joe "The New Jersey Plumber"
joe-the-plumber [at] gmx.com
at 08:53 on October 27th, 2008
Joe "The New Jersey Plumber", thanks for shoutout comment nobel prize winner Krugman, you saying "you want also to make your American dream", well then you need a new economy, the old sub-prime scam economy is dead. Any proposals ?
at 11:56 on November 13th, 2008
The event (DNC08, digg stage in the big blogger tent provided by Kos of Dailykos) during which I took this photograph was of particular interest to me because Thom Hartmann (far left, standing) gently jibed Arianna Huffington (not in photo) for being late to the stage, in order to, as he said, "make an entrance." (Not necessarily verbatim.) When she did arrive, he noted that she smelled good (a comment on her perfume, I would assume). She jibed him gently back, noting that he had said nothing similar about any of the other panel members (or, specifically, David Sirota, seated next to Thom, that [Thom] had not noticed [David]'s cologne). And Thom, quite surprisingly (or, if you're familiar with him and his m.o., quite unsurprisingly), responded that she was right!, he'd been sexist in noting these things. It was very nice to witness. Thom *is* as thoughtful and progressive in person as he pretends to be in his public persona. I appreciated the exchange very much. Especially given the preponderance of overt sexism on display in the run-up to the '08 election by public figures. (Also, Paul Krugs is a genius. Natch.)
lildbsnack has contributed a photo to this story.
at 13:31 on November 13th, 2008
lildbsnack thanks for photo report "Nobel prize Economy for American Paul Krugman". What is he doing now ?