Visualizzazione post con etichetta Paul Krugman. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta Paul Krugman. Mostra tutti i post

martedì 17 dicembre 2013

Paul Krugman: The Facebooking of Economics @ The Conscience of a Liberal blog


The Facebooking of Economics

by Paul Krugman / Read more @ NY Times


David Brooks has a funny piece today about the new profession of Thought Leaders. I think I know who he’s talking about. But I started thinking about my own neck of the woods — and while the rules of the game in economics are definitely changing, it’s nothing like what David describes.
What is true is that there has been a major erosion of the old norms. It used to be the case that to have a role in the economics discourse you had to have formal credentials and a position of authority; you had to be a tenured professor at a top school publishing in top journals, or a senior government official. Today the ongoing discourse, especially in macroeconomics, is much more free-form.
But you don’t get to play a major role in that discourse by publishing clever Slateish snark; you get there by saying smart things backed by data.
Obviously the web has changed a lot, although the process actually started even before the rise of blogs. Economics journals stopped being a way to communicate ideas at least 25 years ago, replaced by working papers; publication was more about certification for the purposes of tenure than anything else. Partly this was because of the long lags — by the time my most successful (though by no means best) academic paper was actually published, in 1991, there were around 150 derivative papers that I knew of, and the target zone literature was running into diminishing returns. Partly, also, it was because in some fields rigid ideologies blocked new ideas. Don’t take my word for it: It was Ken Rogoff, not me, who wrote about the impossibility of publishing realistic macro in the face of “new neoclassical repression.”
Anyway, at this point the real discussion in macro, and to a lesser extent in other fields, is taking place in the econoblogosphere. This is true even for research done at official institutions like the IMF and the Fed: people read their working papers online, and that’s how their work gets incorporated into the discourse.
How does the econoblogosphere work? It’s a lot like the 17th-century coffee shop culture Tom Standage describes in his lovely book Writing on the Wall. People with shared interests in effect meet in cyberspace (although many of them are, as it happens, also sitting in real coffee shops at the time, as I am now), exchange ideas, write them up, and make those writeups available to others when they think they’re especially interesting.
As Standage explains, this informal system gradually evolved into the modern structure of scientific journals, as the process of circulating research writing became formalized, with refereeing as a form of quality check. But the way it began, as Standage says, was in important ways more like social media than like centralized publication with clear lines of authority.
And now we’re back to something like that world.
So who are the players in this world? Well, look at any of the various rankings of economics blogs — say, the one at Onalytica. I don’t see any of Brooks’s Thought Leaders there. I see a lot of solid professional economists; a number of equally solid economic journalists; and a few people who don’t fall into standard categories, but are by no means the kind of shallow operator Brooks describes. Mike Konczal at Next New Deal, for example, doesn’t fit any of the old categories, but does utterly serious and important work.
Well, and there’s Zero Hedge, but it’s an imperfect world.
Does this new, amorphous system work? Yes! In just the past few years we’ve had what I’d consider three classic economic debates — on the effects of monetary expansion at the zero lower bound, on fiscal multipliers and austerity, on the effects of high debt ratios; the emergence of major new themes involving issues like private-sector leverage and the need for safe assets; and more, all strongly informed by data. Of course most of the people on the losing side of these debates refuse to admit having been wrong, but it was ever thus — science progresses funeral by funeral and all that.
So don’t feel nostalgic for the days of authority figures dominating the discourse. Intellectually, in economics at least, these are the good old days.

lunedì 29 aprile 2013

The Italian Miracle by Paul Krugman @ NYTimes.com - April 29, 2013




The Italian Miracle

by Paul Krugman

@ NYTimes.com / Read more

April 29, 2013

Italy is a mess. Yes, it has a prime minister, finally; but the chances of serious economic reform are minimal, the willingness to persist in ever-harsher austerity — which the Rehns of this world tell us is essential — is evaporating. It’s all bad. But a funny thing is happening:

What’s going on here? I think that we’re seeing strong evidence for the De Grauwe view that soaring rates in the European periphery had relatively little to do with solvency concerns, and were instead a case of market panic made possible by the fact that countries that joined the euro no longer had a lender of last resort, and were subject to potential liquidity crises.
What’s happened now is that the ECB sounds increasingly willing to act as the necessary lender, and that in general the softening of austerity rhetoric makes it seem less likely that Italy will be forced into default by sheer shortage of cash. Hence, falling yields and much-reduced pressure.
It also, to be a bit self-justifying, shows that back when I used to cite Italy in the 1990s as an example of how advanced countries can carry high debt loads, I wasn’t being naive. Back then Italy had its own currency, and debt denominated in that currency; yes, it was pegged to the Deutsche Mark, but there was always the option of unpegging. By joining the euro, Italy in effect turned itself, macroeconomically, into a third-world country with debts in someone else’s currency, and exposed itself to debt crisis; now, thanks to the Draghi put, it has stepped half way back into the first world.

giovedì 7 marzo 2013

PIERRE DE GASQUET - Grillonomics 2 : Stiglitz et Fitoussi récusent les avances du M5S de Beppe Grillo @ Les Echos, Fr, 7 mars 2013


Grillonomics 2 : Stiglitz et Fitoussi récusent les avances du M5S de Beppe Grillo

di Pierre De Gasquet @Les Echos, 7 mars 2013 

Tandis que l'entourage de Joe Stiglitz tempère les ardeurs du conseiller économique de Beppe Grillo, l'économiste français Jean-Paul Fitoussi qualifie carrément le mouvement de «régression démocratique ».

Fausse alerte. Malgré les avances du conseiller économique de Beppe Grillo, Mauro Gallegati, les néo-keynésiens ne sont guère tentés de voir leurs noms associés à la gestation du programme économique du Mouvement Cinque Stelle (M5S). Et le font savoir. Son nom ayant été largement cité dans la presse italienne depuis plusieurs jours ( «Les Echos » du 4 mars ), le Nobel d'économie Joseph Stiglitz (Columbia University) prend soin de souligner qu'il n'est «pas un conseiller de Beppe Grillo», même s'il s'est souvent exprimé sur le blog du fondateur de M5S par le passé et a participé au Woodstock 5 Stelle en septembre 2010. Son collègue et ami Jean-Paul Fitoussi (IEP de Paris), lui aussi cité par Mauro Gallegati dans une interview à «La Stampa» du 1er mars, est encore plus catégorique.
«Je n'ai aucunement l'intention de collaborer au programme économique du mouvement Cinque Stelle», assure-t-il. Pour Jean-Paul Fitoussi, -grand connaisseur de l'Italie qui siège comme conseiller indépendant au conseil de Telecom Italia depuis 2004 -, ce genre de mouvement est même l'expression d'une forme de « régression démocratique », en grande partie liée à « l'incapacité des partis de gouvernement à faire autre chose que d'appliquer la feuille de route imposée par l'Europe ». « Même si j'apprécie Mauro Gallegati, je n'ai jamais rencontré Beppe Grillo et je ne me suis jamais intéressé à ce mouvement », ajoute-t-il. Dont acte. Pourtant, dans son interview à «La Stampa », Mauro Gallegati, économiste de l'université d'Ancône et l'un des principaux mentors économiques de Beppe Grillo, avait confié être en train «d'organiser une task-force de chercheurs destinée à commencer à donner des cours d'économie aux nouveaux élus (du M5S). Bruce Greenwald de Columbia University (NDLR : proche de Joseph Stiglitz) et Jean-Paul Fitoussi me donneront un coup de main», ajoutait-il. Il s'était visiblement un peu avancé...
Elève de l'économiste Giorgio Fuà, Mauro Gallegati est un ardent défenseur de l'adoption des indicateurs de bien-être autres que le PIB, au centre, notamment, du rapport de la commission Stiglitz-Sen-Fitoussi sur la performance économique de 2009, réalisé à la demande de Nicolas Sarkozy. Parmi les mesures phares du programme économique de Beppe Grillo figurent notamment la création d'un «revenu de citoyenneté » de 1.000 euros par mois pour les chômeurs et les précaires, limité à 3 ans, dont le coût annuel est évalué entre 20 et 25 milliards d'euros par Mauro Gallegati (35 milliards selon d'autres experts). Autres pistes explorées par le M5S : la réduction du temps de travail à 30 heures par semaine et la suppression des cascades de holdings pour les sociétés cotées. Mais Mauro Gallegati, qui revendique un rôle actif dans la gestation du programme sur la partie réforme du travail, ne cache pas que la doctrine «Grillonomics» est encore largement un «work in progress » encore en pleine discussion sur Internet.
Mauro Gallegati maintient qu'il s'apprête à publier dans la revue de gauche «Micromega» un article important sur la philosophie économique du M5S et la redistribution des revenus, écrit à quatre mains avec Joe Stiglitz. Mais s'il veut lutter, comme il le dit, contre la «désinformation» sur le programme économique de Beppe Grillo, il devra se montrer plus prudent. D'autant que l'autre prix Nobel américain Paul Krugman, qui avait déjà prévu qu'un « bon résultat de Berlusconi et de Grillo pourrait non seulement déstabiliser l'Italie mais l'Europe entière», dans le «New York Times », ne semble guère prêt à prendre le relais pour donner des cours aux nouveaux élus...
DE NOTRE CORRESPONDANT À ROME

lunedì 24 dicembre 2012

Paul Krugman - End This Depression Now! - W.W.Norton & Company, Usa, April 2012


A call-to-arms from Nobel Prize–winning economist and best-selling author Paul Krugman.
The Great Recession is more than four years old—and counting. Yet, as Paul Krugman points out in this powerful volley, "Nations rich in resources, talent, and knowledge—all the ingredients for prosperity and a decent standard of living for all—remain in a state of intense pain." 

How bad have things gotten? How did we get stuck in what now can only be called a depression?
And above all, how do we free ourselves? Krugman pursues these questions with his characteristic lucidity and insight. He has a powerful message for anyone who has suffered over these past four years—a quick, strong recovery is just one step away, if our leaders can find the "intellectual clarity and political will" to end this depression now.