Economist
in sentence
1214 examples of Economist in a sentence
In 1995, the late Yale University
economist
Gustav Ranis emphasized that the East Asian economies’ success in sustaining long-term growth owed much to the “flexibility of policymakers” who consistently responded to changing demands.
A study by the
economist
Homi Kharas of the Brookings Institution gives us a sense of the scale of this change.
The ECB’s founding chief economist, Otmar Issing, has referred to this as a road to serfdom.
The End of Work as We Know ItPARIS – In 1983, the American
economist
and Nobel laureate Wassily Leontief made what was then a startling prediction.
To begin with, as noted by the MIT
economist
David Autor, advances in the automation of labor transform some jobs more than others.
The neo-Keynesian
economist
wants to boost demand generally.
Summers’ theory of “secular stagnation” (a term first used by the
economist
Alvin Hansen back in 1938) holds that, in the United States, the desire to save chronically outweighs the desire to spend on growth-enhancing investments.
Growth Out of TimeCAMBRIDGE – Robert Gordon of Northwestern University is a distinguished
economist
whose work in macroeconomics and studies of long-term economic growth have properly earned him high regard.
Bagehot (1826-1877) was a mid-nineteenth-century editor of The
Economist
who published a book about financial markets, Lombard Street, in 1873.
But no German
economist
has come out against an economic stimulus program, and many favor one.
Krugman is an excellent
economist.
According to the
economist
Geoffrey Crowther, a country’s balance-of-payments position evolves in six stages, with the key variable being net assets – that is, the country’s net international-investment position.
Many prominent economists, including the members of a United Nations panel headed by the Nobel laureate
economist
Joseph Stiglitz, are recommending a “Global Reserve System” to replace the dollar’s hegemony.
Of course, as the
economist
Charles Wyplosz has explained, debt sustainability analysis is inherently uncertain.
(Citigroup’s chief economist, Willem Buiter, has suggested numerous ways to address the constraint of paper currency, but eliminating it is the easiest.)
The idea of permanently raising inflation targets to 4% was first proposed in an interesting and insightful paper led by IMF chief
economist
Olivier Blanchard, and has been endorsed by a number of other academics, including, most recently, Paul Krugman.
But it is also contemplating other macro-prudential instruments, such as a kind of Tobin tax, the levy on financial transactions first suggested in 1972 by the Nobel laureate
economist
James Tobin, in order to discourage volatile capital flows.
In a recent report, the
economist
Philippe Legrain demonstrated how countries that invest in newcomers’ successful and rapid integration into the workforce can, within five years, reap economic benefits that are twice as large as the initial outlay.
As my book Has Globalization Gone Too Far? went to press nearly two decades ago, I approached a well-known
economist
to ask him if he would provide an endorsement for the back cover.
The
economist
demurred.
As the late Yale
economist
Gustav Ranis observed nearly 20 years ago, the key to successful and sustainable development is “avoiding the encrustation of ideas.”
Given the role of capital flows in exchange rates, BIS
economist
Claudio Borio argues for looking at the financial account as well.
The great
economist
John Maynard Keynes taught that changes in market sentiments – which he called “animal spirits” – have a life of their own; that swings in sentiment could swing an economy.
This new techno-market system is shaped and characterized by a belief in the increasing importance of knowledge, new ideas, innovations and new technologies, and a higher pace of what the
economist
Joseph Schumpeter famously called "creative destruction."
But our readers came to our defense, while the prominent Chinese
economist
Wu Jinglian supported our report in an interview on Central Chinese Television, China's main officially sponsored statewide broadcast network.
This is dangerously near the threshold of 90% identified by Harvard
economist
Kenneth Rogoff (together with Carmen Reinhart and Vincent Reinhart), beyond which economic growth stalls.
Although governments have endlessly repeated this argument since the 2008 crash as a justification for fiscal tightening, the
economist
A. P. Lerner pointed out its fallacy years ago.
Among the banned authors is the
economist
Mao Yushi, who received the Milton Friedman Prize for Advancing Liberty in 2012.
Dani Rodrik, a renowned Harvard University economist, is the latest to challenge the intellectual foundations of the Washington Consensus in a powerful new book titled One Economics, Many Recipes: Globalization, Institutions, and Economic Growth .
Authored by Peter Navarro (an
economist
at the University of California-Irvine) and Wilbur Ross (an investor), the plan claims that a President Trump would boost growth and reduce the national debt.
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