Laureate
in sentence
369 examples of Laureate in a sentence
When contemporary economists think of economic dualism, they think first and foremost of the Nobel
laureate
Sir W. Arthur Lewis.
At the WEF in Incheon, Nobel Peace Prize
laureate
Kailash Satyarthi called for a mass popular movement demanding that education be placed prominently on the agenda of every politician running for election, at all levels of government.
The Nobel
laureate
economist Paul Samuelson once commended macroeconomics for having transformed “the pre-war dinosaur into a post-war lizard.”
Depression EconomicsBERKELEY – A decade ago, the 2008 Nobel
laureate
in economics, Paul Krugman, wrote a little book entitled The Return of Depression Economics .
The Nobel
laureate
economist Thomas Sargent and others recently argued that the optimal level of debt for the US is in fact very close to zero, though he does not recommend trying to get there anytime soon, given that US government debt is now over 100% of GDP.
In this sense, the ECB’s Governing Council is, consciously or unconsciously, following the Nobel
laureate
economist Paul Krugman’s 1998 advice that the Bank of Japan “credibly promise to be irresponsible” when nominal interest rates are already at zero and monetary policy is in danger of becoming ineffective.
Europe’s austerians, as the Nobel
laureate
economist Paul Krugman likes to call them, lost the argument.
Liu’s husband, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, died of liver cancer last year, nearly eight years into an 11-year prison sentence in China for drafting a petition demanding democracy and respect for human rights.
As the Nobel
laureate
economist Paul Samuelson observed in 1948, international trade leads to factor-price equalization, with wages, adjusted for skill levels, equilibrating across countries.
As the Nobel
laureate
economist Kenneth Arrow argued in 1972, “much of the economic backwardness in the world can be explained by the lack of mutual confidence.”
In Bangladesh, three top priorities were identified by the research and by a panel of experts including a Nobel
laureate
and Bangladeshi development specialists: e-government solutions, improved TB response, and child nutrition.
Another is what the Nobel
laureate
Daniel Kahneman and his long-time collaborator, the psychologist Amos Tversky, refer to as the “availability heuristic”: people estimate the frequency of events by the ease with which examples come to mind.
Nobel
laureate
Amartya Sen makes a convincing case that development should be defined in terms of freedom, not in terms of gross national product.
In one influential interpretation, popularized by the novelist, Labour Party MP, and future Nobel Peace Prize
laureate
Norman Angell in 1910, the interdependency of the increasingly complex global economy made war impossible.
As the Nobel
laureate
economist Paul Samuelson famously said, the reason we have two eyes is to keep one on supply and the other on demand.
Still, as our team set about defining the global poverty line this year (and thus the incidence of poverty), I was acutely aware of the note of caution from Angus Deaton, this year’s Nobel
laureate
in economics: “I am not sure it is wise for the World Bank to commit itself so much to this project.”
In 1991, the Nobel
laureate
economist Paul Krugman, who is perhaps the world’s leading Keynesian today, showed that whether or not expectations are self-fulfilling depends on underlying economic conditions.
In his 2013 book, The Great Escape, Nobel
laureate
economist Angus Deaton shows how progress in reducing aggregate privation, famine, and premature death over the past 250 years has left many social groups behind.
According to Nobel
laureate
economist Robert J. Shiller, the cyclically adjusted price-earnings (CAPE) ratio of 31.3 is currently about 15% higher than it was in mid-2007, on the brink of the subprime crisis.
A quote often attributed to the Nobel
laureate
physicist Niels Bohr says it best: “Prediction is very difficult, especially if it’s about the future.”
As the Nobel
laureate
James Heckman points out in his recent analysis of the poor performance of the German economy after reunification, new opportunities in technology and trade have raised the cost of preserving the status quo.
The Nobel
laureate
in economics Paul Krugman goes further.
Also on the panel is Pakistan’s Malala Yousafzai, the youngest-ever Nobel Peace Prize laureate, who courageously defied the Taliban to campaign for girls’ access to education.
Thus, external competitiveness is what the Nobel
laureate
economist Paul Krugman calls a “dangerous obsession” – at least to the extent that it is based on the company-country analogy.
With Nobel
laureate
Aung San Suu Kyi freed from two decades of house arrest to campaign vigorously for a seat in parliament in the special election to be held on April 1, Burma’s commitment to rejoining the international community appears to be genuine.
No one spoke more eloquently than Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani schoolgirl and Nobel Peace Prize
laureate.
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.
EMU is founded on the idea, pioneered by the Nobel
laureate
Robert Mundell, that the costs and benefits of monetary integration depend on whether or not countries share certain properties.
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.
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.
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