Laureate
in sentence
369 examples of Laureate in a sentence
The campaign is enthusiastically endorsed by a leading US economist and trade specialist, the Nobel
laureate
Paul Krugman.
The Productivity of TrustCAMBRIDGE – The Nobel
laureate
economist Paul Krugman once quipped that “Canada is essentially closer to the United States than it is to itself.”
The Nobel
laureate
Kenneth Arrow made the point in economic terms almost 40 years ago: “It can be plausibly argued that much of the economic backwardness in the world can be explained by the lack of mutual confidence.”
Still, the mirage of economic confidence could continue, because, as Nobel
laureate
economist Robert Shiller recently observed, one illusion can perpetuate another.
This time, the issue was Hasina’s treatment of the Nobel
laureate
Muhammad Yunus, the microcredit pioneer and founder of the Grameen Bank.
PRONACO has formidable leaders in Wole Soyinka, the Nobel literature laureate, and Anthony Enahoro, an elderly politician who made his name as a fiery young nationalist in the 1940’s.
Nobel
laureate
Mohamed ElBaradei, a liberal reformer, has little in common with Ahmed El-Zind, the head of the Judges Club and a Mubarak loyalist.
A recent Nobel
laureate
in economics, Douglas North, describes the type of state the postcommunist countries now require as a double-edged sword.
When the Nobel
laureate
economist Robert Mundell, the intellectual “father of the euro,” set out to determine an optimal currency area, he put a premium on natural trade and macroeconomic ties.
The World’s Biggest Shock AbsorberMUNICH – Since last autumn, Germany has been accused by a number of Anglo-American economists, above all by the 2008 Nobel
laureate
Paul Krugman, of not doing enough to combat the world economic crisis and of free-riding on other countries’ stimulus programs.
On the contrary, the Abe government currently places a high priority on preschool education – an approach supported by research conducted by the Nobel
laureate
economist James Heckman, who has found that investment in preschool education brings large returns.
The Irish Nobel
laureate
poet Seamus Heaney distinguishes between optimism – the wish for a better future – and hope, the more rationally grounded expectation that it can indeed come to pass.
For example, the Nobel
laureate
Ronald H. Coase has complained that microeconomics is filled with black-box models that fail to study the actual contractual relations between firms and markets.
Another Nobel laureate, Paul Krugman, has claimed that macroeconomics over the last three decades has been useless at best and harmful at worst.
Surprisingly, hope is strongest in Burma, where the military junta recognized the need for change, exemplified in the 2010 decision to free the long-imprisoned Nobel Peace
laureate
Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and embark on a transition to democracy.
Unfortunately, these distorted results have become conventional wisdom – even for respected economists like the Nobel
laureate
Paul Krugman, who recently invoked the flawed “50% youth unemployment” figure.
But, for this dialogue to have any real legitimacy, it must include the Nobel Peace Prize
laureate
Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, who has endured decades of house arrest, and her party, the NLD.
These countries’ private sectors have borrowed significantly; but, as the Nobel
laureate
economist Paul Krugman has been pointing out, leverage and dollar debt are lower (as a share of national income) than they were at the outset of the 1990’s Asian crisis – and at the start of the 1980’s Latin American crisis, for that matter.
CAMBRIDGE – Two and a half years ago, senior staff members of the World Bank approached the Nobel
laureate
Michael Spence to ask him to lead a high-powered commission on economic growth.
While these discussions – hosted by Liberian President and Nobel Peace Prize
laureate
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, and British Prime Minister David Cameron – take place, the nearby Sahel and the Great Lakes region continue to be plagued by violence and conflict.
According to the Growth Commission led by Nobel
laureate
Michael Spence, 13 economies took full advantage of their latecomer status after World War II and achieved annual GDP growth rates of 7% or higher – at least twice as high as developed countries’ growth rates – for 25 years or longer.
Even former US Vice President and Nobel
laureate
Al Gore – who once boasted of casting the deciding vote for ethanol support – calls the policy “a mistake.”
An outside view is especially important when a free-trade and investment agreement is, as the Nobel
laureate
economist Joseph Stiglitz has noted, more of a “managed trade regime that puts corporate interests first.”
But as Nobel
laureate
Robert Lucas noted, capital has been flowing in the wrong direction, from low- to high-income countries.
Frederik Willem de Klerk was President of South Africa and a Nobel Peace Prize
laureate.
Desmond Tutu is a Nobel Peace Prize
laureate.
The Nobel
laureate
economist Robert Solow noted some 60 years ago that rising incomes should largely be attributed not to capital accumulation, but to technological progress – to learning how to do things better.
The second criticism, repeatedly voiced by the Nobel
laureate
economist Paul Krugman, is that the supposed German history lesson is chronologically false.
Nobel
laureate
Amartya Sen wisely reminds us that “it is important that the practical case for tobacco control is not dismissed on the basis of an incomplete libertarian argument.”
Indeed, the Nobel
laureate
economist Amartya Sen has demonstrated that free speech even helps mitigate seemingly natural catastrophes like famines, because it reveals the ways in which a few haves exploit the many have-nots.
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