skip to main
|
skip to sidebar
Daily Economics News Headlines
Daily Economics is blog that sharing my opinion of various Finance and Economics News, Headlines and Ideas at the world.
Home
Sitemap
Contact Us
Disclaimer
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use
Google+
Twitter
Feed RSS
Categories
China
Civilization
Conservatism
Debt
Economics
Finance
Futurism
Health Care
Immigration
Industrial Policy
Israel
Japan
Libertarianism
Macroeconomics
Obama
Partisanship
Politics
Public Goods
Rants
Trade
Unemployment
Blog Archives
▼
2013
(41)
April
(2)
March
(10)
February
(12)
January
(17)
►
2012
(184)
December
(11)
November
(15)
October
(13)
September
(13)
August
(11)
July
(14)
June
(16)
May
(14)
April
(20)
March
(22)
February
(16)
January
(19)
►
2011
(103)
December
(10)
November
(9)
October
(7)
September
(7)
August
(12)
July
(9)
June
(5)
May
(12)
April
(10)
March
(11)
February
(7)
January
(4)
►
2010
(129)
December
(3)
November
(4)
October
(6)
September
(14)
August
(7)
July
(10)
June
(6)
May
(12)
April
(13)
March
(11)
February
(23)
January
(20)
►
2009
(236)
December
(4)
November
(7)
October
(11)
September
(10)
August
(8)
July
(31)
June
(17)
May
(29)
April
(36)
March
(24)
February
(30)
January
(29)
►
2008
(307)
December
(17)
November
(22)
October
(41)
September
(34)
August
(30)
July
(28)
June
(27)
May
(21)
April
(25)
March
(20)
February
(19)
January
(23)
►
2007
(118)
December
(16)
November
(15)
October
(22)
August
(8)
July
(6)
June
(10)
May
(10)
April
(9)
March
(10)
February
(6)
January
(6)
►
2006
(115)
December
(5)
November
(7)
October
(7)
September
(9)
July
(7)
June
(7)
May
(13)
April
(17)
March
(16)
February
(9)
January
(18)
►
2005
(65)
December
(14)
November
(15)
October
(30)
September
(6)
Home
»
All posts
We need to keep the smart people here
Posted by
Unknown
|
9:36 AM
Thomas Friedman is making so much sense it's surprising : Good-paying jobs don’t come from bailouts. They come from start-ups. And wher...
0 comments
Labels:
Immigration
Predictions about the future
Posted by
Unknown
|
8:19 PM
The WSJ and other conservative outlets are fond of claiming that either government spending and/or low interest rates are raising the risk o...
0 comments
Harold Meyerson reads my mind
Posted by
Unknown
|
7:34 AM
Harold Meyerson, on U.S. political institutions and national strength : I don't mean to sound nostalgic for the Cold War, but we've...
0 comments
The Economist vs. The Economist (on China trade policy)
Posted by
Unknown
|
1:47 PM
I had always assumed that The Economist fairly tightly controlled the views that their stable of bloggers expressed, forcing them to maintai...
0 comments
What next?
Posted by
Unknown
|
6:26 PM
Health Care Reform was the biggie - the thing that Democrats had been pushing for for decades, the expansion of the social safety net that p...
0 comments
The In-Crowd isn't so In anymore
Posted by
Unknown
|
10:51 AM
About a month ago, a conservative friend told me that most Americans didn't favor the health care reform bill. At the time, he was right...
0 comments
China Bash Week: a summary
Posted by
Unknown
|
8:21 AM
For the last week, this blog has been all China, all the time. Why? Arguably, the approaching nail-biting climax of America's health car...
0 comments
Avent v. Krugman on China trade policy
Posted by
Unknown
|
9:30 AM
Epic blog war between Ryan Avent of The Economist and Paul Krugman of the New York Times ! First Krugman wrote this column urging the U.S....
0 comments
China's new 'tude
Posted by
Unknown
|
4:26 AM
John Pomfret, a veteran China hand, reports : China's government has embraced an increasingly anti-Western tone in recent months and is ...
0 comments
Should we tweak the Dragon's tail?
Posted by
Unknown
|
6:51 AM
Questions about China's currency all come down to whether or not the U.S. should put pressure on China to appreciate the yuan. As the U....
0 comments
Robert Lucas and the Cargo Cult that is modern macroeconomics
Posted by
Unknown
|
12:25 PM
I'm going to rearrange a DeLong blog post and add some Feynman. Robert Lucas, founder of modern macroeconomics, and chief proponent of ...
0 comments
A functioning political system is a necessity for a strong economy
Posted by
Unknown
|
7:19 AM
Want to understand why government debt is bad? Read Paul Krugman's awesome blog post : [I]f...interest rates are at...zero...why should ...
0 comments
Newer Posts
Older Posts
Popular Posts
On the iatrogenic explanation of post-recession stagnations
I think that title really reaches out of the screen and grabs the reader, don't you? :-) Anyway. John Cochrane has been diligently worki...
Kazakh scientist Dr. Yamak prove woman's brain is size of squirrel!
Tyler Cowen addresses feminist economics . What he dislikes: feminist economists' "lack of a hardheaded willingness to recognize po...
How is Abenomics doing?
Last December, Shinzo Abe swept to power, promising to force the Bank of Japan to re-inflate the economy at any cost, boost stimulus s...
What is an Economic Equilibrium?
I get asked about this one a lot. And it's also a source of controversy...on one hand you have some econ critics who say "E...
Fancy stimulus tools: policy vs. politics
On 2/26, Miles Kimball wrote a Quartz column called " What Paul Krugman got wrong about Italy's economy ", in which he sa...
The Left and wages
Matt Yglesias has a post about the left and wages that I think makes a number of errors. Here's the intro: The left is rightly c...
Ed Prescott unleashed
Ed Prescott is a Nobel Prize winner in economics...his famous theory, which is called "Real Business Cycle Theory," basically stat...
The Koizumi years: A macroeconomic puzzle
Paul Krugman rightly points out that Japan's growth during the period of 2000-2007 - roughly, the Junichiro Koizumi era - was a lot str...
How the poor can (and should!) save money
Although my Atlantic column on wealth inequality got a lot of publicity, the comments were mostly negative. Almost all of them sai...
Resources and Stats