
14
Total Mentions
14
Documents
1,408
Connected Entities
British journalist
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The Declinists at Work March 1979 Used with permission of Bloomberg L.P. Copyright© 2016. All rights reserved. July 2016 Source: Financial Times. Martin Wolf/James Ferguson, 2016. “Global elites must heed the warning of populist rage.” Financial Times / FT.com, 20 July. Used under licence from the Financi
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ation", and "carbon dividends" to their vocabulary. For more on business and the environment, subscribe to the FT's new Moral Money newsletter. 8. Martin Wolf looks back on 75 years since the Bretton Woods conference, and see the global economic order established in 1944 under threat today like never befor
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the Strategic Implications of the Arab Uprisings Robert Satloff Article 5. The Irish Times It's not as bad as the 1930s but there are parallels Martin Wolf Article 6. NYT Paralysis in Athens Randall Fuller Article 7. NYT The Age of Unsatisfying Wars John A. Nagl Articic I. The National Interest
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tion before the summer First we need to encourage and bring forward private sector investment. There is a clear consensus among commentators from Martin Wolf to Paul Krugman that the economic upturn will come not as a result of personal consumption, or public spending. Nor, given the downturn in global t
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ight, that would be 0.000001 per cent. No wonder populists and revolutionaries are raising hell, from neo-Nazis in Greece to jihadists in Nigeria. Martin Wolf of the Financial Times, a Davos stalwart, likens the situation today to the eve of World War I, exactly a century ago, when the world's rich and it
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soon, we could throw ourselves back into the economic doldrums — and increase the very deficit we are trying to reduce. Example: economic columnist Martin Wolf, offered last week in the Financial Times: "The federal government is not on the verge of bankruptcy. If anything, the tightening has been too much
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itself) will contribute to stemming global warming by reducing carbon emissions. That would be a major improvement to the expected trajectory of = Martin Wolf, an economic columnist for the Financial Times, has opened up a discussion of the political implications of bleak assessment of the American futur
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ion before the summer First we need to encourage and bring forward private sector investment. There is a clear consensus among commentators from Martin Wolf to Paul Krugman that the economic upturn will come not as a result of personal consumption, or public spending. Nor, given the downturn in global t
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l tool for recovery. I told him I was all in, but needed some thread of substance as back up for hope. He told me I was getting too technical. Read Martin Wolf yesterday's FT. tjp From: jeffrey E. [[email protected]] Sent: Tuesday, July 12, 2016 6:56 PM To: Pritzker, Tom Subject: when are you
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cation", and "carbon dividends" to their vocabulary. For more on business and the environment, subscribe to the FT's new Moral Money newsletter. 8. Martin Wolf looks back on 75 years since the Bretton Woods conference, and see the global economic order established in 1944 under threat today like never befor
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Thomas Wipf Timothy E. Wirth Matthias Wissmann Martin Wittig Genit Arie Witzel Patricia A. Woertz Anne Wojcicki Siegfried Wolf Michael Wolf Martin Wolf Nathan D. Wolfe Scott Wolstein Ngaire Woods John D. Wren David Wright Nora Wu Sandra Wu Wen-Hsiu General Secretary Group Executive, Westpac
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sity. <1=> <1=> Article 6. Council on Foreign Relations <=>Does the BRICS Group Matter?<=b> 10 EFTA_R1_01444853 EFTA02404876 Interview with Martin Wolf March 30, 2012 -- The group of fast-growing emerging markets known as the BRICS--Brazil, R=ssia, India, China, and South Africa--held their fourth
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eljohann Matthew A. Winkler Stefan Winners Martin Winterkom Gita Wirjawan Mark Wiseman Lisa Witter Martin Wittig Michael Woelk Michael Wolf Martin Wolf Siegfried Wolf Joerg Wolle Cassie Wong Chui-Ping Wong Wai Ming Roger J. Wood Linda Woodhead Ngaire Woods John D. Wren Sir David Wright Ian W
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ight, that would be 0.000001 per cent. No wonder populists and revolutionaries are raising hell, from neo-Nazis in Greece to jihadists in Nigeria. Martin Wolf of the Financial Times, a Davos stalwart, likens the situation today to the eve of World War I, exactly a century ago, when the world's rich and it

United States
LocationCountry located primarily in North America

George W. Bush
PersonPresident of the United States from 2001 to 2009

Marc Rich
PersonAmerican commodities trader (1934–2013)

Barack Obama
PersonPresident of the United States from 2009 to 2017

Lebanon
LocationCountry in West Asia

Prince Andrew
PersonThird child of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (born 1960)

Bashar al-Assad
PersonPresident of Syria from 2000 to 2024

Joe Biden
Person46th President of the United States (2021–2025)

Jeffrey Epstein
PersonAmerican sex offender and financier (1953–2019)

Prince Charles
PersonKing of the United Kingdom and other Commonwealth realms since 2022 (born 1948)

Tehran
LocationCapital city of Iran

Tunisia
LocationCountry in North Africa

Middle East
LocationGeopolitical region encompassing Egypt and most of Western Asia, including Iran

Lawrence Krauss
PersonAmerican particle physicist and cosmologist

Benjamin Netanyahu
PersonPrime Minister of Israel (1996–1999; 2009–2021; since 2022)

Nigeria
LocationSovereign state in West Africa

Saddam Hussein
PersonIraqi president, army officer and Baathist politician (1937–2006)

David Cameron
PersonBritish politician (born 1966)

Belgium
LocationCountry in western Europe

Terje Rod-Larsen
PersonNorwegian diplomat