
93
Total Mentions
74
Documents
2,833
Connected Entities
American economist (born 1953)
EFTA00856687
lar wage boosts by bold-faced names like Walmart and Target — suggests that "maybe it's not that hard to give American workers a raise, after all," Krugman writes. While free market fundamentalists might retort that global competition will sink firms that boost worker pay, Krugman responds by noting th
and his core supporters are most dependent on.... So we have to ask why do they support him and Republican Conservatives like him. Raise the wage: Paul ICrugman shatters the myth that we can't afford to boost workers' pay We can pay workers more -- if we want to EFTA00856690 Inline image 2 Three things
a raise, after all," Krugman writes. While free market fundamentalists might retort that global competition will sink firms that boost worker pay, Krugman responds by noting that most American workers are "employed in service industries that aren't exposed to international trade." What about technolog
EFTA00701509
e American economy, Nobel laureate economist Paul Krugman, compared them in his latest article in the New York Times, Pointing Toward Prosperity? As Krugman points out Mitt Romney's five-point plan to restore prosperity is a list of things he claims will happen, with no description of the policies he wou
s in 2020, rather than at the clear and pressing problems of the present — a bunch of modest if sensible proposals rather than a big push. Again as Krugman says; a slow job is better than a snow job. Mr. Obama may not be as bold as we'd like, but he isn't actively misleading voters the way Mr. Romney is
e both President Obama and Governor Romney are promising that their economic policies will invigorate the American economy, Nobel laureate economist Paul Krugman, compared them in his latest article in the New York Times, Pointing Toward Prosperity? As Krugman points out Mitt Romney's five-point plan to resto
EFTA00702684
n October and is almost half over) to be $845 billion. That may still sound like a big number, but given the state of the economy it really isn't. Krugman believes that that the budget doesn't have to be balanced to put us on a fiscally sustainable path; all we need is a deficit small enough that debt
I have include several other snippets for you to peruse, as our taste buds are being manipulated beyond most people's imaginations. I love to read Paul Krugman because in addition to having the technical understanding and depth of a Nobel Laureate, he also has the compassion of someone who understands that
EFTA00135754
rly September. Reuters (10/8, Valetkevitch) also attributes the gains to comments from President Trump that "fueled hopes of fresh fiscal support." Krugman: Trump Cut Off Talks Out Of "Sheer Spite." Paul Krugman writes in the New York Times (10/8, 18.61M) that if Trump is defeated in November, he "would
tributes the gains to comments from President Trump that "fueled hopes of fresh fiscal support." Krugman: Trump Cut Off Talks Out Of "Sheer Spite." Paul Krugman writes in the New York Times (10/8, 18.61M) that if Trump is defeated in November, he "would still be president for two and a half months. Would he
EFTA01658574
tributes the gains to comments from President Trump that "fueled hopes of fresh fiscal support." Krugman: Trump Cut Off Talks Out Of "Sheer Spite." Paul Krugman writes in the New York Times (10/8, 18.61M) that if Trump is defeated in November, he "would still be president for two and a half months. Would he
rly September. Reuters (10/8, Valetkevitch) also attributes the gains to comments from President Trump that "fueled hopes of fresh fiscal support." Krugman: Trump Cut Off Talks Out Of "Sheer Spite." Paul Krugman writes in the New York Times (10/8, 18.61M) that if Trump is defeated in November, he "would
EFTA02716901
llars in savings while cutting revenue, savaging domestic spending and proposing vouchers to purchase insurance instead of traditiona= Medicare. As Krugman writes, if it "were to become law, it would leave the federal government several trillion dolla=s deeper in debt than claimed, and that's just in th
nd the increasingly better jobs reports, why would we believe these GOP austerity measures would help average families? We don't because they won't. Krugman again: "The simplest way to understand [the GOP budget proposals] is surely to suppose that they are intended to do wha= they would, in fact, actual
EFTA00149675
13,632.84. Bloomberg (5/6, Papuc, Barrett, 3.57M) provides similar coverage. Krugman Faults Media Reaction To Yellen's Comment On Interest Rates. Paul Krugman writes in the New York Times (5/6, 20.6M) that Treasury Secretary Yellen's comment Tuesday that interest rates may "have to rise somewhat to make su
id uttering even the most obvious economic truths, even if she happens to be a world-class economist, lest they be read as signals of...something." Krugman argues that "the hair-trigger media response" to Yellen's comment "was part of a broader phenomenon: Many commentators just don't seem able to keep
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_014532 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_014621
gree of certainty; historically, productivity forecasts have been notoriously wrong. In The Age of Diminished Expectations,” first published in 1990, Paul Krugman, Nobel laureate in economics and professor at City University of New York, wrote that the lower pace of productivity growth experienced since the ear
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_014546 →ent low productivity growth rates do not portend low growth rates going forward. Just as Hansen was proven wrong on his secular stagnation theory and Krugman was proven wrong on his diminished expectations for the US economy (and they were both influenced by their pessimistic view on productivity), those w
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_014547 →EFTA00159909
for the event but children who suffered repeated trauma tend to have poor memory of the events, which Terr suggests is due to repression. Jones and Krugman's (1986) case study of a 3-year-old who was abducted, assaulted, and left to die provided evidence that even very young children can give accurate,
n. 3, 269-294. Goodman. G. and Reed. R. (1986). Age differences in eyewitness testimony. Law and Human Behaviour. 10, 317-332. Jones. D. P. H. and Krugman. R. D. (1986). Can a three-year-old child bear witness to her sexual assault and attempted murder? Child Abuse and Neglect, 10. 253-258. Leichtman,
EFTA00136798
timulus-idUSL1N2GZ1Q2> (10/8, Valetkevitch) also attributes the gains to comments from President Trump that "fueled hopes of fresh fiscal support." Krugman: Trump Cut Off Talks Out Of "Sheer Spite." Paul Krugman writes in the New York Times <https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/08/opinion/donald-trump-econom
tributes the gains to comments from President Trump that "fueled hopes of fresh fiscal support." Krugman: Trump Cut Off Talks Out Of "Sheer Spite." Paul Krugman writes in the New York Times <https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/08/opinion/donald-trump-economy.html> (10/8, 18.61M) that if Trump is defeated in Nov
EFTA00135950
t 13,632 84 Jilnnmberg (5/6, Papuc, Barrett, 3.57M) provides similar coverage. Krugman Faults Media Reaction To Yellen's Comment On Interest Rates. Paul Krugman writes in the New York limes (5/6, 20.6M) that Treasury Secretary Yellen's comment Tuesday that interest rates may "have to rise somewhat to make su
oid uttering even the most obvious economic truths, even if she happens to be a world-class economist, lest they be read as signals of...something." Krugman argues that "the hair-trigger media response" to Yellen's comment "was part of a broader phenomenon: Many commentators just don't seem able to keep
s — as usual — to be the key decision maker on that choice, too. A Microsoft spokesman declined comment. Back to top The Decline of E-Empires Paul Krugman — New York Times Steve Ballmer’s surprise announcement that he will be resigning as Microsoft's C.E.O. has set off a huge flood of commentary. Being
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019421 →nology Ballmer Departure From Microsoft Was More Sudden Kara Swisher All Things D Article text Than Portrayed by the Company The Decline of E-Empires Paul Krugman New York Times Article text As Amazon Stretches, Seattle’s Downtown Is Reshaped Kirk Johnson & Nick New York Times Article text Wingfield State Budge
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019413 →EFTA00657822
mption that today's good news somehow is attached to a bad story as negative consequences could begin, not too far in the future. As Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman wrote this week in his op-ed in the New York Times - The Jobless Trap — We are creating a permanent class of unemployed Americans as a result of our
ression, they probably won't blame fear, per se. Instead, they'll castigate our leaders for doing the wrong things as a result of unnecessary fear. Krugman: For the overriding fear driving economic policy has been debt hysteria, fear that unless we slash spending we'll turn into Greece any day now. Afte
EFTA00147473
plomat, Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein, whom she replaced 10 months ago," she "pulled few punches on the issue of migrant children at the southern border." Krugman: "Cruelty And Corruption Are Intertwined" In Trump's Migrant Policy. Paul Krugman writes in the New York Times (7/8, 18.61M) that the US is committi
few punches on the issue of migrant children at the southern border." Krugman: "Cruelty And Corruption Are Intertwined" In Trump's Migrant Policy. Paul Krugman writes in the New York Times (7/8, 18.61M) that the US is committing "atrocities" against Central American migrants and that "the detention centers
EFTA00667357
rial Over Iraq.' EFTA00667360 For those who really like to read and missed these articles in the New York Times, I have include an op-ed piece by Paul Krugman, 'Cleaning Up the Economy,' as he lays out the case that the country is on much stronger footing than it was in 2008. Echoing this sentiment, is a N
ironmental regulations and taxes on the wealthy." Echoing this sentiment is Paul ICrugman's article in the New York Times, 'Rosie Ruiz Republicans. Krugman compares Paul Ryan to Rosie Ruiz who in 1980 she was the first woman to cross the finish line at the Boston Marathon — except it turned out that sh
EFTA00148778
tributes the gains to comments from President Trump that "fueled hopes of fresh fiscal support." Krugman: Trump Cut Off Talks Out Of "Sheer Spite." Paul Krugman writes in the New York Times (10/8, 18.61M) that if Trump is defeated in November, he "would still be president for two and a half months. Would he
rly September. Reuters (10/8, Valetkevitch) also attributes the gains to comments from President Trump that "fueled hopes of fresh fiscal support." Krugman: Trump Cut Off Talks Out Of "Sheer Spite." Paul Krugman writes in the New York Times (10/8, 18.61M) that if Trump is defeated in November, he "would
EFTA01388570
inly worked in terms of reducing longer-term government bond yields - ballooning central bank balance sheets coincided with falling bond yields. 5 Krugman, Paul R. "It's Baaack: Japan's Slump and the Return of the Liquidity Trap." Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 1998, 29(2), pp. 137-205. Pas
The limits of monetary policy PerwttAGE kv, Woch x. 1 Most recent discussions take a highly accessible paper by Noble laureate Paul Krugman as their starting point.5 The implication of his model is that there is indeed little that conventional monetary policy can do in the here and now.
EFTA01301196
ir balance sheets to record levels to get money to the public markets. At some point, there will have to be a change or there will be consequences. Paul Krugman once said: "Unsustainable situations usually go on longer than most economists think possible. But they always end, and when they do, it's often pai
l Nature Technology Ballmer Departure From Microsoft Was More Sudden Kara Swisher All Things D Than Portrayed by the Company The Decline of E-Empires Paul Krugman New York Times As Amazon Stretches, Seattle's Downtown Is Reshaped Kirk Johnson & Nick New York Times Wingfield Nina Bernstein Sarah Kliff and Sandhy
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028622 →EFTA00137295
they were cheated." In his New York Times <https://vvww.nytimes.corn/2020/11/23/opinion/trump-mnuchin-federal-reserve.html> (11/23, 18.61M) column, Paul Krugman writes that it was apparent that Trump "would react badly to defeat. But his refusal to concede, the destructiveness of his temper tantrum and the w

Barack Obama
PersonPresident of the United States from 2009 to 2017

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

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

Bill Clinton
PersonPresident of the United States from 1993 to 2001 (born 1946)

Marc Rich
PersonAmerican commodities trader (1934–2013)

Donald Trump
PersonPresident of the United States (2017–2021, 2025–present)

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

Paul Ryan
PersonSpeaker of the United States House of Representatives from 2015 to 2019

United States
LocationCountry located primarily in North America

Julie K. Brown
PersonAmerican journalist

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

Mitt Romney
PersonAmerican politician and businessman (born 1947)

Virginia Giuffre
PersonAdvocate for sex trafficking victims (1983–2025)

Bloomberg L.P.
OrganizationAmerican privately held financial, software, data, and media company

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

Medicaid
OrganizationUnited States social health care program for families and individuals with limited resources
Leon Black
PersonAmerican billionaire businessman (born 1951)
GOP
OrganizationAmerican political party

George Mitchell
PersonFormer U.S. Senator from Maine and special envoy, connected to Epstein through flight logs and social events

Samantha Power
PersonIrish-American academic, author and diplomat