Martin Wolf: Milton Friedman was wrong on the corporation https://t.co/x5p5vDvN7U
— Martin Wolf (@martinwolf_) December 8, 2020
Martin Wolf: Why inflation could be on the way back https://t.co/rKltVM9yDs
— Martin Wolf (@martinwolf_) November 17, 2020
Martin Wolf: The threat of long economic Covid looms https://t.co/7qavVwTgok
— Martin Wolf (@martinwolf_) October 20, 2020
What will the world look like after 2020?
I'm being interviewed by @matthewstadlen for @howtoacademy this evening and you can join us. https://t.co/m3uUymyLLN
— Martin Wolf (@martinwolf_) June 19, 2020
Martin Wolf: Why inflation might follow the pandemic https://t.co/4lgzpHDn5h
— Martin Wolf (@martinwolf_) May 19, 2020
Martin Wolf: Covid-19 will hit developing countries hard https://t.co/1hmkJmaz5I
— Martin Wolf (@martinwolf_) June 9, 2020
Martin Wolf: The dangerous war on supply chains https://t.co/4fMLybI6L6
— Martin Wolf (@martinwolf_) June 23, 2020
Curious about the future of globalisation? Wondering what’s in store for the EU? I discuss with @EconSocUCL everything from structural changes in supply chains to an analysis of the economic and cultural consequences of the crisis. Watch here: https://t.co/3QwlclXvaP
— Martin Wolf (@martinwolf_) July 10, 2020
In this podcast I talk on the important and controversial topics of globalisation and especially trade https://t.co/KsTM0f7jen
— Martin Wolf (@martinwolf_) September 30, 2020
Covid-19: Making sense of the world economic crisis, with the FT's Martin Wolf. Listen here: https://t.co/thboXu4B3Z
— Martin Wolf (@martinwolf_) July 3, 2020
Martin Wolf: Best books of 2020: Economics https://t.co/C41crwZR3j
— Martin Wolf (@martinwolf_) November 17, 2020
"Someone asked me a simple question this week: Where are we going? So much news swirls past us it is hard to see precisely where we are as a country. In the decade to come, what will matter economically, culturally, and socially for us?" @stephenkinsellahttps://t.co/BgsKPR4zNV
— The Currency (@thecurrency) December 10, 2020
"This is an infrastructure column. Or rather, a plea for infrastructure. We have no infrastructure to sense these changes and do something about them." @stephenkinsella https://t.co/tP969Gr5lJ
— The Currency (@thecurrency) December 3, 2020
Irish households’ savings have increased by nearly €5 billion so far this year. Where they spend it could decide the future of many businesses, writes @stephenkinsella. https://t.co/FDdMpt98ow
— The Currency (@thecurrency) November 26, 2020
Agent-based models are another approach which holds promise for macroeconomics. Stock-flow consistent models were combined by @stephenkinsella and coauthors, showing they exhibit behaviour mimicking real business cycles. (4/N)
https://t.co/jmLiVlc9vp— Unlearning Economics (@UnlearnEcon) December 3, 2020
A recent episode with a bit of discussion around #WildMountainThyme and some more Proust questions https://t.co/oC42XAJLfm
— annstevetalk (@annstevetalk) November 28, 2020
From a few weeks back, episode 32 when hope starts to emerge in the world https://t.co/0j9YAMhqGV @stephenkinsella @annblake78 @limerickpost #KeepingLimerickPosted #AnnSteveTalk
— annstevetalk (@annstevetalk) November 25, 2020
The ECB's role in preventing sovereign bond rates from climbing is a major difference this time. Unfortunately, in 2008 they simply didn't have the same mandate. Draghi's 'whatever it takes' speech in 2012 changed everything but getting there took time https://t.co/eyW69RFJr5 https://t.co/gxrvFDrPg2
— Donal Palcic (@DonalPalcic) November 28, 2020
UL LINKS: Associate Professor of Economics at UL, @stephenkinsella writes on how “it is in our power to buttress the weaker parts of our society and economy revealed by the COVID crisis”. https://t.co/fpRFkkFQmw
— University Of Limerick (@UL) November 25, 2020
V.good piece by @elidourado on the technologies of the 2020s & how their rollout might alter humanity's fortunes. Progress is undeniable. It took < 310 days start to finish to create & test the #COVID vaccine. Question is: how is this progress distributed? https://t.co/nQPMavblaL
— Stephen Kinsella (@stephenkinsella) January 2, 2021
Quite a few people worried about me taking their actual cheese in 2021. I will not be taking your cheese. Others might though. Read who on @thecurrency: https://t.co/m2IbYDahVG
— Stephen Kinsella (@stephenkinsella) December 17, 2020
This is the first really good '2021 outlook' piece I've come across. @TheStalwart @naufalsanaullah @tracyalloway and @johnturek (whose blog you are probably already reading) give an overview of the issues for macro and markets. https://t.co/hWxdokfkfU
— Stephen Kinsella (@stephenkinsella) December 15, 2020
This column could easily have been called ‘one way to explain Ireland’s (and other export hubs like it) weird GDP response to COVID, but looking at big firms in the country getting shocked.’ Their title is better than mine, in fairness. https://t.co/CLgIBIcrRl
— Stephen Kinsella (@stephenkinsella) December 14, 2020
Progress on batteries–Toyota has a new system that can get cars past the 500km mark. https://t.co/pucvhPCe6I
— Stephen Kinsella (@stephenkinsella) December 11, 2020
Enjoyed listening to this podcast with Rashida Jones, Yuval Noah Harari and Bill Gates on why people believe lies. Opens hilariously with Gates talking about why he's so often cast as the villain in conspiracy theories. Jones is a great host. https://t.co/Y0a5dkWWMo
— Stephen Kinsella (@stephenkinsella) December 7, 2020
This article is such a sad indictment of the direction of @NSSRNews. Alums like @lauraabcarvalho, @EconoGonzo, @NerdlynNY many others like myself are furious. https://t.co/wT2XwC4Z5D
— Stephen Kinsella (@stephenkinsella) December 3, 2020
This is a great story. It is the experience of a load of businesses during #COVID. The factory floor: How a former chocolate factory became a home for creative businesses https://t.co/YxPvcJQPRT
— Stephen Kinsella (@stephenkinsella) November 30, 2020
Enjoyed @hlinehan's podcast on how you'd run a referendum on Irish unity. Panel felt one route towards a shared solution is the delivery of services. Agree infrastructure is where we do the future. Build a university, a hospital, a train system together. https://t.co/AUAph6jYc1
— Stephen Kinsella (@stephenkinsella) November 28, 2020
This story is *bananas*. €445bn that could be spent easily to help the US, which is clearly suffering greatly from COVID, might not be, as Republicans rediscover their love of deficit reduction in or around January 20th. https://t.co/1QLCTxHL39
— Stephen Kinsella (@stephenkinsella) November 24, 2020
This piece works out why, with a vaccine coming, you should be extra cautious. Basic rational expectations would get you to the same place, in fact lots of heuristics would. But this is well argued and clear: https://t.co/VjjPe5aMcZ
— Stephen Kinsella (@stephenkinsella) November 24, 2020
progress needs dreamershttps://t.co/wdrUzZgOvz? @yanisvaroufakis
— Gennaro Zezza (@GennaroZezza) September 14, 2020
Congratulations! https://t.co/k5kykRKujH
— Gennaro Zezza (@GennaroZezza) September 9, 2020
When GDP is projected to fall by 12.8%, should your main concern be the level of public debt?https://t.co/8hPdCT4IQ5
— Gennaro Zezza (@GennaroZezza) June 24, 2020
Should Central Banks trust politicians?https://t.co/Rjm0vYEtB4
— Gennaro Zezza (@GennaroZezza) April 26, 2020
You thought the virus would kill the rich and the poor?
"A reduction in income inequality is one of the most important–if not the single most important—structural changes that needs to be implemented" https://t.co/UUWQGlB93k
— Gennaro Zezza (@GennaroZezza) April 3, 2020
Draghi https://t.co/iEUE6JN3bI
— Gennaro Zezza (@GennaroZezza) March 25, 2020
Sooner or later people will understand what "neoliberalism" is about. It's not only about monetary sovereignity.
Prima o poi lo capirete cos'è il "neoliberismo". Mica basta, la sovranità monetaria https://t.co/XgOFmqAwGY
— Gennaro Zezza (@GennaroZezza) March 22, 2020
Thanks to all who joined us yesterday to pay a tribute to Wynne Godley. Speakers from Canada, the U.S., Thailand, Brazil, the U.K, France and Italy. Video recordings are being published on the conference web pagehttps://t.co/9A7472CjW4@LevyEcon @uni_cassino
— Gennaro Zezza (@GennaroZezza) May 14, 2020
La Bocconi mette in evidenza l'ottimo @FantaLuc …
meglio tardi che mai! https://t.co/AmduR8Ep9E— Gennaro Zezza (@GennaroZezza) April 1, 2020
Discipline and punishhttps://t.co/IOsKOMRiDY
— Gennaro Zezza (@GennaroZezza) February 20, 2020
A close match!
(Part-time for economic reasons are people working less hours/week than they would like) pic.twitter.com/s6nDp2xxr4— Gennaro Zezza (@GennaroZezza) February 6, 2020
On the environmental impact of organic and conventional meat products https://t.co/cMTZMJAINA
— Matías Vernengo (@NakedKeynes) January 3, 2021
I’m shocked https://t.co/JMwEpCVkPx
— Matías Vernengo (@NakedKeynes) December 19, 2020
This is great guide to Keynes. Perhaps the first and best of all those guides. Her intro manual with Eatwell was also very good https://t.co/6imwYoNZbu
— Matías Vernengo (@NakedKeynes) December 29, 2020
Both episodes on Spotify here. I should have a few more during the winter break https://t.co/yUBiFF09ye
— Matías Vernengo (@NakedKeynes) December 12, 2020
Venture capitalist @NickHanauer says stock buybacks kill the economy. (via HARDtalk) Read more: https://t.co/EJk84S08WE pic.twitter.com/uBlID09K2P
— Evonomics (@EvonomicsMag) January 1, 2021
Econ Alan Kirman: "We should take lessons from biology and look at the evolution of complex interconnected systems in which the components are constantly adapting to their changing environment." https://t.co/4vmkbM4mvw @EricBeinhocker @NickHanauer @David_S_Wilson @KateRaworth
— Evonomics (@EvonomicsMag) December 27, 2020
Read “Being Rich Doesn’t Mean You’re More Hardworking: Economist Says Markets Amplify Luck” by @econnaturalist: https://t.co/IPTP3QVy9G
Image credit: @xkcd pic.twitter.com/IY5fvvX356— Evonomics (@EvonomicsMag) December 27, 2020
"So rich people are a bit like Immanuel Kant’s famous bird who thinks she could fly even faster in air-less space, forgetting that it’s the air itself that gives her lift." @HaraldEia @AOC @BernieSanders https://t.co/XtjM6XcSb9
— Evonomics (@EvonomicsMag) December 1, 2020
Economist @MazzucatoM on the false use of GDP as a measure of the economy. Read more: https://t.co/GI0SJ5jPH8. pic.twitter.com/tAzz4zPK3S
— Evonomics (@EvonomicsMag) November 25, 2020
Why Behavioral Economics is Itself Biased https://t.co/ZMqbCzfCoM
— Ninja Economics (@NinjaEconomics) December 31, 2020
RT @cemad_es Economist @DJSnower Says Economics Nears a New Paradigm https://t.co/XrFv5OW1RY
— Dennis A V Dittrich (@davdittrich) December 31, 2020
https://t.co/1ZjdDnvA45 with @christiansarkar
— Philip Kotler (@kotl) December 20, 2020
https://twitter.com/scottsantens/status/1340381939900018688
We can do better than "us vs. them" =>..How to Move Beyond Utopian Socialism and Libertarianism https://t.co/fG2e1JMbrj
— lorelei kelly (@loreleikelly) December 8, 2020
Can you believe that the median worker would be earning six figures today, if not for 40+ years of neo-liberal policies which have crushed working families. Thanks to @RANDCorporation and @NickHanauer for this important research.https://t.co/ebRWACrNxI
— Carl Rist (@carlrist) December 8, 2020
Excellent article on UBI in England; the costs and benefits that would flow inc; broad social cohesion and reduced stress across each person life. https://t.co/pmcsM8SC2t
— Brett Houghton (@BrettAHoughton) November 25, 2020
Tax cuts for rich people boost inequality without providing benefits to anyone else. @LSEEcon paper analyzing 18 countries over 15 yrs drives stake into the heart of trickle-down economics. https://t.co/kkYfK8E2rd via @business
— Eric Beinhocker (@EricBeinhocker) December 17, 2020
Very exciting work from @LukasLehner_ @INETOxford on #JobGuarantee experiment! https://t.co/2Io3eXhvIv
— Eric Beinhocker (@EricBeinhocker) December 3, 2020
The EU needs a way out of its fiscal paralysis in order to fight Covid and recover. @georgesoros makes a strong argument that new perpetual bonds could be both an economic and political answer @ProSyn https://t.co/bwIAnbXzPv
— Eric Beinhocker (@EricBeinhocker) November 30, 2020
Revealing piece from @nytimes using data from my @BlavatnikSchool colleagues on effectiveness of COVID containment measures by US state. Bottom line: strong measures save lives. @thomasnhale https://t.co/WHCheSyL9M
— Eric Beinhocker (@EricBeinhocker) November 19, 2020
Our @INET_Complexity director Doyne Farmer talks to the @FT about why GDP is a poor measure of an economy’s health & why he’s trying to map an ecology of contracts using methods borrowed from biology https://t.co/mbdYjhnBa7
— INET Oxford (@INETOxford) November 20, 2020
Small business owners are eager to get a second chance at a new round of Paycheck Protection Program loans, but for many it may not be enough to get them through the winter https://t.co/9PivUanmqG
— Olivia Rockeman (@livrockeman) December 22, 2020
“Try to pour 10 gallons of water into a five-gallon bucket,” @westonlabar says, “and you’re going to have a hard time.” 11/ https://t.co/5JCgvYAHsU
— Brendan Murray (@b_muzz) November 23, 2020
Investors shouldn't worry about a "made in Canada" bond taper tantrum, CIBCs' @roycecmendes and Ian Pollick say https://t.co/kjpkoVHP0c #cdecon
— Shelly Hagan (@shellykhagan) December 17, 2020
My home town has turned into a lake. This story we wrote on neglexit and flooding in 2018 gets more prescient every year. https://t.co/p8TKcWtgmZ w/ @AlexJFMorales https://t.co/k0Vg74njxI
— Jess Shankleman (@Jess_Shankleman) December 24, 2020
Argentina is the first country outside the former Soviet Union to approve Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine
With @jdorosario https://t.co/tMq2zHjLVy
— Patrick Gillespie (@Pat_Gillespie) December 23, 2020
This video is one of the best I've seen from British media regarding Pele's career. @HITCSevens is by far the best YouTube channel for football fans and specially football history/politics/economics. https://t.co/GORzSEXjeh
— Mario Sergio Lima (@mariosbessa) December 30, 2020
https://twitter.com/RexChapman/status/1345487665974673413