Sign in
Sign in
Recover your password.
A password will be e-mailed to you.
Browsing Category
Political Economy
Positive thoughts on my return from Germany and London
I was in Cologne and London last week, two places I know quite well. And as I went out, my trip down memory lane was greeted by the eternal progress of human endeavour. Whether riding the frequently behind schedule Deutsche Bahn by the…
The end of global co-operation among liberal democracies
I am back from my beach vacation. So, let me outline what my thinking is after a period of reflection and how it has changed or stayed the same.
I last posted more than a week ago right before I left, regarding my frustration about…
Our over-reliance on monetary policy is the problem
I am going to argue here that monetary policy is both less effective than fiscal policy, and that over-reliance on it unnecessarily politicizes monetary policy by putting unelected officials in too prominent an economic role.
I would argue…
Why my base case for 2020 is recession
Back at the end of July, I was talking about my macro thesis. And I led off writing this:
The US is the laggard in this slowing but is affected as well. From a markets perspective, that means a convergence to zero, with yield curves…
The trade-currency war will crystallize downside risks
Yesterday, the overarching message of my post was this bit:
"as we think of potential outcomes, policy error has to be a real concern here, especially in 2020 once the cumulative impact of all this takes its full measure."
I don't think the…
Trade war escalation highlights downside economic risks
The big story today is the potential for a currency war, emanating from the escalating trade war between the US and China. But there's a considerable degree of data flow that I want to parse to give a more complete macro view.
Having…
Signs of recession are hitting Europe. Is the new Central Bank president up for the challenge?
By Marshall Auerback
This article was originally published on AlterNet and produced by Economy for All, a project of the Independent Media Institute.
We now know that there will be a changing of the guard at the European Central Bank…
US GDP report puts nail in the coffin for the recession story
The latest US GDP report was just released showing the US economy expanded at a 2.1% annualized rate in the second quarter of 2019. This was marginally better than expectations for a 1.8% increase, and significantly above the Atlanta Fed's…
The awful news coming out of Germany
Yesterday, I highlighted Germany in terms of downside global economic risk. We are experiencing a manufacturing- and trade-led deceleration in global growth. Germany is the most prominent large Western economy leveraged to both.
Dreams of a Second Half Recovery
As I write this, Washington is fixated on the congressional testimony of Robert Mueller. My attention is elsewhere though. For me, it's the economy that matters.
Over the past two weeks, we have had a "recession watch" on Real Vision,…