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Dani Rodrik
By Dani Rodrik - Jan 11,2022
CAMBRIDGE — The specter of inflation is once again stalking the world, after a long period of dormancy during which policymakers were more likely to be preoccupied by price deflation.
By Dani Rodrik - Dec 12,2021
CAMBRIDGE — The last four decades of globalisation and technological innovation have been a boon for those with the skills, wealth, and connections to take advantage of new markets and opportunities.
By Dani Rodrik - Oct 30,2021
CAMBRIDGE — Development policy has long been divided between two types of approaches. One approach targets poor people directly and seeks to alleviate the poverty of individual households, through income support, health and education interventions, and enhanced access to credit.
By Dani Rodrik - Sep 12,2021
CAMBRIDGE — The economic-policy conversation in the United States has been thoroughly transformed within the space of just a few years.
By Dani Rodrik - Aug 10,2021
CAMBRIDGE — Early in his career, the economist Joseph E. Stiglitz had an extended stay in Kenya, where he was struck by various oddities in how the local economy operated. Sharecropping was one such anomaly.
By Dani Rodrik - Jun 07,2021
CAMBRIDGE — On June 5, the world’s leading economies announced an agreement that will bolster their ability to raise taxes on global corporations.
By Dani Rodrik - May 16,2021
CAMBRIDGE — Neoliberalism is dead. Or perhaps it remains very much alive. Pundits have been calling it both ways these days.
By Dani Rodrik - Apr 11,2021
CAMBRIDGE — President Joe Biden’s $2 trillion infrastructure plan is likely to be a watershed moment for the American economy, clearly signalling that the neoliberal era, with its belief that markets work best and are best left alone, is behind us.
By Dani Rodrik - Apr 05,2021
CAMBRIDGE — Economists have never been shy about taking on the big questions that disciplines such as history, sociology, or political science consider their own province. What have been slavery’s long-run implications for contemporary American society?
By Dani Rodrik - Feb 11,2021
CAMBRIDGE — Economic development relies on the creation of more productive jobs for an ever-rising share of the workforce. Traditionally, it was industrialisation that enabled poor countries to embark on this transformation.