Wow! Really awesome news! http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/economics/laureates/2008/He's also apparently the only winner this year, which is a bit odd I think. It's kind of a break from previous years when several people recieved the award. Plus Paul Krugman was certainly not the only economist studying the implications of increasing returns, which is the cornerstone of his "analysis of trade patterns and location of economic activity". Either way, I'm very pleased to see this pick. Krugman's popular writings (especially the Self-Organizing Economy and Pop Internationalism) were particularly inspirational to me in my undergrad years. I've also been recently trying to get through a textbook he co-authored "The Spatial Economy", since I am working on a few regional development projects at my job. Nothing I've read so far can be readily applied to those projects, but it is helping me understand the forces at work in determining why some regions grow while others remain static. Anyone got any input on how they feel about the pick??[Edited on October 13, 2008 at 9:28 AM. Reason : ``]
10/13/2008 9:00:33 AM
It's the economy, stupid!
10/13/2008 9:14:11 AM
It's fortuitous that such a die-hard supporter of Obama just won the Nobel Prize in economics at a time like this.
10/13/2008 9:15:32 AM
The politics of Socks always has puzzled me. Edwards>Clinton>McCain>Krugman (which of these is not like the others)
10/13/2008 9:17:42 AM
Boone, Yah, that's what I would take away from this. Economics != Politics. At least 5 Nobel Winners have spoken out against Obama saying his proposals are risky for the economy (Gary Becker, James Buchanan, Robert Mundell, Edward Prescott, and Vernon Smith).http://www.johnmccain.com/Informing/News/PressReleases/96557315-1694-4d8f-9b0a-c29f0f0872e6.htmAnd technically we have no idea who Paul Krugman supports for President. NYT rules prevent him for endorsing either candidate.
10/13/2008 9:24:15 AM
10/13/2008 9:28:22 AM
How did I know Socks`` would be making this thread?!
10/13/2008 9:35:52 AM
^ 'cause you is strolling me.
10/13/2008 9:44:41 AM
I think it's an excellent pick, good thread, and I like Paul Krugman alot. This will make most conservatives heads explode, which is a bonus. I know the wingnuts like to call him 'the shrill one' and he was talking shit about the Bush admnistration from the very beginning, but beyond politics - the guy is really fucking smart. Back during the debates when the question was prompted to the candidates who they'd pick for the sec. of the treasury - I thought about him.
10/13/2008 9:45:23 AM
He does look kinda like Ben Bernanke only with hair...DOPPELGANGER???
10/13/2008 9:46:49 AM
This one goes out to Keynes, who'd probably be posting this if he hadn't graduated.
10/13/2008 9:50:45 AM
10/13/2008 10:52:03 AM
I don't think Krugman cares as much as you do.
10/13/2008 10:56:21 AM
I have a lot of respect for Krugman as an economist and don't see anything wrong with his nomination for a Nobel Prize in economics. As for his politics, well, I usually don't pay too much attention to the columns he writes that focus primarily on non-economic issues.
10/13/2008 10:57:26 AM
10/13/2008 11:17:16 AM
10/13/2008 11:25:19 AM
^ humans don't have comparable utility functions because utility is not measured in standardized units. Your statement implies the common fallacy that if we take $100 from Bill Gates and give it to Joe Six Pack we will get a net welfare improvement (because it reduces Bill Gates utility less than it increase Joe Six Packs). However utility cannot be measured on an objective scale. You may say that you are happier with an extra $100 but you cannot say HOW MUCH happier you are (like wise we cannot measure how much less happy Bill Gates will be if you take $100 away from him).[Edited on October 13, 2008 at 12:58 PM. Reason : ``]
10/13/2008 12:56:29 PM
^ I fully support this supposed fallacy. (The fact that any economist would call it such shows how out of touch economists are.)
10/13/2008 1:00:48 PM
I think Bill Gates would fully support this supposed fallacy, too.
10/13/2008 1:04:01 PM
You never know. Dude might cry if he had a hundred bucks less to spend.
10/13/2008 1:07:36 PM
considering how much he gives away i doubt it
10/13/2008 2:03:08 PM
Boone & GV, It would not make Bill Gates or anyone else correct. We simply cannot obtain cardinal measures of happiness. Just because you think it would make intuitive sense that a rich guy would be less hurt by the transaction doesn't make it so. This is one reason that progressives make me nervous. Bill Clinton talked about expanding opportunities, but not equalizing outcomes or directly redistributing wealth (and yes this is EXACTLY what the line argument is about). Too many progressives these days talk about using the government to "correct" income inequality as if they actually KNOW how to make everyone happier--even if they drag you kicking and screaming.This is yet another fundamental shift from the Democratic Party of the late 1990s to the Democratic party of today.
10/13/2008 2:42:38 PM
I have always been a big fan of Krugman's economic work on many levels, even if I haven't always supported his politics. There is no doubt that he deserves it. In many ways he may be the most brilliant economist of our time.As a side note and a moment of shameless self-promotion, I had a chance to speak with Krugman when came to NC State a year back and gave a talk on the housing bubble and the future of the USD. After a brief exchange he conceded my point that the US could export services to the rest of the world by increasing rates of foreign relocation to the US which in theory could contribute to closing the current account deficit without net exports of physical goods reaching seemingly unrealistic levels.
10/13/2008 3:00:14 PM
Beyond affecting the brain directly, no action can be assured to produce happiness. I could hardly care less. I'll continue to advocate what I see as beneficial. The lack of certainly doesn't make me completely lost.
10/13/2008 3:13:25 PM
10/13/2008 3:38:57 PM
10/13/2008 3:45:56 PM
God, I hate the Nobel prize. There is one reason why he won it this year, and it isn't based on merit. Not that he couldn't win it on merit, though I'm not sure he should have, but it's pretty obvious why he was selected.
10/13/2008 3:52:23 PM
Because of the papers who wrote on International trade back in the 1970s; because that is why he won it. claiming anything else makes you a conspiratory idiot.
10/13/2008 3:58:04 PM
The Nobel committees are pretty notorious for selecting awards for political reasons...
10/13/2008 4:06:17 PM
kwsmith2
10/13/2008 5:20:03 PM
interesting perspective on the Nobel Prize in Economics from F.A. Hayek back in 1974:
10/13/2008 5:42:33 PM
10/13/2008 5:52:03 PM
bump
9/29/2010 9:33:06 PM
did he win another Nobel
9/29/2010 9:37:06 PM
Wtf, he calls for massive more spending and pretends like debt doesn't exist, now he saying defaults are inevitable?Can this guy do anything else to kill his credibility (did he have any?)?Forgot da linkhttp://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/09/25/default-is-in-our-stars/[Edited on September 29, 2010 at 10:21 PM. Reason : linky]
9/29/2010 10:15:50 PM
I dunno...This is America. Christians rule here and debt is pretty repugnant to them; nevermind enough debt to trigger a default.
9/30/2010 10:09:53 AM
He's saying we can straight up default, or we can inflate away the debt, which is effectively a default. I agree completely. Are you guys realizing how fucked we are yet?
9/30/2010 11:36:09 AM
We can't inflate away our obligations to SS, Medicare and Medicaid which are brilliantly indexed to inflation.GG PK, you're wrong again.
9/30/2010 11:51:48 AM