I dag trodde jag den ekonomiska världen skulle gå under
Att jag trodde det beror på vad Martin Wolf skrev i dagens Financial Times:
As Raghuram Rajan of the University of Chicago Booth School of Business and former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund notes in a thought-provoking new book, the underlying “fault lines” are still with us.
His voice is worth listening to: in 2005, he presented a controversial, yet now acclaimed, paper at the annual Jackson Hole monetary conference entitled “Has Financial Development Made the World Riskier?”
His answer? Yes.
The crisis has revealed deep faults within western economies and the global economy as a whole.
We may be unable to avoid further earthquakes.
Underligt nog går världens vidare som vanligt.
Folk vill väl inte ta till sig information som kräver ett förändrat beteende?
Eller så har jag, Martin Wolf och Raghuram Rajan med flera fel?
Men jag är inte alldeles ensam, även om det känns så ibland.
As Raghuram Rajan of the University of Chicago Booth School of Business and former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund notes in a thought-provoking new book, the underlying “fault lines” are still with us.
His voice is worth listening to: in 2005, he presented a controversial, yet now acclaimed, paper at the annual Jackson Hole monetary conference entitled “Has Financial Development Made the World Riskier?”
His answer? Yes.
The crisis has revealed deep faults within western economies and the global economy as a whole.
We may be unable to avoid further earthquakes.
Underligt nog går världens vidare som vanligt.
Folk vill väl inte ta till sig information som kräver ett förändrat beteende?
Eller så har jag, Martin Wolf och Raghuram Rajan med flera fel?
Men jag är inte alldeles ensam, även om det känns så ibland.
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