It seems that China.org.cn has heard of my book, The Great Recession. The editor has picked a piece by Heiko Khoo for its opinion column, in which Khoo points out how Marxist economics has become relevant again in explaining the global crisis of capitalism. See http://www.china.org.cn/opinion/2010-01/08/content_19204711.htm Khoo says: In the era before 1989, the plannedContinue reading “Big in China”
Category Archives: economics
Inequality: rich and poor
Economist Rebecca Wilder (http://www.roubini.com/author/rebecca_wilder) recently looked at the IMF’s World Economic Outlook database (October 2009), to see how unequal the world is, as measured by income. She drummed up some charts that (quote): illustrate the frequency distributions for global per-capita income (income divided by population) across 182 countries (you can download my country-level data here,Continue reading “Inequality: rich and poor”
Employment and growth in ‘the recovery’
Economist Prieur de Plessis (http://www.roubini.com/author/prieur_du_plessis) posted an item in his blog last week pointing out that in the last decade of ‘noughties’ US employment stagnated. I posted a chart about the decade of zeros in the context of the Dow Jones Industrial Index a few days ago. There are a number of economic statistics conveyingContinue reading “Employment and growth in ‘the recovery’”
The great recession
Don’t forget that my new book on The Great Recession, published in early December is available from Lulu.com http://www.lulu.com/product/paperback/the-great-recession/6079458. It will be on Amazon etc very shortly. You can see me interviewed on his book by going to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rSDN5sbPzw8 or http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rSDN5sbPzw8 And you can hear a recent radio interview from resonancefm 104.4 London go toContinue reading “The great recession”
Michael Roberts on the next recession
The Great Recession is over but the next recession is only a few years away. Here’s why. The deepest and longest economic recession in the advanced capitalist economies since the 1930s is more or less over. But it won’t be long before capitalism plunges into another. That won’t happen in 2010, but there will beContinue reading “Michael Roberts on the next recession”