From “Plan B” to “Plan V”: What the UK economy needs to reboot and rebalance growth

John Van Reenen, 7 March 2011

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Britain, along with most of the developed world, has been through the worst recession since the 1930s (Eichengreen and O’Rourke 2010) and more pain is set to come as the government’s austerity programme bites.

Topics: Global crisis, Macroeconomic policy
Tags: austerity, fiscal stimulus, stagflation, UK

Oil shocks redux

Alan S. Blinder, Jeremy Rudd, 13 January 2009

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From the end of 2002 to the middle of 2008, the US economy was in the throes of a significant oil price shock. The dollar price of oil rose fivefold, with spot prices briefly hitting $145/barrel. Even adjusting for inflation, the rise in oil prices was stunning.

Topics: Energy, Monetary policy
Tags: oil shocks, stagflation

Central banking doctrine in light of the crisis

Axel Leijonhufvud, 13 May 2008

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On April 8 of this year, Paul Volcker addressed the Economic Club of New York about the current crisis. The Federal Reserve, he noted, has gone to “the very edge” of its legal authority.

Topics: Financial markets, Monetary policy
Tags: asset prices, central bank independence, inflation targeting, monetary policy, stagflation, subprime crisis, transparency

Four mega-dangers international financial markets face

Dennis J Snower, 30 April 2008

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Day after day new, alarming news emerges from the world’s financial markets, and day after day the public is surprised by how bad it is.

Topics: Financial markets
Tags: crisis, stagflation, Subprime

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