The Best President of My Adult Life Needs to Withdraw
Kamala Harris would be a strong successor.
By Paul Krugman
Most of my writing involves economics, but I weigh in on other issues such as technology, global politics or domestic policy, when I think I can add something to the discussion. I also write a weekly newsletter.
I’m an economist by training, with an original focus on international trade and finance, who taught at M.I.T. and Princeton University among other places, and am now a distinguished professor at City University of New York Graduate Center.
My pre-Times research was honored, among other things, with the 2008 Nobel Prize in economics. I am the author (or editor) of 27 books, and I am one of the founders of the “new trade theory,” a major rethinking of international trade that explains the emergence of new trade patterns between countries, based, in part, on how consumers started to seek out different brands for everyday products. I received my undergraduate degree at Yale University and my Ph.D. in economics from M.I.T. I grew up in Albany, N.Y.
I rely almost entirely on public information, rather than insider access. I try to get my facts right, try to listen to multiple views, and make a point of admitting when I got something wrong. I have no financial stake in anything I write, and no connection with any political campaign. You can learn more about The Times’s ethics guidelines here.
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Kamala Harris would be a strong successor.
By Paul Krugman
Homicides, which surged during 2020, have been plunging.
By Paul Krugman
Trump’s new economic idea would raise taxes substantially on working-class Americans.
By Paul Krugman
Inflation is yesterday’s problem.
By Paul Krugman
And that’s good for Biden.
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Why higher rates are replacing inflation as the thing to hate.
By Paul Krugman and Peter Coy
Why America’s oligarchs are rallying around Trump.
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It’s a political problem, not an economic crisis.
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The case for rate cuts in America and Europe is almost identical.
By Paul Krugman
The landing is almost here, but will it be soft?
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A radical idea: The administration should just tell the truth.
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The stakes for our democracy should be obvious.
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What overflowing septic tanks tell us about the future.
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Most voters say that they’re doing OK but that the economy is bad.
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The stock market isn’t the economy — but its record high refutes conspiracy theories.
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What looked like an acceleration in prices was probably a statistical illusion.
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None of the advanced countries seem to like their leaders at the moment.
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MAGA Republicans’ obsession with woke washing machines.
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How negativity bias affects economic perceptions.
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A full plate of culture war and conspiracy theories.
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Most of the bad news about the economy is just noise.
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Are you better off than you were four years ago? Yes.
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Reconsidering my views on interest rates.
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Beware strongmen who engage in magical thinking.
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In Congress, rebuilding the Key Bridge could be the next Ukraine funding debate.
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In truth, he has no plan to “fix” affordable health care.
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How a much-maligned health reform defied the doomsayers.
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Republicans seem determined to destroy the Affordable Care Act.
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Spoiler alert: quite possibly.
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Holy wars have consequences.
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