non liberal
Joseph Stiglitz
Joseph Eugene Stiglitz
b. 1943
Also known as: Stiglitz, Joseph E. Stiglitz
How Joseph Stiglitz is discussed in this archive
Referenced in 3 other works , including Report , INDIA'S EXTERNAL SECTOR — AGENDA FOR REFORMS , and How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the Trade Deficit | Sudha Shenoy .
In How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the Trade Deficit | Sudha Shenoy : Shenoy cites Stiglitz by name as an example of mainstream economists raising alarms about U.S.
In Report : Stiglitz serves as Karnik's named foil in the globalisation debate — Karnik explicitly prefers Bhagwati's defence of globalisation to Stiglitz's critique, positioning Stiglitz as the leading sceptic Karnik argues against.
In INDIA'S EXTERNAL SECTOR — AGENDA FOR REFORMS : Stiglitz appears twice in Tarapore's argument: as one of the post-crisis authorities on continued interest-rate controls and, more pointedly, in the lecture's controlling phrase that India must not let recent events push it 'from gradualism to zeroism' in external-sector reform.
Mentioned in (4)
Primary works (4)
- ખોજ · 2007
- How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the Trade Deficit | Sudha Shenoy · 2006
- "Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize winner, believe, no less, tells us that the world financial system can't put up with all this money flowing into the U.S., etc, etc." · Setting up the conventional alarmist view she will dismantle
- Report · 2005
- "globalisation (trade liberalisation unambiguously benefits growth and lowers poverty; Bhagwati's "In Defense of Globalisation" is preferred to Stiglitz's critique)" · Karnik names Stiglitz as the principal critic of globalisation he rejects
- "Globalisation is defended via Bhagwati against Stiglitz: trade liberalisation unambiguously lowers poverty; selective safety nets, not closure, are the correct policy response to transition costs." · key-points reprise restates Stiglitz as the named anti-globalisation foil
- INDIA'S EXTERNAL SECTOR — AGENDA FOR REFORMS · 1999
- "invoking John Williamson and Molly Mahar's 1998 Princeton survey, Joseph Stiglitz on continued interest-rate controls, Jeffrey Frankel's ICRIER lecture on the theory of the second best, and Rudiger Dornbusch's dictum that 'capital controls are an idea whose time is past'." · Stiglitz is cited inside the academic survey Tarapore uses to situate his sequencing view
- "He explicitly cites Stiglitz's phrase to argue that India must not let recent events push it 'from gradualism to zeroism' in external-sector reform." · Stiglitz's 'gradualism to zeroism' phrase becomes the rhetorical centerpiece of Tarapore's warning