Dean Baker co-founded CEPR in 1999. His areas of research include housing and macroeconomics, intellectual property, Social Security, Medicare, and European labor markets. His blog, Beat the Press, provides commentary on economic reporting. His analyses have appeared in many major publications, including The Atlantic, The Washington Post, the Financial Times (London), and the New York Daily News. Dean received his BA from Swarthmore College and his PhD in economics from the University of Michigan.
Dean has written several books, including Getting Back to Full Employment: A Better Bargain for Working People (with Jared Bernstein, Center for Economic and Policy Research, 2013); The End of Loser Liberalism: Making Markets Progressive (Center for Economic and Policy Research, 2011); Taking Economics Seriously (MIT Press, 2010), which thinks through what we might gain if we took the ideological blinders off of basic economic principles; and False Profits: Recovering from the Bubble Economy (PoliPoint Press, 2010), about what caused — and how to fix — the 2008–2009 economic crisis. In 2009, he wrote Plunder and Blunder: The Rise and Fall of the Bubble Economy (PoliPoint Press), which chronicled the growth and collapse of the stock and housing bubbles and explained how policy blunders and greed led to catastrophic — but completely predictable — market meltdowns. He also wrote a chapter (“From Financial Crisis to Opportunity”) in Thinking Big: Progressive Ideas for a New Era (Progressive Ideas Network, 2009). His previous books include The United States Since 1980 (Cambridge University Press, 2007), The Conservative Nanny State: How the Wealthy Use the Government to Stay Rich and Get Richer (Center for Economic and Policy Research, 2006), and Social Security: The Phony Crisis (with Mark Weisbrot, University of Chicago Press, 1999). His book Getting Prices Right: The Debate Over the Consumer Price Index (editor, M.E. Sharpe, 1997) was a winner of a Choice Book Award as one of the outstanding academic books of the year.
Among his numerous articles are “The Benefits of a Financial Transactions Tax,” Tax Notes 121, no. 4 (2008); “Are Protective Labor Market Institutions at the Root of Unemployment? A Critical Review of the Evidence” (with David R. Howell, Andrew Glyn, and John Schmitt), Capitalism and Society 2, no. 1 (2007); “Asset Returns and Economic Growth,” with Brad DeLong and Paul Krugman, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity (2005); “Financing Drug Research: What Are the Issues,” Center for Economic and Policy Research (2004); “Medicare Choice Plus: The Solution to the Long-Term Deficit Problem,” Center for Economic and Policy Research (2004); “Professional Protectionists: The Gains From Free Trade in Highly Paid Professional Services,” Center for Economic and Policy Research (2003); and “The Run-Up in Home Prices: Is It Real or Is It Another Bubble?,” Center for Economic and Policy Research (2002).
Dean previously worked as a senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute and an assistant professor at Bucknell University. He has also worked as a consultant for the World Bank, the Joint Economic Committee of the US Congress, and the OECD’s Trade Union Advisory Council. He was the author of the weekly online commentary on economic reporting, the Economic Reporting Review, from 1996 to 2006.
All from Dean Baker
Trump’s United States as Number Three
Trump’s threats and economic bluster ignore the reality that the US is now only the world’s third-largest economy and increasingly isolated from larger democratic blocs.
December 2025 Jobs Preview: What to Expect
The upcoming jobs report for December is likely continue the pattern we have been seeing of a gradually weakening labor market.
Walz Pulls Out: Chalk Up Another One for Racism, Coupled with Democratic Party and Media Ineptitude
Tim Walz’s exit shows how exaggerated fraud claims, media failure, and racialized politics can end Democratic careers.
Venezuela Will Pay for Its Own Reconstruction
Comparing Iraq in 2003 to Venezuela today shows that Trump’s claims of an easy, self-financing intervention are far less believable than Bush’s already-failed promises.
Trump Says Fraud is a Big Problem When Black People Do It: The MN Daycare Fraud Story
Trump is using old fraud cases as a racialized distraction from his Epstein ties.
Fraud, Drugs, and Hope for 2026
As Trump pushes racist narratives and weak policy fixes, economic and political trends point to possible change in 2026.
Did Mark Zuckerberg Throw $77 Billion of Our Money into the Toilet?
Mark Zuckerberg’s $77 billion Metaverse gamble wasn’t just a corporate misstep, but a massive diversion of talent and resources with real economic costs as Big Tech now pours even more money into AI.
Washington Post’s Trumpian Ideology Boils Over
A critique of Washington Post editorials that distort healthcare and EV economics to align with Trump-style ideology.
Strong Third Quarter GDP, with Some Caveats: Is Healthcare the Key to Affordability?
Q3 GDP growth of 4.3% is led by a narrowing trade deficit, while income growth slows, inflation fluctuates, and healthcare spending increases.
Donald Trump Wants Us to Pay More for Electricity Because He Is Angry at Windmills
Trump’s move to cancel wind projects will increase power costs, kill jobs, and slow the clean energy transition.