Article Artículo
Another Argument for Free Market Drugs: Limits on Supply of Patients for Clinical TrialsCEPR / August 22, 2019
Article Artículo
CEOs Say Shareholders Won’t Be No. 1 Anymore. Turns Out They Already Weren’t.Dean Baker
The Washington Post, August 20, 2019
Dean Baker / August 20, 2019
Article Artículo
China Did Not Trick the US — Trade Negotiators Served Corporate InterestsDean Baker
Truthout, August 19, 2019
Dean Baker / August 19, 2019
Article Artículo
Latin America and the Caribbean
¿Quién tiene la culpa de la crisis económica en Argentina?Mark Weisbrot
The New York Times, 19 de agosto, 2019
Mark Weisbrot / August 19, 2019
Article Artículo
Latin America and the Caribbean
Who is to Blame for Argentina’s Economic Crisis?Mark Weisbrot / August 19, 2019
Article Artículo
CEOs Say They Will Stop Maximizing Shareholder Value, Be Better If They Stopped Maximizing CEO CompensationCEPR / August 19, 2019
Article Artículo
Good News: The Stock Market is PlungingThe stock market enjoys a mythological place not only among mainstream media types, but also among many progressives. For some reason this measure of expected future corporate profits is taken as a measure of economic well-being.
The fact that the media obsesses over the stock market hardly needs to be mentioned. If there is one item about the economy that we can be sure will be repeated every day, it is the movement in the Dow or the S&P 500. And, needless to say, an upward movement is good news and a downward movement is bad news.
But the view that the stock market is telling us something about the well-being of the economy goes far beyond just ill-informed media types. In the lead up to the 2016 election, Justin Wolfers, a University of Michigan economics professor, and a fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, had several New York Times pieces arguing that the wise investors in the stock market recognized that Trump would be bad news for the country. He pointed to sharp declines in the market in response to events making a Trump win more likely.
The Wolfers hypothesis suffered a serious setback in the weeks and months immediately following the election. The S&P 500 was up more than 5 percent in the first month after Trump’s victory. It continued to rise throughout 2017, hitting a peak in January of 2018 that was more than a third higher than its value on the eve of the election.
Wolfers was far from the only one taking stock market movements as a measure of economic well-being under Trump. When the market slumped last fall, there were many Trump critics who seized on this as evidence of Trump’s failings as a manager of the economy.
This view that the stock market is a measure of economic well-being is bizarre, because it is so completely at odds with what the stock market is. The stock market is a measure of the expectations of future profits of companies that are listed in the exchange: full stop.
CEPR / August 16, 2019
Article Artículo
Trump’s Contempt for Working-Class Expressed in New Expanded Public Charge RuleCEPR and Shawn Fremstad / August 15, 2019
Article Artículo
Social Security Does Much More for Disadvantaged Children than Temporary AssistanceShawn Fremstad / August 13, 2019
Article Artículo
Prescription Drug Spending Jumps as the Price Index DropsAugust 13, 2019
CEPR and / August 13, 2019
Prices Byte Artículo
Rising Rents Push Core and Overall CPI Up 0.3 Percent in JulyAugust 13, 2019 (Prices Byte)
Dean Baker / August 13, 2019
Article Artículo
Progressive Policies May Hurt the Stock Market. That’s Not a Bad Thing.Dean Baker
Truthout, August 12, 2019
Dean Baker / August 12, 2019
Article Artículo
Yet Another New York Times Column Gets the Story on Automation and Inequality Completely WrongCEPR / August 12, 2019
Article Artículo
Why Would the Democrats Want to be "Tough" on Trade, as Opposed to Smart on Trade?CEPR / August 11, 2019