The headline told readers that: “Thailand GDP Grows 3.6% in the Fourth Quarter.” How many readers knew that Thailand’s economy had grown at an impressive 15.2 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter? Yes, the NYT once again reported a quarterly rate of growth. It is unlikely that many readers recognized that this was a […]
Dean Baker
Dean Baker is senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, D.C. He is the author of several books, including Rigged: How Globalization and the Rules of the Modern Economy Were Structured to Make the Rich Richer. Read more about Dean.
S.F. Fed President Sees Brighter Jobs Picture
Except the NYT headline said the opposite: “President of San Francisco Fed Sees Slow Recovery, Especially in Jobs.” According to the article, Janet Yellen, the President of the San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank, expects that the unemployment rate will fall to around 8.0 percent by the end of 2011. By contrast, both the Obama administration […]
Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty Doesn’t Know Any Economics
It is appropriate for reporters to call attention to statements by politicians are that strange or wrong. Reporters had no problem going on at great length about then Senator Obama’s reference to “bitter” white working class voters. In the same vein, the NYT should have pointed out that Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty was not making […]
Robert Samuelson: Financial Meltdown Exposes Flaw in Welfare State
One might think that the mass unemployment caused by the collapse of the housing bubble might lead people to be concerned about restructuring the financial sector: not at the Washington Post. Robert Samuelson tells us that the meltdown shows that the welfare state is no longer viable. Actually, he has a pretty good case. With […]
Thomas Friedman Competes for the Nobel in Ignorance
Thomas Friedman told readers that: “But now it feels as if we are entering a new era, ‘where the great task of government and of leadership is going to be about taking things away from people,’ said the Johns Hopkins University foreign policy expert Michael Mandelbaum.” Unfortunately, Mr. Friedman apparently doesn’t talk to anyone who […]
It Is Not a Jobless Recovery, It is a Growthless Recovery
The NYT has a good article on how millions of workers are likely to face prolonged joblessness as a result of the current recession. The article implies that there has been a change in the relationship between economic growth and employment in recent decades as it has taken longer for the economy to recovery the […]
Gold-Plated Garbage is Still Garbage: The Fund Managers’ Tax Break
While tens of millions of ordinary workers pay taxes at a 25 percent marginal rate, many of Wall Street’s highest paid dealmakers get to pay tax at just a 15 percent rate. They get this lower rate because of the special treatment of “carried interest,” also known as the fund managers’ tax break. The Washington […]
Fed Exit Strategy? Where is the Article on the Fed Strategy for Full Employment?
The NYT has an analysis this morning of the Fed’s “exit strategy” from its quantitative easing policy that was designed to support the economy after the collapse of the housing bubble. It seems that the Fed is pursuing an exit strategy, so it is reasonable for the NYT to report on the policy. However, this […]
Hungary, Which Was Saved by Not Being in the Euro, Lectures Greece on the Virtues of the Euro, and the NYT Doesn’t Notice
Our greatest economic minds were too out to lunch to notice an $8 trillion housing bubble and it just keeps getting worse. The NYT tells us how Hungary is giving lectures to Greece about how it should just suck it up, cut its spending, and then celebrate the wonders of the euro, offering its own […]
Higher Unemployment Claims: Is Anyone Noticing?
The Labor Department reported an increase of 31,000 initial claims for unemployment insurance last week. The weekly data are always erratic, but there has been a clear upward movement since December numbers. The four-week average was 467,500, which is considerably higher than a level consistent with job growth (@400,000). Also, last week’s numbers were almost […]

