Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Vor 3 Tagen · Zu den Unterzeichnern gehören einflussreiche Ökonomen wie Harvard-Professor Dani Rodrik, Mariana Mazzucato vom Londoner University College, Columbia-Ökonom Adam Tooze, die mit ihren Kapitalismus-kritischen Büchern erfolgreichen Ökonomen Thomas Piketty und Branko Milanovic, der frühere IWF-Chefökonom Olivier Blanchard sowie die Deutschen ...

  2. Vor 3 Tagen · der Harvard-Professor Dani Rodrik, Mariana Mazzucato vom Londoner University College, Columbia-Ökonom Adam Tooze, der New Yorker Ungleichheitsexperte Branko Milanović, der Ökonom Thomas...

  3. Vor 2 Tagen · Auf dem Berlin Summit haben führende Köpfe über die Wirtschaft nachgedacht und darüber, wie man die Menschen zurückgewinnen kann. Hier ist eine Videosammlung von kurzen Interview-Ausschnitten – mit Dani Rodrik, Adam Tooze, Maja Göpel, Eric Lonergan, Robert Gold, Dalia Marin, Mark Blyth, Shahin Vallée und Frauke Thies.

  4. 10. Mai 2024 · May 10, 2024 Dani Rodrik. Governments should stop decrying each others’ green industrial policies as norm violations or dangerous transgressions of international rules. The moral, environmental, and economic arguments all favor those who subsidize their green industries, not those who want to tax others’ production.

  5. 22. Mai 2024 · September 1, 2020, Video: "In this lecture Dani Rodrik argues that the model of hyperglobalization we have been pursuing is unsustainable and that we have an opportunity to embark on a sounder, healthier globalisation. He outlines his views on what such a globalisation might look like."

  6. 7. Mai 2024 · globalization. international trade. Dani Rodrik (born August 14, 1957, Istanbul, Turkey) is a Turkish American economist whose work on economic globalization and international trade has had a significant impact on the fields of international trade policy and development economics.

  7. 24. Mai 2024 · HKS Affiliated Authors. Dani Rodrik. Ford Foundation Professor of International Political Economy. Excerpt. July 2020, Paper, "There is compelling evidence that globalization shocks, often working through culture and identity, have played an important role in driving up support for populist movements, particularly of the right-wing kind.