Podcast appearances and mentions of anne krueger

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Best podcasts about anne krueger

Latest podcast episodes about anne krueger

Ideas of India
Anne Krueger Reflects on 50 Years of Rent-Seeking, Trade, and Economic Development

Ideas of India

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2024 74:11


Today my guest is Anne O Krueger. She is a Senior Fellow at the School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, and the Herald L. and Caroline Ritch Emeritus Professor of Sciences and Humanities in the Economics Department at Stanford University. She served World Bank's Chief Economist from 1982 to 1986, and the first deputy managing director at the IMF from 2001 to 2006. We talked about her famous 1974 paper “The Political Economy of a Rent Seeking Society” on its 50th anniversary, her experience understanding the license permit raj system in India, the 1991 trade liberalization, the Washington consensus, decline of the WTO, the new protectionism in the US, reforming Argentina and much more. Recorded May 17th, 2024. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links. Connect with Ideas of India Follow us on X Follow Shruti on X Click here for the latest Ideas of India episodes sent straight to your inbox. Timestamps (00:00:00) - Intro (00:01:24) - Rent-Seeking in Turkey and India (00:10:49) - Professional Influences (00:15:35) - South Korean Miracle (00:18:53) - Korea vs. India (00:26:19) - Import Substitution and Rent (00:29:15) - Turning Around the World Bank (00:38:59) - The Krueger Consensus (00:42:18) - Africa (00:45:39) - India's 1991 Reforms (00:50:52) - World Trade Organization (00:53:53) - United States and Free Trade (01:02:14) - License Permit Raj in the US (01:04:36) - International Monetary Fund (01:06:47) - Hope for Milei and Argentina (01:11:30) - Looking Back on Success (01:13:31) - Outro

Dimes y Billetes
G130. Macroeconomía en tiempos de crisis con Anne Krueger

Dimes y Billetes

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2023 7:44


Hoy estamos muy emocionados de tener a Anne Krueger como invitada. Anne es una economista reconocida internacionalmente y ha ocupado varios cargos importantes en organizaciones como el Fondo Monetario Internacional y la Universidad de Stanford.Descarga mis formatos completamente gratis en:https://morisdieck.com/Sígueme en todas mis redes sociales:

Macro Musings with David Beckworth
Colin Grabow on Current Trends in US Trade Policy and the Adverse Impact of the Jones Act

Macro Musings with David Beckworth

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2022 53:53 Very Popular


Colin Grabow is a policy analyst at the Cato Institute's Center for Trade Policy Studies, and he joins Macro Musings to talk about US trade policies, the Jones Act, and the consequences of this harmful maritime statute. Specifically, David and Colin also discuss the counterfactual world of TPP, the future of international trade, and how to fix the myriad of problems caused by the Jones Act.   Transcript for the episode can be found here: https://www.mercatus.org/bridge/tags/macro-musings   Colin's Twitter: @cpgrabow Colin's Cato Institute profile: https://www.cato.org/people/colin-grabow   Related Links:   Cato's Project on Jones Act Reform: https://www.cato.org/project-jones-act-reform   *The Jones Act: A Burden America Can No Longer Bear* by Colin Grabow, Inu Manak, and Daniel Ikenson https://www.cato.org/publications/policy-analysis/jones-act-burden-america-can-no-longer-bear   *Rust Buckets: How the Jones Act Undermines U.S. Shipbuilding and National Security* by Colin Grabow https://www.cato.org/policy-analysis/rust-buckets-how-jones-act-undermines-us-shipbuilding-national-security   *The Progressive Case for Jones Act Reform* by Colin Grabow https://www.cato.org/study/progressive-case-jones-act-reform#:~:text=The%20Jones%20Act%20is%20unwise,repeal%2C%20of%20this%20odious%20law   *Candy-Coated Cartel: Time to Kill the U.S. Sugar Program* by Colin Grabow https://www.cato.org/policy-analysis/candy-coated-cartel-time-kill-us-sugar-program   *5 Years Later and the United States is Still Paying for Its TPP Blunder* by Colin Grabow https://www.cato.org/blog/5-years-later-united-states-still-paying-tpp-blunder   *The Cato Trade Team's 2022 Policy Wish List* by Scott Lincicome, Inu Manak, Gabriella Beaumont-Smith & Colin Grabow https://www.cato.org/blog/cato-trade-teams-2022-policy-wish-list   *For Inflation Relief, the United States Should Look to Trade Liberalization* by Gary Clyde Hufbauer, Megan Hogan, & Yilin Wang https://www.piie.com/publications/policy-briefs/inflation-relief-united-states-should-look-trade-liberalization#:~:text=For%20inflation%20relief%2C%20the%20United%20States%20should%20look%20to%20trade%20liberalization,-Gary%20Clyde%20Hufbauer&text=With%20US%20inflation%20running%20at,calls%20anticompetitive%20behavior%20by%20corporations   *Biden's Frozen Trade Policy* by Anne Krueger https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/trump-trade-policy-frozen-in-place-under-biden-by-anne-o-krueger-2022-02?barrier=accesspaylog   *Clashing over Commerce: A History of US Trade Policy* by Douglas Irwin https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/C/bo24475328.html   David's Twitter: @DavidBeckworth David's blog: http://macromarketmusings.blogspot.com/

Novus Podcasts
6 Ocak |

Novus Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2022 5:00


Daily Press'te bugün; kısa gündem, AK Parti'nin meclise sunduğu yeni yasa teklifi, Kazakistan'daki olaylar ve daha fazlası var. Keyifli dinlemeler!

PROYECCIONES 2020 - EPISODIO 1
PROYECCIONES 2021 EP 374 La mejor aliada de la Argentina en el FMI contra las cuerdas: hoy debatirán su posible renuncia y Europa aparece dividida sobre su continuidad

PROYECCIONES 2020 - EPISODIO 1

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2021 73:33


OPINIONES DE MARTIN TETAZ, ROSENDO FRAGA, CARLOS GERMANO. Europa aparece dividida en torno de la continuidad de la directora gerente del Fondo Monetario Internacional (FMI), Kristalina Georgieva, cuyo futuro empezará a decidirse hoy. La Argentina estará muy atenta a este debate, a pocas horas del inicio de la asamblea anual del organismo. La velocidad de una definición dependerá básicamante de dos cuestiones: la postura del Tesoro de EE.UU. que conduce Janet Yellen y la posibilidad de que Europa unifique posiciones en torno de una potencial reemplazante, ya que le corresponde tradicionalmente liderar el organismo multilateral. “El tema no es tanto el futuro de Georgieva, sino si el futuro del FMI si ella sigue sin ser declarada inocente. Está cada vez más complicada y creo que perdió credibilidad con el staff; le va a costar mucho manejarlo”, dijo a Infobae un ex representante argentino en el Fondo. Al respecto, el Financial Times indicó que “Francia tiene previsto dar su apoyo a Kristalina Georgieva cuando los 24 miembros del directorio del FMI se reúnan el viernes para evaluar si deben mantener a la directora gerente del fondo tras las acusaciones que cuestionan su ética en su anterior trabajo en el Banco Mundial”. Sin embargo, Alemania y Gran Bretaña mantienen sus dudas y Estados Unidos aparece más cerca de forzar su salida. En este sentido, el FT señaló que no está claro “si el apoyo de París ayudaría a convencer a otros países europeos para resolver una controversia que se ha cernido sobre el prestamista multilateral durante las últimas tres semanas y que amenaza con ensombrecer la reunión anual del FMI y el Banco Mundial en Washington DC que comienza el lunes”. “Varios países de la UE y el Reino Unido estaban esperando cualquier indicación del gobierno de Biden sobre si Georgieva había perdido el apoyo de Estados Unidos, según personas con conocimiento de las discusiones en el directorio”. “El hecho de que el consejo de administración se tomara cinco horas (el miércoles) y no diera una orientación clara demuestra lo divididos que están en este asunto”, señaló un antiguo funcionario del FMI. Una cuestión clave que planea sobre las capitales de la UE es “la posición de Joe Biden y de la secretaria del Tesoro estadounidense, Janet Yellen, ya que Washington tiene la mayor influencia dentro del FMI, dado que Estados Unidos tiene el 16,5% de los derechos de voto en el Fondo”. “Hasta que los estadounidenses no se pronuncien, hay mucha gente sentada al costado”, dijo una fuente familiarizada con las discusiones. Horas atrás, un vocero del Departamento del Tesoro se negó a decir si EE.UU. apoyaba el liderazgo de Georgieva en el FMI después de las reuniones de la junta directiva de esta semana, al señalar que el Tesoro había presionado para que se hiciera un “recuento completo y justo de todos los hechos”. Al parecer, el objetivo del FMI es resolver el asunto a nivel de la junta directiva antes de las reuniones anuales del fondo la próxima semana, indicó una fuente cercana al Fondo. Sin embargo, un antiguo funcionario del FMI dijo que podría ser un objetivo difícil de cumplir. Al respecto, la salida de Georgieva generaría un dolor de cabeza político en Europa, que siempre ha reclamado el puesto, mientras que Washington nombra tradicionalmente al jefe del Banco Mundial. Si permaneciera, la credibilidad del Fondo se verá “muy mermada”, advirtió Anne Krueger, ex primera subdirectora gerente del FMI, quien fue muy dura con la Argentina tras la salida de la convertibilidad.

Kopi Time podcast with Taimur Baig
Kopi Time E059: Anne Krueger on trade, inflation, wages, and industrial policy

Kopi Time podcast with Taimur Baig

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2021 47:32 Transcription Available


Anne Krueger, a veteran of international economics, Senior Research Professor at the School for Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, joins Kopi Time. She is candid in her criticism of the current US administration's stance on trade with China, guarded about the usefulness of industrial policy, and against a substantial rise in federal minimum wage. With sharp reasoning, she breaks down the risks associated with inflation, stimulus measures, international support to deal with the pandemic, and central bank digital currencies. At 87, Dr Krueger remains as brilliant as ever; an inspiration to work productively long past what tradition dictates to be retirement age. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Aujourd'hui l'économie
Aujourd'hui l'économie - Le coronavirus élargit le fossé entre les «millennials» et leurs aînés

Aujourd'hui l'économie

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2020 4:13


Les jeunes souvent accusés de propager le coronavirus apparaissent aussi comme les premières victimes de la crise économique engendrée par la pandémie. De quoi réveiller la guerre entre les millennials et leurs aînés ? Les millennials, c'est-à-dire les 25-40 ans, tout comme leurs petits frères de la génération Z, les jeunes nés autour de l’an 2000, sont souvent pointés du doigt depuis la rentrée : en se retrouvant entre eux, au mépris des règles de distanciation, ces inconscients accélèrent le rebond du coronavirus. À la mi-août l’Organisation mondiale de la Santé a corrigé ce jugement expéditif : oui les jeunes sont devenus les principaux vecteurs de la pandémie explique l’OMS, mais c’est d’abord parce qu’ils travaillent, souvent dans les services, les secteurs les plus exposés à une contamination, que ce soit dans la santé, les maisons de retraite, la restauration ou la grande distribution. Et s’ils restent à leur poste c’est d’abord parce que c’est une question de survie pour nombre d’entre eux. Moins riches que leurs aînés, les jeunes subissent le plus gros contre coup économique. D’après une enquête réalisée en septembre aux États-Unis -par Morning Consult, 39% des millennials ressentent un impact financier négatif, tandis que les baby boomers, les héritiers de la forte croissance de l'après-guerre, ceux qui ont aujourd'hui entre 56 et 74 ans, sont seulement 17% de cet avis. Le coronavirus aggrave le fossé entre les millennials et les babyboomers? Les plus jeunes sont partis avec un sérieux handicap : leur entrée dans la vie active avait déjà été retardée, gâchée par la crise financière de 2008, et alors qu’ils avaient enfin accès à un emploi, qu’ils espéraient profiter de la hausse des salaires déjà sensibles aux États-Unis en 2019, les voilà aux prises avec une nouvelle crise d’une violence encore plus inouïe. Ils avaient nettement moins d’économies que leurs aînés pour affronter le chômage ou la maladie. Une situation logique, eu égard à leur âge, mais atypique si on compare avec les générations précédentes. Aux États-Unis, les baby boomers possèdent aujourd’hui plus de la moitié de la richesse nationale, 53% -selon les chiffres de la Réserve Fédérale-, les millenials 4,6% seulement, mais en 1989, leurs aînés qui démarraient dans la vie active disposaient déjà 21% du revenu national, soit 5 fois plus que leurs enfants aujourd’hui à l’âge adulte. De quoi alimenter le ressentiment des plus jeunes, même si la solidarité inter générationnelle a amorti ce grand écart : face au coronavirus les plus de 50 ans ont souvent soutenu leurs enfants en les accueillant chez eux ou en leur donnant un coup de pouce financier pour faire face à leurs dettes. Cet appauvrissement des plus jeunes va peser longtemps sur leur avenir ? Cela va de fait limiter leur capacité à emprunter pour acheter un logement ou même pour consommer. Voilà de quoi retarder la reprise et peut-être remodeler la croissance : ces générations qui achètent moins de biens durables que leurs aînés pourraient privilégier d’autres modes de consommation. À moyen terme, les millennials qu’on oppose volontiers en terme de revenue et de mode de vie aux baby boomers seront en mesure de choisir comment ils voient leur avenir puisqu’ils formeront la moitié des électeurs des pays du G7 à partir de 2030. S'ils se sentent que les dés sont pipés, que le contrat social ne fonctionne plus, leur intérêt penche du côté d’une meilleure redistribution des revenus, via par exemple l’impôt sur les grandes fortunes. Ce n’est plus de l’économie c’est de la politique, et c’est à eux d’en décider, ok boomer ? C'est ce qu'ils pourront répondre à leurs aînés ! ►Boomer, une expression des millennials devenue culte, une façon de signifier aux aînés que leurs avis sont dépassés. ►En bref On connaîtra tout à l'heure le nom du lauréat ou de la lauréate du prix Nobel d'économie Qui va succéder à la Française Esther Duflo, l'une des lauréates du Nobel 2019 avec deux économistes américains pour ses travaux sur la réduction de la pauvreté ? Parmi les favoris, deux Américaines : Claudia Goldin qui a travaillé sur les inégalités et le rôle des femmes dans l'économie et Anne Krueger, spécialiste des rentes et militante du libre échange. Le yuan, la monnaie chinoise, est en baisse aujourd'hui Un mouvement très contrôlé, dû à un assouplissement des règles de change. Les entreprises chinoises actives sur le marché des devises ne sont plus obligées de conserver 20% de leurs réserves en yuan. Cette modification va sans doute limiter la tendance haussière de la monnaie chinoise, elle a atteint vendredi son plus haut niveau face au dollar. Un signe entre autre de vitalité de l'économie chinoise.

Free To Choose Media Podcast
Episode 92 – Difficulties of Sensible Economic Decision-Making in a Democracy (Podcast)

Free To Choose Media Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2020


In this discussion, Difficulties of Sensible Economic Decision-Making in a Democracy Listen to Dr. John Shoven, Professor Emeritus of Economics and Director of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research at the Hoover Institution, and Anne Krueger, Professor Emeritus of Science and Humanities in Economics at Stanford University, as they discuss how difficult economic decisions are to make in a democracy in. It was recorded in 2000.

Community College Marketing MasterClass
Getting to "Newsworthy": How to Get Your Stories Covered by Media

Community College Marketing MasterClass

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2019 18:22 Transcription Available


Your college community has great stories, but having those stories go beyond your website audience and social network following can be a challenge. So, how exactly do you get your story to make headlines in other publications? In this episode, Anne Krueger, communications and public information director of the Grossmont-Cuyamaca Community College District, and Cheryl Broom, president of Interact, discuss the best ways to market your stories to the media. Show Notes: Link to Annual Report website: https://www.gcccd.edu/about-us-area/annual-report.html

Cato Event Podcast
Free Trade and Prosperity: How Openness Helps Developing Countries Grow Richer and Combat Poverty

Cato Event Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2019 81:59


Free trade provides enormous benefits to developing countries. Arvind Panagariya will describe its impressive record in promoting growth and reducing poverty at a time when some policymakers in rich and poor countries are turning toward protectionism. He will explain how openness was key to the economic success of countries like South Korea and Taiwan and will refute claims that industrial policy, infant industry protection, or measures that erected barriers to trade have worked better than free trade itself. Anne Krueger will comment on Panagariya’s full-scale defense of free trade and warn about threats to the liberal, global trade regime. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Cato Institute Event Videos (Full)
Free Trade and Prosperity: How Openness Helps Developing Countries Grow Richer and Combat Poverty

Cato Institute Event Videos (Full)

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2019 81:59


Free trade provides enormous benefits to developing countries. Arvind Panagariya will describe its impressive record in promoting growth and reducing poverty at a time when some policymakers in rich and poor countries are turning toward protectionism. He will explain how openness was key to the economic success of countries like South Korea and Taiwan and will refute claims that industrial policy, infant industry protection, or measures that erected barriers to trade have worked better than free trade itself. Anne Krueger will comment on Panagariya’s full-scale defense of free trade and warn about threats to the liberal, global trade regime. 

What'd You Miss This Week
The American Brain Drain

What'd You Miss This Week

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2019 32:16


This Week, former IMF deputy managing director Anne Krueger came on to talk about what she calls "Trump's Brain Drain" and how higher education is getting left out of the immigration debate. Alberto Ramos, head of Latin America Economic Research at Goldman Sachs, explained why he's 'cautiously optimistic' about the outlooks for Brazil and Argentina. Canopy Growth CEO Bruce Linton discussed building the first hemp production facility in the U.S. Steve Cannon, CEO of the AMB Group, which owns the Mercedes Benz Stadium in Atlanta, talked about his Super Bowl prep. Then Greylock Capital Management CEO Hans Humes came on to talk about the dueling presidents in Venezuela. 

Macro Musings with David Beckworth
137 – Matt Mitchell on Rent-Seeking and Public Choice

Macro Musings with David Beckworth

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2018 56:21


Matt Mitchell is the director and senior research fellow at the Equity Initiative at the Mercatus Center. He joins the show today to talk about rent seeking and how it affects long term economic growth and prosperity. David and Matt also discuss regulatory capture, the rise of patent trolls, and the economics of public choice theory.   Transcript for the episode: https://www.mercatus.org/bridge/podcasts/12172018/macroeconomics-rent-seeking   Matt’s Twitter: @MattMitchell80 Matt’s Mercatus profile: https://www.mercatus.org/matthew-mitchell   Related Links:   *Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power, Prosperity, and Poverty* by Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson https://scholar.harvard.edu/jrobinson/publications/why-nations-fail-origins-power-prosperity-and-poverty   *The Political Economy of the Rent-Seeking Society* by Anne Krueger https://www.jstor.org/stable/1808883?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents   *Entrepreneurship: Production, Unproductive, and Destructive* by William Baumol https://www.jstor.org/stable/2937617   *Uncontestable Favoritism* by Matt Mitchell https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3210953   *40 Years of Research on Rent Seeking* by Roger Congleton, Arye Hillman, and Kai Konrad https://www.springer.com/us/book/9783540791881   David’s blog: macromarketmusings.blogspot.com David’s Twitter: @DavidBeckworth  

Campus Lectures, Interviews and Talks
Cornelson Distinguished Lecture in Economics: Anne Krueger

Campus Lectures, Interviews and Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2011 71:45


Anne Krueger, professor of international economics at the School for Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University, delivers the annual Cornelson Distinguished Lecture in Economics. Kreuger was the First Deputy Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund from 2001 to 2006, and was Vice President of Economics and Research at the World Bank from 1982 to 1986. She currently serves as a senior fellow at the Center for International Development (of which she was the founding Director) and the Ritch Emeritus Professor of Sciences and Humanities in the economics department at Stanford University. Krueger has published extensively on economic development, international trade and finance, and economic policy reform. She has also written a number of books and articles on the economies of India, South Korea, and Turkey.