The non-bogus conservative argument against Obamanomics

As dead-armadillo-in-the-middle-of-the-road centrist, I’ve been really unimpressed with most of the conservative critiques of Barack Obama’s economic plans that I’ve seen. (Michael Boskin’s WSJ op-ed piece of a couple of days ago serves as a pretty good proxy for the lot of them.) First, they tend to be inordinately alarmist about the economic consequences of [...]

New story: Hank Paulson wants to build a relationship with you

They’ve put my story about Hank Paulson online, a day before the issue of TIME in which it appears comes out. Here’s how it begins: It is late on a summer afternoon, and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is sipping a Diet Coke in his giant corner office a patch away from the White House and [...]

TheDeal.com doesn’t like what I said about KKR. But I know I’m right.

What I said on Monday was that how the private-equity shop KKR “stacks up in terms of influence over worker-lives” isn’t too shabby. KKR had said it would go public—partly as a way to take over its struggling affiliate KKR Private Equity Investors (KPE)—and in the process, bragged that the 46 companies it has in [...]

A VW recession?

Regular readers of this blog were well-prepared for the news that GDP grew at an almost respectable 1.9% pace in the second quarter (or at least was estimated to grow at that pace on the basis of incomplete data and possibly suspect assumptions). But the really interesting information in the GDP release was that Q4 [...]

Steve Randy Waldman says stop shopping and start saving, people

The always-thought-provoking Steve Randy Waldman, inspired by that Paul McCulley piece I cited last week on “the paradox of deleveraging,” writes: Encouraging people to go shopping in order to help the economy is not “second best” policy. It’s a desperate last resort. We’re not at a point where there’s so little economic activity that we [...]