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Charting the Economic Fault Lines

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Raghuram Rajan interviewed by BW's Peter Coy. Rajan was prescient in questioning the Greenspan Fed's policies and the risks posed by the excessive leveraging in the financial system at the 2005 Jackson Hole conference. After the excessive monetary easing by the Bernanke Federal Reserve, Rajan questions the wisdom of keeping interest rates too low for too long. He joins John Taylor, George W. Bush presidential advisor, and Allan Meltzer of Carnegie-Mellon in making this point. Rajan was the chief economist at the IMF from 2003 to 2006. He is the author of a 2010 book, Fault Lines: How Hidden Fractures still Threaten the World Economy. The fault lines he describes are rising inequality in the US and the dependence of the US on loans from China.

Raghuram Rajan on the risks to the U.S. economy and society before the 2008 financial crisis

01/02/2009

Is Bernanke making the same mistake made by Greenspan by keeping interest rates too low for too long. Would a stronger safety net in the US ease pressures on the US Federal Reserve to do excessive monetary easing and instead allow the Fed to let a more natural rise in employment take place? He isn't ideological and joins John Taylor, George W Bush's economic advisor, and Allan Meltzer of Carnegie-Mellon, in questioning Bernanke's excessive monetary easing. In 2005, Rajan was prescient in questioning the Greenspan Fed's policies and the risks from excessive leveraging in the financial system at the Jackson Hole conference.

Grouped Articles

Mr. Rajan Was Unpopular (But Prescient) at Greenspan Party

Wall Street Journal 01/02/2009

Interest Rates: The Zero Percent Solution

BusinessWeek 08/25/2010

Tom Keene's Econo Chat

BusinessWeek 11/04/2010

The Case Against the Bernanke-Obama Financial Rescue

New York Times 05/16/2014

Charting the Economic Fault Lines

BusinessWeek 02/10/2011

Ben Bernanke's '70s Show

Wall Street Journal 02/05/2011


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