Economist

Joseph Stiglitz

American economist

1943

11
Total Mentions
0
Direct Quotes
2001
First Mention
2019
Latest Mention

Most Frequent Citing Countries

France(4)Venezuela(2)Republic of Costa Rica(2)Belize(2)Singapore(1)

All Mentions (6)

2019·Republic of Costa Rica
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nflict crisis to be the new lever that compels us to adopt the necessary changes. Contemporary thinkers such as Rob Riemen, Yuval Noah Harari, Joseph Stiglitz and others agree that today we are seeing parallels with the world of the 1930s. Despair, frustration, resentment and the lack of a sense of belongin
2009·France
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ht there. I would like to appeal to all States, to all international organizations, that the recommendations made by the commission chaired by Joseph Stiglitz be disseminated broadly. Let us make no mistake about the way we measure economic growth. The task is a huge one, and it is only just beginning. That
2009·Venezuela
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s than a century. And that of course has to do with the economy. I shall not read this document, Mr. President; I shall merely refer to it. It is the Stiglitz report. I invite the Assembly to analyse it. Yesterday the President of France also invited the Assembly to analyse it. It is thanks to him that the
2008·Belize
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leadership challenge we face. In addressing that challenge, we would propose that we first examine how our multilateral institutions function. Joseph Stiglitz in his book Making Globalization Work wrote that: “The nation-state, which has been the center of political and ... economic power for the past centu
2001·France
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ileges, sharing wealth and power in new ways, and rewriting certain rules hitherto held to be inviolable. As the Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz has written, free trade was designed by Western countries for the Western countries. This is debatable, of course, but none of this will happen witho
2001·Singapore
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But what the terrorist attacks have dramatically highlighted is the reality of interdependence in today’s globalized world. Joseph Stiglitz, a recent Nobel Prize winner, like the United Nations, highlighted this interdependence in a Washington Post article dated 11 November 2001. He said,