News

The titular sports car of Robin Schavoir’s The Jag is parked in an imaginary space off-stage at the Brooklyn Center for ...
A gender bending troupe of nine electrifying women take over a barge, in the New York Premiere of The King's Men. The ...
Paul Simon wasn’t supposed to be coming back. In 2018, the New York songwriter — actually born in Newark, N.J. — went on what ...
We're getting a look at how the public mood and political attitudes have changed over time thanks to economic shifts and dislocation. Paul Solman sat down with Nobel-winning economist Paul Krugman ...
Paul Krugman, the Nobel Prize-winning economist and longtime left-leaning New York Times columnist, left the Gray Lady last month after more than two decades, accusing editors of effectively ...
Donald Trump champions the working class but his policies are bad news for them, Paul Krugman says. The Nobel-winning economist says tariffs and deportations will hurt instead of help the poor. "A ...
Without further ado, here they are: words worth revisiting. Words worth keeping. Their forebears appeared in the Best Sentences of 2023.I’ll start rounding up their descendants in 2025.
Paul Krugman, columnist for The New York Times for nearly 25 years, is retiring at the end of this year. “Time and again, he took on the big fights, grappled with policy deeply and seriously, ...
Consider Paul Krugman, a noted “part-time specialist” who burnishes his glory by holding up a “Nobel Prize” (in fact, the prize is awarded “in memory of Alfred Nobel” and funded by ...
Nobel laureate and noted economist Paul Krugman has weighed in on the ramifications of replacing taxes with tariffs, a policy move rumored to be favored by Donald Trump. Krugman argues that such ...
Krugman's cheery outlook comes came after new data showed that the US's GDP rose by a better-than-expected 3.3% over the final quarter of 2024.
Paul Krugman and Robin Wells put it this way in their seminal text Macroeconomics: “...market failure […] happens when the individual pursuit of oneʼs own interest, instead of promoting the interests ...