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Emmanuel Saez

Emmanuel Saez

1 commentaries
1 videos & podcasts

Emmanuel Saez, Director of the Center for Equitable Growth at the University of California, Berkeley, is Co-Director of the World Inequality Database. His latest book (with Gabriel Zucman) is The Triumph of Injustice: How the Rich Dodge Taxes and How to Make Them Pay.

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  1. Escaping the Inequality-Data Dark Ages
    piketty1_Mr.Cole Photographer Getty Images_datawaves Mr. Cole_Photographer/Getty Images

    Escaping the Inequality-Data Dark Ages

    Dec 23, 2019 Thomas Piketty, et al. lament governments' failure to collect the most basic statistics on the distribution of income and wealth.

  1. benami202_Burak KaraGetty Images_erdogan Burak Kara/Getty Images

    Turkey’s Pragmatic Islamist

    Shlomo Ben-Ami expects Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s latest electoral victory to have little impact on Turkish foreign policy.
  2. sierakowski98_Jaap ArriensNurPhoto via Getty Images_donaldtusk Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images

    Poland's Electoral Inquisition

    Sławomir Sierakowski decries a new law designed to disqualify opposition candidates from running in this year's general election.
  3. stiglitz318_Drew AngererGetty Images_ira Drew Angerer/Getty Images

    Western Industrial Policy and International Law

    Joseph E. Stiglitz

    With recent landmark legislation to support decarbonization and innovation, the United States is making up for lost time after its failed 40-year experiment with neoliberalism. But if it is serious about embracing a new paradigm, it will need to do more to help bring the rest of the world along.

    explains how to minimize the political risks of new spending packages in the US and Europe.
  4. mohan4_STEFANI REYNOLDSAFP via Getty Images_imf STEFANI REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images

    The IMF’s Turn to Lead on Climate

    Rakesh Mohan, et al. explain how the International Monetary Fund can best support green investment where it is needed the most.
  5. nye_Joe RaedleGetty Images_trump Joe Raedle/Getty Images

    If Trump Returns

    Joseph S. Nye, Jr.

    What would a second Donald Trump presidency mean for US foreign policy and the world? While the man himself is unpredictable, his first term and his behavior since losing re-election in 2020 offer plenty of clues, none of which will be comforting to America's allies.

    considers the implications of the 2024 presidential election for America's foreign policy and global standing.
  6. alnuaimi1_GodongUniversal Images Group via Getty Images_UAEsolar Godong/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

    A Western Distraction from Climate Action

    Ali Rashid Al Nuaimi warns that calls for the removal of Sultan Al Jaber as COP28 president-designate are a dangerous diversion.
  7. sheng137_Kaikeo SaiyasaneXinhua via Getty Images_china investment Kaikeo Saiyasane/Xinhua via Getty Images

    How to Restructure Chinese Supply Chains

    Andrew Sheng & Xiao Geng argue that private markets can be leveraged to support a much-needed economic transformation.
  8. hausmann112_AIZAR RALDESAFP via Getty Images_solar panels AIZAR RALDES/AFP via Getty Images

    The Supply Side of Decarbonization

    Ricardo Hausmann touts strategies that create incentives for developing countries to produce renewables and other green goods.
  9. roubini177_Getty Images_china us Getty Images

    America and China Are on a Collision Course

    Nouriel Roubini juxtaposes recent developments and current trends with diplomatic happy talk about a “thaw” in tensions.

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