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Paul Krugman

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Paul Krugman (born 1953) is an American economist who is best-known as an outspoken and formidable critic of the economic policies of the administration of George W. Bush.

Krugman was born and grew up on Long Island, and majored in economics as an undergraduate at Yale. He obtained a Ph.D. from MIT in 1977 and taught at Yale, MIT, Stanford before joining the faculty of Princeton, where he has been since 1996.

From 1982 to 1983, he spent a year working at the Reagan White House in the Council of Economic Advisers.

As an academic, Krugman has written hundreds of papers and eighteen books. His International Economics: Theory and Policy is a standard textbook on international economics.

When Bill Clinton came into office in 1992, it was expected that Krugman would be given a leading post, but he was passed over for various reasons. However, it allowed him to turn to writing journalism for wider audiences, first for Fortune and Slate, later for The Harvard Business Review, Foreign Policy, The Economist, Harper's, and Washington Monthly. In his own words, he became adept at "new kind of writing ... essays for non-economists that were clear, effective, and entertaining."

Since 1999, he has contributed a weekly column on the OpEd page of the New York Times which has made him in the words of the Washington Monthly "the most important political columnist in America."

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