Niall Ferguson's Blog
October 4, 2020
Sir Harold Evans (1928-2020)
As Simon Schama observed on hearing the sad news of Harry Evans’s death, Harry was that rare combination of great and good. The English phrase “the great and the good” is ironical, implying that the great (in the sense of the socially or politically powerful) are rarely good. Harry Evans was never one of the great and good in that sense. He was simply a great editor and a...
Published on October 04, 2020 18:01
May 26, 2020
Six Questions for Xi Jinping: Another update
It is now seven weeks since I published an opinion column in the London Sunday Times with the headline, “Let’s Zoom Xi Jinping. He has questions to answer about coronavirus” (April 5, 2020). In it, I posed six questions that I suggested should be put to the Chinese President and Communist Party General Secretary Xi Jinping. On April 21, in response to widespread interest...
Published on May 26, 2020 06:20
April 21, 2020
Six Questions for Xi Jinping: An update
Nearly two weeks ago, I published my usual column in the London Sunday Times with the headline, Lets Zoom Xi Jinping. He has questions to answer about coronavirus (April 5, 2020). In it, I posed six questions that I suggested should be put to the Chinese President and Communist Party General Secretary Xi Jinping. In response to widespread interest in this...
Published on April 21, 2020 06:49
Six Questions for Xi Jinping: An update
Nearly two weeks ago, I published my usual column in the London Sunday Times with the headline, “Let’s Zoom Xi Jinping. He has questions to answer about coronavirus” (April 5, 2020). In it, I posed six questions that I suggested should be put to the Chinese President and Communist Party General Secretary Xi Jinping. In response to widespread interest in this...
Published on April 21, 2020 06:49
November 20, 2017
Calling it Right: Excerpts from Niall Ferguson’s Pre-Crisis Journalism
REASONS TO WORRY (NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE) “According to calculations published by Barron's in February, over the next two years the monthly payments on about $600 billion of mortgages taken out by borrowers in the so-called subprime market (those with checkered or nonexistent credit histories) will increase by as much as 50 percent. This is because many A.R.M.'s have two-...
Published on November 20, 2017 11:45
December 5, 2013
Quantitative Teasing
Back on November 15, 2010, I was one of the signatories of the following letter, addressed to the Chairman of the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke, which was published in the Wall Street Journal: We believe the Federal Reserve's large-scale asset purchase plan (so-called "quantitative easing") should be reconsidered and discontinued. We do not believe such a plan is necessary or...
Published on December 05, 2013 04:36
October 16, 2013
Inflated Claims
Josh Barro is the son of a famous economist. Maybe that’s why the website Business Insider allows him to write about economics. Maybe it’s also why he feels the need to stick up for another famous economist by attacking that individual’s principal detractor. The famous economist himself solemnly promised us that he would not reply – “never” – to my...
Published on October 16, 2013 11:43
October 12, 2013
The Wizard Exposed
Paul Krugman has never shied away from criticizing me. He has relished it, and has not hesitated to spice his criticism with insults. And yet, when called to account for his own mistakes, not to mention his own boastful misrepresentation of his own record, he has collapsed. Manifestly unable to refute any of my charges against his work, he has added one final, infantile insult –...
Published on October 12, 2013 12:06
Plover Alert
Meanwhile, the plovers flap about desperately: Funny how, far from defending Krugman, they just prove my point about the need for civility in public discourse, not to mention honesty and humility. Memo to Josh Barro: 1. If you are defending someone against a charge of incivility, the word "asinine" is not one to use. Nor does it really help your cause to cite tweets like this: Oh...
Published on October 12, 2013 12:03
How I Personally Caused The Great Depression To Happen Again
Yes, according to Dean Baker, it was me. Except for one small problem, familiar to readers of Brad DeLong. There is not a shred of evidence that I – as opposed to "people like" me – said any of the things attributed to me in this strange rant. Take a look (emphasis added): Ferguson and like-minded people ... have ruined millions of lives and cost the world more than $10...
Published on October 12, 2013 12:01
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