I know this may be hard for some of you to believe but before Paul Krugman was writing for the New York Times and outraging Bush administration supporters, he was writing for Slate and other publications and ridiculing Clinton administration officials for their 'dangerous obsession' with 'competitiveness' and their 'strangely careless arithmetic.' He was also known for challenging anti-globalization protesters for 'not thinking their position through.' His piece " In Praise of Cheap Labor Bad jobs at bad wages are better than no jobs at all " which appeared in Slate - Dismal Scientist - March 20, 1997 compactly sums up his position on this last point. This piece is on the Eco 340 reading list but I wanted to post it here for those of you in Eco 740 who might be interested, and to open up a space for discussion. Here's a choice excerpt: .... moral outrage is common among the opponents of globalization--of the transfer of technology and ca...
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