Robert Mundell Famous Quotes
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I decided to go to the London School of Economics to write my thesis for MIT, under James Meade, Nobelist with Bertil Ohlin in 1977.
The price of gold was fixed at $35 an ounce in 1934, but by the time the U.S. got through the Korean War, the Vietnam war, with all the associated secular inflation, the price level had gone up nearly three times.
I took high school very casually. There was Teen Town, chess, tennis, boxing, running. Lots of things going on.
The public is looking for free lunches, and the political competition for votes makes the politicians offer them free lunches.
The U.S. berates China for its exchange rate policy, which Washington doesn't like. But one-sided pressure on China to change its exchange rate is misplaced.
The benefits from a world currency would be enormous.
I have never believed that central banks should have rigid inflation targeting. That is not a good thing to stabilize. There is nothing in economic theory to back this.
The United States can't keep a completely open system if the rest of the world is less open. The United States may have to take a leaf out of the book of Japan, China, and Germany, and have protectionism inside the system.
It's a lethal thing to suddenly raise taxes.
As an undergraduate at UBC in Canada, I fell in love with economic theory. It was the right choice for me.
The whole idea of having a free trade area when you have gyrating exchange rates doesn't make sense at all. It just spoils the effect of any kind of free trade agreement.
I went to the University of Washington in Seattle. This was a very good place to study, and I learned a lot. But it wasn't the right place for my Ph.D.
Monetary discipline forces fiscal discipline on the politicians as well.
The most important initiative you could take to improve the world economy would be to stabilize the dollar-euro rate.
It's political glue inside Europe to keep it together - the euro is the best thing going for it since the creation of the common market.
How much we owe to good teachers, good education, and good advice!
In my early days, I wrote my dissertation for MIT at the London School of Economics, really under James Meade, but my dissertation was five chapters on the theory of capital movement, but it didn't mention money.