Nouriel Roubini
![Nouriel Roubini](/assets/img/authors/nouriel-roubini.jpg)
Nouriel Roubini
Nouriel Roubiniis an American economist. He teaches at New York University's Stern School of Business and is the chairman of Roubini Global Economics, an economic consultancy firm...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionEconomist
Date of Birth29 March 1958
CountryUnited States of America
luxury negative sending signal
I think it's a very negative signal we're sending to the world. We don't have the luxury to snub the world.
delicate disaster economy economy-and-economics massive might natural oil shock top
This is a very delicate moment. The economy is already very imbalanced. On top of that, we've had a massive oil shock and now we have a natural disaster that might be something of a tipping point.
chinese trying
The Chinese are trying to do the least they can. They want to set their own pace.
belts consumers country excesses large running save spending
The U.S. has been living in a situation of excesses for too long. Consumers were out spending more than their income and the country was spending more than its income, running up large current-account deficits. Now we have to tighten our belts and save more.
ability china cost foreign increase markets order policy send surely veto
The ability to send a 'sell' order that roils markets may not give China a veto over U.S. foreign policy, but it surely does increase the cost of any U.S. policy that China opposes.
above assets continue current dangers foreign foreigners form fraction high increasing owning patterns percent spending stop whining
If we continue with our current patterns of spending above our incomes, by 2013 the U.S. foreign liabilities could be as high as 75 percent of GDP and an increasing fraction of such liabilities will be in the form of equity. So, let us stop whining about the dangers of unfriendly foreigners owning our firms and assets and get used to it.
technology gains population
The gains from technology must be channeled to a broader base of the population than has benefited so far.
economics modern crisis
In the history of modern capitalism, crises are the norm, not the exception.
told-you-so oxymoron funny-oxymoron
I am not going to say I told you so, but I did.
oxygen years fire
Having spent 10 years studying emerging markets, I know that you have patterns repeated over and over again. A bubble is like a fire which needs oxygen to continue... when you see there is no oxygen, things change.
normal alive humans
I am just a normal human being - I am alive! Why is anyone surprised that I am human? Like many New Yorkers, I have a multifaceted life.
banks care central investors less private return scholars-and-scholarship
While central banks care less than private investors about the return on their investments, they're not completely clueless,
complacent country excesses excessive household sure weaknesses
No country can be complacent in making sure that excessive debt of the household doesn't create excesses and weaknesses in the financial system. Everything is interconnected.
bailing becoming costs fiscal income job larger
The economic costs, the financial costs, the job losses, the income losses, the fiscal costs of bailing out financial system are becoming larger and larger.