Why Economics Matters

Wednesday, May 07, 2008
by Geoff Riley

This looks like a tremendous event at the LSE in a couple of weeks

Why Economics Matters
Date: Tuesday 20 May 2008
Time: 6.30-8pm
Venue: Old Theatre, Old Building
Speakers: Professor Orazio Attanasio, Tim Harford, Professor Klaus Nielsen, Martin Wolf, Chair: Evan Davis

Further details available here

Print Digg it Del.icio.us My Yahoo RSS

Comments

Name:

Email:

Location:

URL:

Smileys

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Submit the word you see below:


Latest entries

Categories

Monthly Archives

Tags

inflation, recession, confidence, housing, competition, prices, price, demand, slowdown, dollar, credit crunch, expectations, property, food, sterling, china, incentives, euro, unemployment, profit, environment, consumption, risk, supply, emissions, usa, costs, globalisation, trade, gdp, externalities, debt, mortgage, wealth, economist, investment, supermarkets, commodities, exports, deflation, taxes, downturn, welfare, environmental, saving, monopsony, oil, productivity, inequality, economic cycle, employment, efficiency, retailers, macroeconomics, behavioural economics, copper, economics, climate change, stocks, evaluation, tim harford, pollution, airlines, interest rates, happiness, waste, poverty, innovation, manufacturing, agflation, contestable, management, competitiveness, opec, carbon trading, cpi, stagflation, eurozone, price discrimination, imports, migrants, regulation, profits, cartel, population, sub-prime, survey, india, crude oil, newsnight, rationality, landfill, uk economy, monetary policy, federal reserve, balance of payments, us economy, economies of scale, lse, aviation,

Syndicate