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Topic: Anatole Kaletsky


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In the News (Sun 6 Dec 09)

  
  Anatole Kaletsky - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anatole Kaletsky (born June 1, 1952) is a journalist and economist in the United Kingdom.
Mr Kaletsky was born in 1952 in Moscow, Russia and also spent his childhood in Poland and Australia.
Mr Kaletsky was educated at King's College at the University of Cambridge where he graduated with a first class honours degree in Mathematics and at Harvard University, where he was a Kennedy Memorial Scholar and gained a master's degree in Economics.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Anatole_Kaletsky   (325 words)

  
 Anatole Kaletsky - The London Speaker Bureau
Anatole Kaletsky is Principal Economic Commentator and Associate Editor of The Times of London, where he writes a twice-weekly column on economics, politics and financial markets.
Mr Kaletsky was educated at King's College, Cambridge where he graduated with a first class honours degree in Mathematics and at Harvard University, where he was a Kennedy Memorial Scholar and gained a master's degree in Economics.
Mr Kaletsky was born in 1952 in Moscow, Russia and also lived as a child in Poland and Australia.
www.londonspeakerbureau.co.uk /speakers/viewSpeaker.aspx?speakerid=143   (317 words)

  
 Oliver Kamm: The present prosperity, and party politics
These were the deregulatory reforms of the Thatcher years; the change in macroeceonomic policy that had been initiated, ironically, by the failure of policy in the ERM crisis; and a shift in relative prices whereby the things that we import (especially mass-produced manufactured goods) have got cheaper while knowledge-intensive goods have risen in price.
Kaletsky's exposition of economic policy and the benefits of an open, trading economy is particularly good.
Kaletsky understates the importance of Labour's decision to grant operational independence to the Bank of England in setting interest rates.
oliverkamm.typepad.com /blog/2004/08/the_present_pro.html   (807 words)

  
 Anatole Kaletsky - Speakers Biography - Celebrity Speakers Limited
Anatole Kaletsky is widely recognised and respected for his views and analyses on the state of the economy not only in the UK but world-wide.
Anatole Kaletsky was born in 1952 in Moscow, and as a child lived in Poland and Australia.
His provocative style makes him ideal for key note speeches and he is excellent when participating in panel debates or moderating conferences.
www.speakers.co.uk /csaWeb/speaker,ANAKAL   (319 words)

  
 Incompetent economic commentator calls President Bush a dolt
According to Anatole Kaletsky, associate editor of The Times and one of the world’s greatest economic thinkers, President Bush is a dolt.
The fact of the matter is that Kaletsky ranks as one of worst economic commentators it has been my painful duty to read.
If Kaletsky is right it would pay Australia, for example, to thoroughly demolish its factories, offices, transport systems and even housing stock every few years.
www.brookesnews.com /060602kaletsky.html   (852 words)

  
 Financial Reckoning Night by Bill Bonner
Kaletsky is a smart writer and a good thinker, but his wrongness is profound and reliable.
And according to Kaletsky, it died before it was even hatched.
Kaletsky: He is Thomas Friedman with a brain.
www.lewrockwell.com /bonner/bonner282.html   (1537 words)

  
 Oil prices, Anatole Kaletsky’s and Keynesian fallacies
Let me remind readers that Kaletsky — who mindlessly walks in Keynes’ shadow— stated that it was his belief that mass bombings stimulate investment and employment (it certainly raises the demand for gravediggers, surgeons, nurses, etc.,) by destroying masses of capital.
At this point someone like Kaletsky will write that the economy is “coming under a strain from excess demand.” That the problem lies with the money supply never seems to get a look in.
Kaletsky welcomed the weakness of the Euro against the dollar by claiming it would stimulate growth in Europe by, wait for it, by directing employment from America to Europe.
www.brookesnews.com /062407Kaletsky.html   (785 words)

  
 Anatole Kaletsky, Keynesian stupidity and Asian woes
A few days ago I was discussing the direction of the Chinese economy with several colleagues when one of them praised the work of Anatole Kaletsky.
To be honest, Kaletsky's economic stupidity was nearly as offensive as his grovelling to Bill Clinton.
It certainly is not due to Kaletsky's intelligence.
www.brookesnews.com /031512zhang.html   (563 words)

  
 Anatole Kaletsky: ZoomInfo Business People Information
Anatole Kaletsky: Anatole is best known as an economic commentator for The Times and, prior to that, on the Financial Times.
Anatole has been an adviser to multinational companies and financial institutions in Europe, America and Asia, as well as a sought-after public speaker.
In 1996 Mr Kaletsky was named Newspaper Commentator of the Year in the BBC's 'What the Papers Say' awards and he has twice received the British Press Award for Specialist Writer of the Year.
www.zoominfo.com /people/kaletsky_anatole_25545281.aspx   (410 words)

  
 Stumbling and Mumbling: Anatole Kaletsky: smart or stupid?
What's more, Kaletsky ignores other, better, explanations for market seasonality - for example, the possibility that investors' appetite for risk is affected by hours of daylight.
And of course, if Kaletsky's influential readers feel their egos are being boosted, they'll return the compliment, and perpetuate the impression that Kaletsky is a brilliant writer.
Kaletsky, then, is smart enough to see and act upon a big truth - that you gain a reputation as a great thinker not by writing great truths, but by flattering your readers.
stumblingandmumbling.typepad.com /stumbling_and_mumbling/2006/09/anatole_kaletsk.html   (807 words)

  
 EURSOC: Sky High Snobbery
Anatole Kaletsky launches an attack on the "left-wing radicals" who want to see air travel restricted with punitive taxes.
Kaletsky, a self-confessed "carbon criminal", probably had the Guardian's resident eco-loon George Monbiot in mind when he wrote his column.
This obsolete outlook limits their range of solutions to a tax on air travel, which Kaletsky argues wouldn't work, to an outright ban on flying, which is too absurd to even consider.
www.eursoc.com /news/fullstory.php/aid/953/Sky_High_Snobbery.html   (873 words)

  
 Mover Mike Who is Anatole Kaletsky?
Anatole Kaletsky is an Associate Editor of The Times and one of the country’s leading commentators on economics.
Anatole was previously Economics Editor of The Times, and has won many awards for his financial and political journalism.
Ask the parents of Max de Sully and the parents and wives and children of 52,000 dead Americans and all the wounded if losing was a blessing.
www.movermike.com /posts/1156441492.shtml   (775 words)

  
 My letter to the NYT re: David Brooks | TPMCafe
No Brainer!") giving the reader the impression that Kaletsky's arguments support his own, which if one takes the time to read Mr.
Kaletsky's argument is primarily about the European Central Bank's monetary policy and the travails of trying to impose a single monetary standard on the still-diverse needs of the eurozone, and has nothing to do with questions of the welfare state.
Kaletsky's argument tends to suggest that is the 1992 Maastrict treaty and the subsequent European monetary union that is the problem.
www.tpmcafe.com /story/2005/6/2/35333/15082   (381 words)

  
 Jul 27, 2006 Inflation and a slowing economy Bill Bonner 321gold . . . 7
Kaletsky has been very bullish on the world economy.
And we got word from a friend who is trying to sell his house in Santa Barbara that not a single person came to look at his pad in a two-week period.
Kaletsky goes on: "Inflation in America is now running at a truly alarming 4.8 per cent.
www.321gold.com /editorials/bonner/bonner072706.html   (771 words)

  
 http://www.qando.net/ - London and Oklahoma City
Anatole Kaletsky has a very interesting piece in The Times today.
Kaletsky's point is that Brits shouldn't do too much soul-searching about why these 4 chose to do what they did anymore than we in the US did about McVeigh.
Anatole seems to be sticking his head in the sand by suggesting that this incident is somehow isolated from the wider War on Terror.
www.qando.net /details.aspx?Entry=2243   (4916 words)

  
 AsiaMedia :: U.K. journalist symposium in Japan
Kaletsky also challenged the view that Japan in the coming months is headed for a difficult period of a significant slowdown -- if not outright recession -- because it has never experienced a continued expansion lasting more than 57 months.
Noting that Japan -- as shown by some economic indicators -- is still in a deflationary environment, Kaletsky said the BOJ should continue to maintain ultralow interest rates "until you get out of deflation or until you get to a level of inflation" comparable to other world economies.
Kaletsky said he suspected that with the improvement in the Japanese economy in recent years, big corporations are "moving back to the corporate philosophy that puts more emphasis on investments and market share than on return on assets and profits."
www.asiamedia.ucla.edu /article.asp?parentid=47930   (2950 words)

  
 The TaxPayers' Alliance   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Anatole Kaletsky makes some interesting points in an article in today's Times attacking Gordon Brown.
Some of Kaletsky's reasons for losing faith in Brown are based on his own personal dislike of Brown's apparent sympathy for the current US administration.
But as Kaletsky suggests, Brown always lets himself down in the end by his almost corporatist, managerial approach to everything.
www.taxpayersalliance.com /news/individual_blog.php?post_id=435   (541 words)

  
 AMERICAN FUTURE - Trying to make sense of a world in turmoil » Defeat Is Victory
If George Orwell were still alive and had read Anatole Kaletsky's op-ed in The Times, he might be tempted to revise 1984.
Kaletsky is wrong in almost every single fact and inference.
Kaletsky’s argument is that Iran is better able to do without the rest of the world than the rest of the world without Iran.
americanfuture.net /?p=2140   (2257 words)

  
 AMERICAN FUTURE - Trying to make sense of a world in turmoil » The American Paradox
Anatole may not like Bush, but he recognizes the reality that the US is vastly outperforming Europe and is willing to say so in print.
Kaletsky’s noting of the obvious—that the US is less fettered in business affairs—is largely what separates the EU from the US.
Kaletsky marvels at the fact that the US can have an “incompetent” president and that this does not seem to affect our fortunes as a nation.
americanfuture.net /?p=1326   (1951 words)

  
 Liberal Polemic: Kaletsky   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
His argument is that rather than political stability resulting from economic success, the reverse is true.
While he is correct to suggest that economic benefits require social and political stability, this is because the exercise of basic economic freedoms rely upon the rule of law to make outcomes predictable.
Kaletsky juxtaposes, one that epitomises both the rule of law and the freedom of the individual.
liberalpolemic.blogspot.com /search/label/Kaletsky   (451 words)

  
 ParaPundit: Anatole Kaletsky on the EU Democracy Deficit
ParaPundit: Anatole Kaletsky on the EU Democracy Deficit
Kaletsky compares the US constitution and new proposed European Union constitution proposed by the Convention on the Future of Europe and offers an explanation for why the EU is becoming no more democratic:
Is the neglect of democracy in the new European constitution merely a cynical omission by national politicians and bureaucrats whose primary aim is preserving as much of their powers as possible?
www.parapundit.com /archives/000496.html   (211 words)

  
 Gavekal Forum
On page 5, Anatole, back from a recent trip in Japan, confronts the poor policy choices.
On page 6, Anatole reviews the bad French numbers and what those might mean for Europe...
On page 4, Anatole takes down the myth that Gordon Brown is responsible for the UK Pensions mess.
gavekal.com /forum3/default.aspx?f=6   (383 words)

  
 EURSOC: Deadly Dull Consensus
Earlier this week EURSOC reported on how new Conservative leader David Cameron seems to be planning to bring the Tories as close to Labour as possible.
Today Anatole Kaletsky argues that Cameron's strategy risks blighting Britain with the stagnant "consensus politics" that has blocked change on the continent for decades.
Kaletsky says, correctly, that the slogan "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em" can't be applied to democratic politics - at least not by principled campaigners.
www.eursoc.com /news/fullstory.php/aid/920/Deadly_Dull_Consensus.html   (625 words)

  
 SPEAKERS for BUSINESS - Anatole Kaletsky
Anatole Kaletsky is Editor-at-Large of The Times of London, where he writes a twice-weekly column on economics, politics and international relations.
He is also a partner in GaveKal Research, a Hong Kong-based consultancy which provides economic and financial analysis to 200 financial institutions and multinational companies around the world.
If any of them is disabled or not correctly supported by your browser, some aspects of the SPEAKERS for BUSINESS site may not work correctly.
www.sfb.co.uk /cgi-bin/profile.cgi?s=37   (83 words)

  
 Opinions: 'Apolitical economy' by Anatole Kaletsky | Prospect Magazine May 2005 issue 110
The end of boom and bust means the politics has been taken out of economics.
Anatole Kaletsky is a columnist for the "Times"
British politicians have been brought up on the assumption that elections are won or lost on economics, and for most of the 20th century they have been broadly right.
www.prospect-magazine.co.uk /article_details.php?id=6863   (426 words)

  
 Anatole Kaletsky: Defeat is never pleasant | The World | The Australian   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Article no longer available "Anatole Kaletsky: Defeat is never pleasant"
Due to copyright restrictions, this story is no longer available at NEWS.com.au.
FOXTEL Digital - Pay nothing* for install + 1st month of the ultimate package.
www.theaustralian.news.com.au /story/0,20867,20239773-2703,00.html   (135 words)

  
 InvestorsInsight : Thoughts From The Frontline > Print View
I quoted a significant portion of a speech by Anatole Kaletsky from GaveKal.
Last week, we published the speech Anatole gave at the Morgan Stanley Venice conference, on the topic of the global imbalances".
In his speech Anatole argued that the imbalances should not be a concern for investors.
www.investorsinsight.com /otb_va_print.aspx?EditionID=327   (2311 words)

  
 Articles written by 'Anatole Kaletsky' for Prospect Magazine
Charles Grant Roger Liddle Gilles Andréani Michael Portillo Kirsty Hughes Anatole Kaletsky
Pamela Meadows Ruth Lister Anatole Kaletsky Patricia Hewitt Julian Le Grand David Willetts
Charles Goodhart Bernard Connolly Gavyn Davies Will Hutton Anatole Kaletsky David Marsh Giles Radice
www.prospect-magazine.co.uk /list.php?author=2268   (239 words)

  
 Thoughts from the Frontline
Then Charles and Louis-Vincent Gave, along with colleague Anatole Kaletsky answered in their book, Our Brave New World, that trade deficits do not in fact matter at all.
This has been occasioned by an essay by Anatole Kaletsky, which was part of a debate between himself and Stephen Roach (of Morgan Stanley).
As I often remind readers, it is important to read smart people (and Anatole is quite smart) with whom you disagree.
www.frontlinethoughts.com /article.asp?id=mwo051206   (4627 words)

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