Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American professor Kenneth Rogoff.
Last updated on December 3, 2024.
Kenneth Saul Rogoff is an American economist and chess Grandmaster. He is the Thomas D. Cabot Professor of Public Policy and professor of economics at Harvard University.
Workers are not being exploited. But if their share of growth doesn't increase, this could be a potential cause of social tension worldwide.
Marx's theory that only capitalists benefit from capitalism and workers are exploited was completely wrong. Nothing could have been further from the truth. Workers earned more as economies grew.
People aren't looking at how they're doing, but rather at how their neighbors are doing and at their own place in society.
We all use cash in our everyday life, but we don't use hundred-dollar bills. We're not using 500-euro notes. And yet these account for mountains of cash out there. I think they're being used in tax evasion and by criminals of all types.
It comes as no surprise that average Americans have a different perception of the economy than (US President) George W. Bush and his friends. They can play around with statistics as much as they want, but it's clear that we have an unfair distribution of wealth.
Russia exists in the context of open global economy and is a part of it
We're not just going to see mid-sized banks go under in the next few months, we're going to see a whopper.
If you didn't have employers able to pay off the books and off the record safely in cash, you wouldn't have illegal immigration on nearly the scale that we do.
Cash is very easy to hide. It's easy to hoard. It's easy to move, especially these large bills.
Today, chess programs have become so good that even grandmasters sometimes struggle to understand the logic behind some of their moves.
It is vital for Russia to normalize relations with the rest of the world. You shouldn't isolate your economy
The Indians and Chinese have become brilliant chess professionals. They get on a plane and play all over the world. This has led to dramatic pressure on incomes. Nowadays, the best chess player in Argentina can no longer make a living playing chess.
The assertion that everyone benefits simultaneously from free trade is simply incorrect.
... far more people make a living as professional chess players today than ever before. Thanks partly to the availability of computer programs and online matches, there has been a mini-boom in chess interest among young people in many countries.
Russia depends on natural resources way too much. Russian economy is not diversified enough
Unbridled capitalism will lead to some very real problems.
It's quite astonishing how much money people make in the hedge fund business and in the private equity field, and how well-off affluent families really are.
I think that a lot of the money - these big bills - is used to facilitate tax evasion and crime.
Unbridled capitalism in the United States can't be sustained socially. It leads to tensions.
Global markets have a much bigger effect on prices and wages in the U.S. and elsewhere than they did before.
Worrying about inflation now is like worrying about the measles when you might get the plague.
Why are oil prices so low? First, energy consumption growth rates in developing markets have decreased. This is particularly noticeable in China. Second, new technologies are being developed and the shale gas revolution in the USA has taken place
I don't think it's time yet to eliminate cash, but I propose having a less-cash society, not a cashless one.
I tell my children that a man like Bill Gates has a personal fortune of $100 billion. They can't even comprehend that. Then I explain that he has more money than some countries.
We Americans are not about to stop borrowing as long as they give us money for nothing.
The problem - at least in the United States - is not that people can't find jobs. The problem is that they're no longer finding jobs that provide them with dignity and decent social status.
There has been a noticeable decline in the labor factor in all wealthy countries in the past 20 years. The rich are getting richer, but those at the lower end aren't moving ahead as quickly as the capitalists.