AUP Events: Mark Blyth Guest Speaker on The Future of The Eurozone
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On Monday, November 9 Mark Blyth, Brown University Eastman Professor of Political Economy, spoke to the AUP community on the future of the Eurozone. Professor Blyth is the acclaimed author of the 2012 book Austerity: "The History of a Dangerous Idea". His talk addressed some of the challenging questions facing the European Union and by definition the global economy. Will Greece emerge from the insolvency ward of the monetary hospice? Is the future of the euro secure? What about the Eurozone itself? What are the various economic and political factors at play? Don’t miss hearing from a renowned international economist on this very timely and important topic.
Comments
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Wish I was a Professor
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Here is the video with visible slides: https://youtu.be/S31VLG8Qi78
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The people in the audience must all be hair stylists and sauce cooks.
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I have no audio here. What should I do ?
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Always get the slides from the speaker and overlay them afterwards :)
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Why not use the shot that shows the slides?
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I've watched a few of Mark's videos and read one of his books. I'm a Scot and an economist so understand his perspective and suggest he's way ahead of most but to prove his points needs to be lecturing more on what to do when the next crisis takes place
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The audience seems dumbstruck. It's sad that the 'Kassenwart' Schäuble does dictate the economic guidelines to EU.
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Thanks for the upload =). Why doesn't the camera show the slides?
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What study did he refer to prior to the sonnenschein mantel debreu theorem? (37:26) his accent is kinda unclear sometimes...
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why isn't anyone laughing at his jokes ??? And it would have been nice to actually see the slides!
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i wish it wasn't so zoomed in on him and we could see the slides. mark blyth is great! love his lectures... wish i had a professor like him.
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i doint understand. so you telling me the french banks bought bonds from other european nations that were promising higher yields right before introduction of the Euro? Then those bond payments had to be paid in Euro, and said bond nations were in trouble couldn't pay those high interests, which caused the french banks that bought those bonds to face possible failure risk, and now Austerity is enacted in order to pay those bonds so the banks won't fail???
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It would be nice if we could see the pictures.
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