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by ch00 4548 days ago
I always see at least one ad hominem remark made in any thread that might relate to Krugman. I'm actually curious, as someone who is not embedded in finance or economics, what are people's detractions against this guy (who won a Nobel prize)?
4 comments

A lot of it has to do with the fact that he is a mainstream economist who pointedly makes fun of the ideas promulgated by the Chicago School, Ayn Rand and the general sort of things you find at mises.org and other right wing watering holes.

I suspect most of his critics are the sort of folks who think that they would be billionaires if only their taxes were low enough and governments weren't so restrictive about things like labor laws and environmental regulations.

Yep, the problem with Krugman is that he only "makes fun" of opposing ideas (and not just in the realm of economics). As someone incapable of considering other viewpoints on their own merits and engaging them in good faith, he's not worth taking seriously as a columnist.

He's only one among many such types penning editorials for NYT.

I'd say there are three main reason, in decreasing order of legitimacy: 1) he uses his academic credentials to write a more-or-less partisan column 2) a lot of the time he can't just disagree with someone, he has to call them an idiot and corrupt as well 3) he's a keynesian and hard money supporters are loud on the internet

When he sticks to economics (his blog has a higher percentage of economic material compared to his column) he is definitely worth reading and shouldn't be dismissed with ad hominem attacks.

Partisanship accusations are what people make when they can't rebut the actual argument.
Krugman is known to throw ad hominem remarks himself + when criticizing BTC he openly advocates for government violence as fundamentally good (without mentioning that everyone involved in bitcoin are doing it voluntarily and not dragging others against their will). With that attitude this man deserves to be called names, IMO.
Citation?
"To fight this recession the Fed needs more than a snapback; it needs soaring household spending to offset moribund business investment. And to do that, as Paul McCulley of Pimco put it, Alan Greenspan needs to create a housing bubble to replace the Nasdaq bubble." - Paul Krugman, 2002

He doesn't always give the best advice...

It did work, it killed the recession.

Had there not been CDO's threatening to take down the world economy, the credit drying up in 2008 would have been far less severe.

That said, I believe he's describing, not advising

i don't think you could possibly read that quote and think that he was advising that there be a housing bubble...