36 Quotes by Michael Spence
- Author Michael Spence
-
Quote
A global economy that is levering up, while unable to generate enough aggregate demand to achieve potential growth, is on a risky path.
- Share
- Author Michael Spence
-
Quote
There is no question that the recovery from the global recession triggered by the 2008 financial crisis has been unusually lengthy and anemic.
- Share
- Author Michael Spence
-
Quote
Monetary policy should never have been expected to shift economies to a sustainably higher growth trajectory by itself.
- Share
- Author Michael Spence
-
Quote
For highly indebted governments, low interest rates are critical to keep debt levels sustainable and ease pressure to restructure debt and recapitalize banks. The shift to a high sovereign-debt-yield equilibrium would make it impossible to achieve fiscal balance.
- Share
- Author Michael Spence
-
Quote
Next to my family, it seems clear to me that the educational institutions and the teachers from whom I had the privilege of learning were especially important.
- Share
- Author Michael Spence
-
Quote
Productivity gains are vital to long-term growth because they typically translate into higher incomes, in turn boosting demand. That process takes time, of course - especially if, say, the initial recipients of increased income already have a high savings rate.
- Share
- Author Michael Spence
-
Quote
Reforms aimed at increasing an economy's flexibility are always hard - and even more so at a time of weak growth - because they require eliminating protections for vested interests in the short term for the sake of greater long-term prosperity.
- Share
- Author Michael Spence
-
Quote
Properly targeted public investment can do much to boost economic performance, generating aggregate demand quickly, fueling productivity growth by improving human capital, encouraging technological innovation, and spurring private-sector investment by increasing returns.
- Share
- Author Michael Spence
-
Quote
China's economic transformation began with the introduction in the 1980s of market incentives in the agricultural sector. These reforms were followed by a gradual opening to the global economy, a process that accelerated in the early 1990s.
- Share