Martin Wolf has a stab at the numbers involved in his latest column in the FT.
The Financial Times's Martin Wolf said it would go down as the "sigh of relief Davos".
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Although I almost always disagree with economists like Paul Krugman and Martin Wolf, I avidly read them.
The FT's Martin Wolf, for example, made this argument very strongly last week.
When Martin Wolf writes, he reflects what the cognoscenti of Britain are thinking.
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So do the likes of Paul Krugman and the FT commentator Martin Wolf.
Martin Wolf and Gillian Tett, FT editors, did a superb job of drawing out the puzzling tensions acutely active in the global economy.
Martin Wolf, economist and chief commentator at the Financial Times, agreed with Weisbrot that the EU-IMF plan for Greece is impossible.
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And that is what Martin Wolf, the highly regarded columnist for the Financial Times in London, suggests that Great Britain should do.
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Martin Wolf in the Financial Times is very critical of a recent speech by David Cameron explaining why there can be no more borrowing.
However, critics of the government's approach, such as Martin Wolf of the FT, would say there's a hidden assumption in this whole line of argument.
As I have noted many times, there are those who would say it is not: notably Martin Wolf, Larry Summers and the economist I featured in my report, Bill Martin.
Aside from its columnists who are lively reads, particularly Martin Wolf, The Financial Times is a bare bones publication with meager investigative journalism and little color added on breaking stories.
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Two others, Martin Wolf, the Financial Times' chief economics rottweiler, and Clare Spottiswoode, a former utility regulator, are said to be more provocative but not yet obviously wedded to any position.
As Martin Wolf of the Financial Times in London suggests, the strategy of EU-wide synchronized liberalizing, the great hope of recent times, appears to be out the window and a new round of intramural competition is likely to take its place.
As Martin Wolf of the FT pointed out this morning on Today, this German fear of becoming banker to the entire eurozone even infects the capacity of the European Central Bank to buy the debt of Italy and Spain in sufficient quantity to prevent their sovereign borrowing costs from ballooning to potentially lethal levels.
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