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Many economists respected by Republicans, such as Nobel Laureate Robert Mundell, Brian Domitrovic and Judy Shelton praise the gold standard.
FORBES: The Gold Standard: A Litmus Test For GOP Candidates
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Robert Mundell to find credible growth recipes (although one hopes it will).
FORBES: Dear Budget Supercommittee: It's Time To Grow Up
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In 1974 Columbia economics professor Robert Mundell gave an interview to Wall Street Journal editorial writer Jude Wanniski that changed the world.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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Beginning in the 1960s, economists notably Robert Mundell, known as the father of the euro developed a framework to figure out whether the benefits of common currencies outweigh the costs.
WSJ: Troubles in Euro Zone Offer Chance to Fix Its Flaws
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For economists such as Robert Mundell and others, who saw huge benefits in shared currencies but had despaired of politicians giving up monetary control, the euro is an exciting experiment.
ECONOMIST: The gains outweigh the losses
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The best-known theory for understanding why a country's current-account balance might rise or fall was developed by Robert Mundell, a Canadian economist, and Marcus Fleming, a Briton, in the early 1960s.
ECONOMIST: Figures to fret about
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The current champion of that idea is Robert Mundell, winner of 1999's Nobel Prize for Economics and a professor at Columbia University who advised the European Union for 30 years, right up through the adoption of the euro in 1999.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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When FORBES GLOBAL celebrates its own anniversary at age five next year, we may have more to say on the great economic thinkers of the age, from Keynes and Hayek through Milton Friedman and Robert Mundell to those who will carry the debate from here on.
FORBES: 85 and kicking
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It was made by the founder of supply-side economics, the future economics Nobelist Robert A. Mundell, in 1971.
FORBES: Supply-Side Economics Takes Two To Tango
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When Robert A. Mundell won his Nobel Prize in economics in 1999, he spoke of the causes of the Great Depression in his acceptance speech.
FORBES: The Claims Against Gold Still Aren't Sticking