Finance & economics | Free exchange

Economists explore the consequences of steering technological progress

Global warming and AI raise questions about how to manage innovation

SINCE THE ancient Greeks, at least, people have recognised that civilisational progress tends to create havoc as well as opportunity. Economists have had little time for such concerns. To them, technological progress is the wellspring of long-run growth, and the only interesting question is how best to coax more innovation out of the system. But in the face of looming social challenges, from climate change to inequality, some are now asking whether, when it comes to innovation, what sort is as relevant as how much.

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Prometheus undirected”

The horrible housing blunder: Why the obsession with home ownership is so harmful

From the January 18th 2020 edition

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Could war in the Gulf push oil to $100 a barrel?

Missiles are flying over a region that supplies a third of the world’s crude

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How bond investors soured on France

They now regard the euro zone’s second-largest economy as riskier than Spain



Why economic warfare nearly always misses its target

There is no such thing as a strategic commodity

A tonne of public debt is never made public

New research suggests governments routinely hide their borrowing