HomeThemesTypesDBAbout
Showing: ◈ Adam Posen×
PIIE President Adam Posen says that the United Kingdom’s choice to close itself off from the European single market will damage Britain’s economy.
Adam Posen, Peterson Institute for International Economics president, discusses U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit speech on Friday.
This is the most chilling explanation of what Brexit will do to the UK economy after December. By @AdamPosen, President of the Peterson Institute for International Economics.
Adam S. Posen delivered the 2019 Data Analytics for Finance and Macro (DAFM) Annual Lecture at the DAFM Research Centre at King’s Business School in London.
Adam Posen, a former Bank of England policy maker, said most of Britain’s inflation problem stems from Brexit and that he’d vote for a half-point interest rate increase to curb an upward surge in prices.
@AdamPosen is speaking with @lizzzburden about food prices and inflation at #EconafterBrexit
@AdamPosen shows how Brexit has curtailed UK trade, FDI inflows, & immigration growth in a series of charts presented at @UKandEU's The Economics of Brexit conference 2022. #PIIECharts
Stagflation reflects the "realities that Brexit has wrought", economist Adam Posen said.
The economic fallout from leaving the EU is becoming all too apparent.
Boris Johnson has caused "untold damage," according to Peterson Institute President Adam Posen. / "He's a prime minister who thinks he's a president," says Posen.
As small businesses crumble, shelves get emptier and the care-worker shortage intensifies, life outside the EU is having a dire effect on many of us. Why aren’t politicians talking about it?
Former Bank of England policymaker Adam Posen insists 80% of high price growth is due to Britain leaving EU.
Brexit has reduced UK trade openness, foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows, and immigration growth. New border frictions and higher transport costs pose new barriers to trade, and FDI inflows are unlikely to return to levels reached in the 1990s and 2000s.
Red tape continues to frustrate small businesses as the hunt for the sunlit uplands goes on.
World-renowned economist Adam Posen reveals some tough truths about Britain’s situation.
The US economist and former Monetary Policy Committee member on how Britain became so poor and where Labour is going wrong.