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Zombie ideas" is a term used by Paul Krugman in his book "Arguing with Zombies". These are ideas that, despite being debunked with substantial evidence, continue to persist in political and economic discourse. They are called "zombie" ideas because they refuse to die. Krugman, as an economist, aims to fight these ideas by providing evidence-based arguments against them. The book is a collection of his efforts to debunk such persistent, yet flawed, ideas.
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Entry-level wages for male high school graduates have fallen 23% since 1973. The percentage of high school graduates working in the private sector with health benefits had declined from 65% in 1980 to 29% in 2009. The United States has become a society where less-educated men had great difficulty finding jobs with fair wages and benefits. This lack of opportunities leads to these men being less likely to participate in the workforce or get married. Social changes taking place in America's working class are the result of sharply rising inequality and not its cause, Krugman says.
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“Zombie ideas” simply refuse to die despite mountains of evidence to disprove them. How do you fight them? Paul Krugman, Nobel Prize winner in Economi...
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