Alphaville's Jemima Kelly and Izabella Kaminska sat down with Yanis Varoufakis, former finance minister of Greece and current organiser of a trans-European group of what he calls "radical Europeanists" — in favor of union, without deflation or austerity. Mr Varoufakis answers criticism from the left, pointing out that even if the euro or the EU were poorly conceived, leaving them now would have catastrophic consequences for the poor. He gives a brief history of economic thought, connecting Joseph Schumpeter back to Karl Marx, saying it's not so clear that leftists know what Marx, a globalist, would be saying today. Oh, and also: Pamela Anderson.
Angela Nagle on the online culture wars
Nouriel Roubini on the US-China Thucydides Trap
Jay Shambaugh on the tools to fight the next recession
Joel Mokyr and the curse of Adam
Will Davies on populism, data and experts
Robert Kaplan on jobs, oil and credit
Ajay Royan searches for the next growth frontier
Banking culture since the crisis
Kimberly Clausing makes the case for open economies
Alphachat Live! Raghuram Rajan and Ashley Putnam on community
The IMF's Tobias Adrian on stability
Bonus: IMF's Vitor Gaspar on debt
Odette Lienau on the most complicated debt restructuring in history
Brexit: Too late now to get the milk out of the tea
Immigration: comparing this wave to the last
Andrew Keen on the internet: misery is not the answer
Waltraud Schelkle and Ashoka Mody: Is the eurozone fixable?
What China wants: Brad Setser, and Freya Beamish
Germany's China shock
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