Martin Wolf is chief economics commentator at the Financial Times, London. He was awarded the CBE (Commander of the British Empire) in 2000 “for services to financial journalism”.
He drove radical reform of an anti-market policy regime that was strangling growth
A critical mass of shareholder activists are forcing companies to adjust
How should governments take on bold challenges such as climate change?
The ECB president on how Europe can keep up with the US
There is a danger that animal spirits and the propensity to invest expire in a vicious downward spiral
As it faces fresh challenges, Europe should remember that neither economic integration nor convergence among member states was inevitable
The renowned development economist on why migration is essential
Opportunities exist for the UK and its European neighbours, but they must grasp the nettle of economic reform
The FT's chief economics commentator speaks to the former US Treasury Secretary
We can draw important lessons from the UK’s varied experience
Are American pathologies the necessary price of economic dynamism?
The deal on financing agreed at COP29 is too little, too late
This is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to create a system able to enhance both prosperity and security
Martin Wolf selects his must-read titles
Tariffs, especially on one country, will lead to an unholy economic and political mess
It is so much easier to blame the disappearance of these US jobs on China than on domestic consumers and automation
Human inability to act in advance of distant perils is preventing necessary action now
Relations with both the US and EU are now called into question
The country needs a strategy that takes on its most obvious weaknesses
The British people will hope that higher spending delivers the better services they want
Were the former president to return to the White House, it would encourage rightwing populists everywhere
But significant downside risks will continue to pose a challenge for policymakers
Unfortunately, policymakers have made things worse by resorting to temporary palliatives
The chancellor’s task is made much harder by structural weaknesses in the UK economy
His new suggestions would have a far bigger impact than the relatively modest ‘starter protectionism’ of his first term