Politics

Harvard’s Ken Rogoff: Virus crisis could be as bad as anything for 150 Years

'I would give the US response a three. We should be ashamed'

U.S. President Donald Trumpspeaks during a Coronavirus Task Force news conference
U.S. President Donald Trumpspeaks during a Coronavirus Task Force news conference Photo: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA/Getty Images

Harvard economist Kenneth Rogoff knows what a financial crisis looks like. He studied 800 years of crises with fellow economist Carmen Reinhart. In this pandemic, Rogoff sees the global economy possibly headed for a Depression-era like hit, with emerging markets, corporate debt and an election year making the situation more precarious.

FN's sister title Barron’s spoke with Rogoff — who co-wrote This Time Is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly with Reinhart in 2009 — about how this coronavirus crisis compares with the Great Depression, how it could morph into a financial crisis, and what election years and crises have in common. This is an edited version of the discussion.

WSJ Logo
Pro Bono or Pro Nono? Law Firms Split on Fulfilling Deals With TrumpExternal link

Pro Bono or Pro Nono? Law Firms Split on Fulfilling Deals With Trump