One might think that this would give a born-again Keynesian macroeconomist like Paul Krugman pause.
From the theatlantic.com
For the first decade of his career, Roubini, 51, was a well-regarded but hardly renowned macroeconomist.
From the time.com
Is there any macroeconomist out there among the readers who could tell me where this begins to be good?
From the guardian.co.uk
Now we consider the situation from a macroeconomist.
From the economist.com
He was a Nobel Laureate in Economics, and generally is portrayed as a macroeconomist sympathetic to Keynesian views.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Tesco's Philip Clarke is a shrewd observer of the retail market, but, like many British business executives, not a macroeconomist.
From the guardian.co.uk
The only reader who raised concerns about including the unemployment prediction was her husband, another Berkeley macroeconomist.
From the swampland.time.com
His drawback is that he is another microeconomist in an administration with no prominent macroeconomist since Ms Romer and Larry Summers left.
From the economist.com
Instead, in late 2008 it was almost impossible to find a single prominent macroeconomist who was loudly and clearly insisting that monetary stimulus was the way to prevent a severe recession.
From the economist.com
More examples
An economist who specializes in macroeconomics
(macroeconomy) The economy looked at as a whole or in terms of major components measured by aggregates such as gross domestic product, the balance of payments and related links, in the context of the national economy. ...
(macroeconomy) national performance and policy on money, prices, inflation, interest rates and investment, output, growth, trade, exchange rates, national budgets and budget deficits, systemic causes of unemployment. ...