Katrine Linda Mathilda Kielos-Marçal (née Kielos; born 24 October 1983[1]) is a Swedish author, journalist and correspondent for Swedish daily newspaper Dagens Nyheter.
Kielos-Marçal earlier served as chief editorialist of the Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet where she mainly wrote articles about Swedish and international financial politics and feminism. She has a Bachelor's degree from Uppsala universitet[2] and has also been a freelance writer for Expressens culture page.[3] In 2013, the Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter awarded Marçal the third annual Lagercrantzen prize for critics.[3] She received the Jolo Prize for Journalism in 2015.
Kielos-Marçal has interviewed leading economists and investors like Nassim Nicholas Taleb and Steve Eisman as part of her work for the Swedish financial news channel EFN. Her interview with former Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis about the European debt crisis has been viewed more than 1 million times on YouTube. In 2015, she was listed as one of BBC's 100 Women.[4]
Apart from her journalism, Kielos-Marçal has also written two books so far. Most famous of these are Det enda könet (The only sex, in Swedish), discusses the relationship between economics and patriarchy, was nominated for the August Prize in 2012.[5] An English translation by Saskia Vogel was published in the United Kingdom under the title Who Cooked Adam Smith's Dinner?.[6] The book has since been translated to 20 languages. Margaret Atwood called it “A smart, funny, readable book on economics, money [and] women.”.[7]
See main article: articles and Who cooked Adam Smith's dinner?. The book Who Cooked Adam Smith's Dinner? from 2015 written by Marçal is feminist critique of economics that aims to expose the historical neglect of women's roles, particularly in domestic spheres. Marçal questions the simplistic paradigm of the "economic man" and highlights the influence of neoliberal ideology within contemporary economic thought. She traces the evolution of economics, where a economistic outlook was first seen as absurd and taboo only to gradually become normalized, exemplified by Gary Becker's ideas.[8] Marçal reflects on Keynes' prediction (that was pessimistic in terms of growth) of a world in 2030 where waged work gives way to art, poetry and contemplation, contrasting it with what she refers to as the contemporary obsession with economic thought.[9] She underscores how the notion of the "rational individuals" blinds us to societal issues and as well as comments that "What is good for the rich and powerful is almost always 'good for the economy".[10]
It was reported in 2012 that she was living in Hertfordshire, England.[11] Since 2014, she has been married to British garden designer Guy Marçal, from whom she took her current surname.[12]