Updates

  1. Anti-Trust Ruling Against Google is Based on INET-Funded Research into its Monopolistic Advertising Practices

    Apr 21, 2025

    New York Times & others

  2. Bloomberg Cited Perry Mehrling’s INET Book, Money and Empire

    Apr 8, 2025

    Bloomberg

  3. The Guardian Cited Thomas Freguson’s INET Paper published in International Journal of Political Economy

    Apr 8, 2025

    The Guardian

  4. Barron’s Cited Fred Ledley’s INET Working Paper on the NIH’s Role in Approved Pharmaceuticals

    Apr 7, 2025

    Barron’s

  5. Fred Ledley’s INET-Funded Research is in the Top 5% of all Research Monitored by Altmetric (≈28 million)

    Mar 7, 2025

    Altmetric

  6. The New York Review Cited MacLean’s INET Working Paper on Milton Friedman’s Role in Expanding Vouchers

    Feb 21, 2025

    The New York Review

  7. The LA Times Cited Ledley’s INET Working Paper on the importance of the NIH’s Investment in Approved Pharmaceuticals

    Feb 14, 2025

    The Los Angeles Times

  8. Wall Street Journal Cited Wright’s INET Working Paper on the Fortune 500 of 1812

    Feb 10, 2025

    Wall Street Journal

  9. The Financial Times Cited Lazonick’s INET-Funded Research Into Big Pharma’s Financialized Business Model

    Feb 7, 2025

    The Financial Times

  10. Appelbaum and Batt Cite Their INET-Funded Research in the Boston Globe

    Feb 3, 2025

    Boston Globe

  11. Phenomenal World Interviewed INET Research Director Thomas Ferguson on the 2024 US Election

    Dec 13, 2024

    Phenomenal World

  12. NY Times and Rolling Stone Cited Fred Ledley’s INET Working Paper on the NIH’s Investment in FDA Approved Drugs

    Dec 5, 2024

    NY Times (12/1/2024) & Rolling Stone (12/3/2024)

  13. NBER Published Anton Korinek’s INET-Funded Research

    Nov 13, 2024

    NBER: Concentrating Intelligence: Scaling and Market Structure in Artificial Intelligence

  14. The Washington Post and Sen. Markey Cite Appelbaum and Batt’s INET Working Paper on REITs and the Reshaping of Healthcare

    Oct 18, 2024

    Sen. Markey’s “Steward Healthcare Report” Washington Post

  15. The 2024 Nobel Prize in Economics

    Oct 14, 2024

    INET is very happy to congratulate this year’s winners of the Nobel Prize in Economics: Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson, and James Robinson.

  16. Smart Energy Quotes INET-Grantee Michael Grubb on UCL’s Net Zero Market Design Center

    Sep 17, 2024

    Smart Energy

  17. Rolling Stone, Salon, and Bloomberg cite Ledley’s INET-supported research on government seed funding and drug price negotiations

    Aug 22, 2024

    “…the prohibition on negotiating price was kind of a poison pill in the original Medicare Act.”

  18. INET Welcomes Sarah Abell as its Newest Governing Board Member

    Jul 23, 2024

    New INET Governing Board Member Announcement

  19. Appelbaum and Batt’s INET working paper is repeatedly cited in testimony for the Senate HELP Committee’s subcommittee hearing

    Jun 4, 2024

    Subcommittee hearing: When Health Care Becomes Wealth Care: How Corporate Greed Puts Patient Care and Health Workers at Risk

  20. South China Morning Post cited Galbraith’s INET article on American industrial policy.

    May 31, 2024

    “Failed at free enterprise? Well, try industrial policy, China style”

  21. Forbes Magazine featured the INET-funded "Berlin Summit: Winning Back the People"

    May 30, 2024

    “Governments Must Regain Voter Trust With New Economic Policies”

  22. NBER Published Christian Moser’s and Iacopo Morchio's INET-Funded Research

    May 8, 2024

    The Gender Pay Gap: Micro Sources and Macro Consequences

  23. London Review of Books Cites INET as Important and Influential in Understanding Markets and Capitalism

    Apr 22, 2024

    London Review of Books

  24. The New York Times cites Servaas Storm’s INET Working Paper on Bernanke and Blanchard’s Inflation Explanation

    Apr 12, 2024

    Peter Coy, in an OpEd for the New York Times, cited Servaas Storm’s INET working paper criticizing Bernanke and Blanchard’s inflation explanation.

  25. Rolling Stone cites Fred Ledley’s INET working paper on the NIH seed funding of pharmaceuticals

    Mar 31, 2024

    A Rolling Stone article by Andrew Perez cited Fred Ledley’s INET working paper on the NIH seed funding of pharmaceuticals.

  26. INET in India (February 2024)

    Feb 14, 2024

    The media coverage of the INET team’s February 2024 visit to India. Prof. Michael Spence, Chair of the Commission on Global Economic Transformation (CGET), along with INET Governing Board Chair Dr. Rohinton Medhora, and INET President Dr. Rob Johnson, took part in this visit.

  27. Business Insider quotes and cites Lazonick’s INET-funded research on Boeing’s stock buybacks.

    Feb 12, 2024

    Business Insider quotes and cites William Lazonick’s INET-funded research on Boeing’s stock buybacks. Cross-posted in MSN, Yahoo Finance, Business News, AOL, News Break, Star News, and Web Today.

  28. The Economic Times quotes Rob Johnson’s presentation at the Global Business Summit

    Feb 12, 2024

    The Economic Times quotes Rob Johnson’s presentation at the Global Business Summit in India. Cross posted in Pune Media and BM Business News

  29. Times Now News features and quotes Rob Johnson’s presentation at the Global Business Summit

    Feb 12, 2024

    Times Now News features and quotes Rob Johnson’s presentation at the Global Business Summit in India.

  30. The White House Cites INET's Working Paper on Government Funding of Pharma R&D

    Dec 8, 2023

    The White House cited Ledley’s INET working paper on the NIH’s seed funding of FDA approved pharmaceuticals in their fact sheet on new actions to lower health care and prescription drug costs.

  31. INET Welcomes Jamie Daves as its Newest Governing Board Member

    Dec 4, 2023

    New INET Governing Board Member Announcement

  32. Lynn Parramore's Interview with Jim Chanos is Featured in a Dozen Publications

    Nov 13, 2023

    Lynn Parramore’s INET interview with Chanos is suggested reading in the FT, and has been cross-posted or summarized in the following media outlets: Naked Capitalism, MSN, Yahoo, Business Insider, AOL, Markets Insider, Latest Finance, Trade for Profit, Tech Telegraph, Best Stocks, Motor Mouth, Trading View India, Trading View, Benzinga, Hataf News, Forex TV, Business News and WN.

  33. Washington Monthly Recognizes Rob Johnson and INET’s Role in the Shift that is Underway in the Economy

    Oct 30, 2023

    Washington Monthly

  34. The Atlantic Cites Eileen Appelbaum and Rosemary Batt’s INET Working Paper on Private Equity in Healthcare

    Oct 29, 2023

    The Atlantic

  35. INET congratulates Dr. Claudia Goldin

    Oct 13, 2023

    We heartily congratulate her on receiving the Nobel Prize in Economics.

  36. INET Welcomes Dr. Neva Goodwin as its Newest Governing Board Member

    Sep 25, 2023

    New INET Governing Board Member Announcement

  37. Bentley University Study Shows NIH Investment in New Drug Approvals Is Comparable to Investment by Pharmaceutical Industry

    Apr 28, 2023

    INET-funded study: Government provides early investment in pharmaceutical innovation

  38. IJPE Article Available Now: The Roots of Right-Wing Populism - Donald Trump in 2016

    Apr 3, 2023

    Ferguson et al.’s revised INET working paper on Trump and the 2016 election is temporarily available on open access from the International Journal of Political Economy.

  39. Herman Daly (1938-2022)

    Nov 3, 2022

    The economist Herman Daly passed away on October 28, 2022. Read one of the last interviews he gave.

  40. INET Congratulates the Winners of the 2022 Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel

    Oct 11, 2022

    Ben Bernanke, Douglas Diamond, and Philip Dybvig were honored for their work on financial instability

  41. Rohinton Medhora Appointed INET Board Chair

    Oct 4, 2022

    Medhora has served on INET’s Board since 2012 and is a distinguished fellow and former president of the Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI).

  42. Michael Grubb on BBC Panorama

    Sep 5, 2022

    Michael Grubb appears on BBC Panorama to discuss his INET research on European energy markets

  43. Rob Johnson on Background Briefing with Ian Masters

    Jul 20, 2022

    Rob Johnson joins Background Briefing with Ian Masters to discuss public concern about inflation

  44. INET Research on Pharma in The American Prospect

    Jun 28, 2022

    Ekaterina Cleary, Matthew Jackson and Fred Ledley’s INET research on government innovation in pharmaceuticals was cited in The American Prospect

  45. Michael Greenberger in Salon

    Jun 17, 2022

    Michael Greenberg’s INET working paper on derivatives regulation is featured in Salon

  46. Moritz Schularick in The Economist

    May 13, 2022

    INET Fellow Moritz Schularick writes in The Economist that Germany should immediately cut off Russain gas

  47. Lynn Parramore on The Healthcare Policy Podcast

    May 5, 2022

    Lynn Parramore discusses her INET article on neoliberalism and mental health with The Healthcare Policy Podcast

  48. Lynn Parramore's Article Cited in The New Republic

    Apr 20, 2022

    Lynn Parramore’s INET article is cited in The New Republic

  49. Rob Johnson Joins WDET's "Tracked and Traced"

    Mar 9, 2022

    Rob Johnson discusses surveillance capitalism

  50. William Lazonick's INET-Funded Research Featured in The Daily Poster

    Mar 3, 2022

    The Daily Poster cites INET research on stock buybacks

  51. Review of Mangee's INET-CUP Book in Seeking Alpha

    Feb 23, 2022

    Nicholas Mangee, associate professor of finance in the Parker College of Business at Georgia Southern University, begins How Novelty and Narratives Drive the Stock Market with a statement that encompasses the problem he tackles and the compelling reason for investor interest in the new-style thinking that addresses it. This detailed stock market study attempts to extend Nobel Prize-winner Robert Shiller’s development of narrative economics, albeit Mangee’s focus is on novelty information embedded in textual news narratives. Using a set of text-based indices to capture the uncertainty and ambiguity in unscheduled news, Mangee measures the impact of news narratives on equity behavior.

  52. William Lazonick's INET-Funded Research Is Cited in Quartz

    Feb 17, 2022

    “What is the motivation for tax avoidance? To maximize profits and juice the stock price, of course. A research team led by William Lazonick at the University of Massachusetts reports in Harvard Business Review that from 2009 to 2019, S&P 500 companies spent over 90% of net income on buybacks and dividends, with the highest levels achieved after the 2017 tax cuts, in 2018 and 2019. Taking on corporate debt to finance share repurchases has become commonplace. Never mind that share buybacks deplete corporate treasuries of cash to weather setbacks and to fund productive investment in labor and R&D.”

  53. OSF and INET Complete 12 Year Collaboration on New Economic Thinking

    Jan 5, 2022

    The Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) and the Open Society Foundations (OSF) announced that OSF has made a gift of $23.5 million to INET. The grant marks the completion of the organizations’ 12-year collaboration.

  54. William Lazonick’s INET funded research is cited in the American Prospect.

    Oct 26, 2021

    “Nobody but those top corporate executives was really paying attention to share buybacks until the middle of the last decade, when University of Massachusetts economist William Lazonick wrote an article for the Harvard Business Review documenting the surprising and depressing fact that the companies that had belonged to the Fortune 500 during the previous decade had spent so much on share buybacks and dividends that the total was either equal to or actually exceeded their profits.”

  55. INET in the News: Lynn Parramore’s INET Interview with Jim Chanos is cited by The New York Times

    Oct 22, 2021

    Paul Krugman links to INET article

  56. Thomas Ferguson is quoted in Truthout's interview with Chomsky

    Jun 17, 2021

    “The most recent study, using sophisticated AI techniques, dispels “notions that anyone’s opinion about public policy outside of the top 10 percent of affluent Americans independently helps to explain policy.” Thomas Ferguson, the leading academic scholar of the power of the “tools and tyrants” of government, concludes: “Knowing the policy area, the preferences of the top 10 percent, and the views of a handful of interest groups suffice to explain policy changes with impressive accuracy.” — Jared Rodriguez, Truthout

  57. Rob Johnson, Pia Malaney, and other INET scholars have signed a letter in the FT in response to a call for a return to austerity

    Jun 15, 2021

    “Moreover, too little government spending can increase company bankruptcies and lead to less investment in research and development, hurting the supply side of our economies — potentially exacerbating inflationary pressures. The EU has gone through a decade of demand stagnation, performing well below its productive potential. Inflationary forces of the 1970s are no longer intact, not least because of declining labour bargaining power, changing demographics, high inequality and private debt overhang. Without concerted fiscal expansion to scale-up investment and protect the vulnerable, aggregate demand will remain low and standards of living will stagnate. Instead of fetishising fiscal discipline, we should prioritise more important social, economic and environmental outcomes — like creating well-paid green jobs, lifting millions out of poverty and implementing green infrastructure projects.” — From Frank van Lerven and others, Financial Times

  58. Thomas Ferguson's research is cited in Noam Chomsky's interview with Jacobin

    Jun 11, 2021

    “Well, one place to look always is: “Where’s the money? Who funds Congress?” Actually, there’s a very fine, careful study of this by the leading scholar who deals with funding issues and politics, Thomas Ferguson. He and his colleagues did a study in which they investigated a simple question: “What’s the correlation over many years between campaign funding and electability to Congress?” The correlation is almost a straight line. That’s the kind of close correlation that you rarely get in the social sciences: greater the funding, higher the electability.” — Noam Chomsky in an interview with Jacobin

  59. Rob Johnson and other commissioners sign a public letter on the importance of coming together to fight climate change

    Jun 8, 2021

    “Overcoming the COVID-19 crisis and ensuring a rapid and equitable economic recovery are only two of the challenges we must meet in 2021. This year will also be a crucial one for achieving the goal of net-zero carbon dioxide emissions by mid-century.” — Project Syndicate

  60. Weil and Goldman’s INET working paper is summarized in Law 360

    Jun 7, 2021

    “Last year, Weil and his former top adviser, Tanya Goldman, spoke with Law360 about their “concentric circles” model, laid out in a recent working paper published by the Institute for New Economic Thinking. They propose a three-tiered system that starts with a set of core rights linked to all types of work, like basic protections against unsafe conditions, discrimination and harassment, and nonpayment. The second tier of rights includes things like collective bargaining, and access to workers’ compensation and unemployment insurance, which businesses would have to provide unless they could affirmatively prove that their workers aren’t employees. The outermost tier of rights seeks to make benefits portable for workers facing uncertainty.” — Mike LaSusa, Law 360

  61. Rob and Spence’s session at the Trento Festival is quoted in L’Adigetto

    Jun 7, 2021

    “What is the real meaning of the return of the state in a world that after the pandemic starts a boom in the technology sector with the advantages and risks that this entails? The response of the Nobel laureate in economics Michael Spence during the discussion with Robert Johnson, president of Inet (Institute for New Economic Thinking) was clear: “I believe that the return of the Statto means many things. The state is very important for social protection, to remedy the failures of the market. There will be changes in the models of globalization but people think about the state and not about globalization. And the state must be able to respond to citizens’ expectations.” And in the face of what Johnson called “growing political despair” ( even as Biden has made progress in restoring confidence in citizens after the inequalities caused by the pandemic ), a new political class is needed.” -L’Adigetto

  62. Melissa Hathaway discussed her INET article on NPR

    Jun 3, 2021

    Melissa Hathaway joined NPR to discuss cybersecurity and the growing threat of ransomware attacks.

  63. Thomas Ferguson's research is cited in Nonprofit Quarterly

    Jun 3, 2021

    “How talented is the right? Maybe not so much. The late Yale political scientist Charles Lindblom, author of the 1977 book Politics and Markets (and onetime American Political Science Association president), would have told Giridharadas that in a capitalist economy, business elites enjoy a “privileged” position. This position does not always align with party, but it alters the field of play. Lindblom’s position is backed by others. Thomas Ferguson wrote about the investment theory of politics in 1990s. In the past decade, Ben Page of Northwestern has covered similar ground.” — Steve Dubb, Nonprofit Quarterly

  64. Lynn Parramore appeared on The Zero Hour to discuss her latest INET articles

    Jun 3, 2021

    “It’s interesting he [Josephus Daniels] may not have been the most die-hard racist, but he just saw that racism is how you win elections. I think we see echoes of that today. I think it’s also notable to recall that this is the only successful insurrection on U.S soil in U.S history. People started finding out a little bit about it when the capital siege occurred because people started asking, “has an insurrection ever happened?” Actually the answer is yes, and it would be Wilmington. It’s the only time this has ever happened to a municipal government and it was the state that allowed this to happen, allowed these militias to run amok. It was the state that was really responsible at the end of the day for this violence. And there have never been any reparations of any kind even though there are people living in Wilmington today who can who can say, “my ancestor owned this plot of land that was taken.” They’ve never had any reparations. If it was a white person that could prove that, I think we would be talking about justice. But it mirrors the Tulsa situation, it was the success of black people that was the problem. Not this idea of inferiority which had been the racial mythology. it was actually the fact that black people had persevered and were very successful even in the face of all of this oppression.” ….It’s just happened time and time again in Wilmington, Tulsa, Detroit, elsewhere, that the American dream has just been incredibly elusive for black Americans through absolutely no fault of their own. What I think is pretty clearly structural racism.”— Lynn Parramore

  65. Arjun Jayadev joined the T20 Forum on Social Cohesion

    May 24, 2021

    “Now it’s maybe particularly an Indian phenomenon because of the strong lockdown we had last year, but I think across the world what we’re seeing in fact is that people are trapped in poverty because of the lack of employment opportunities, lack of income support, they’re increase in indebtedness, and their earnings remain depressed. So in that sense the news is extremely bad. Also, we’re seeing huge dislocations in the labor market itself. People who finally came into the formal labor force and had some sort of formal protections are now becoming informalized or worse as is the case with women in India, just leaving the labor force. When one asks for example social cohesion what can one say –it is devastating for any kind of view of an inclusive growth process where we’re trying to encourage many people into gainful employment and to actually see their welfare rise. Of course, financial vulnerabilities have risen many fold as a result of that. In addition, one ought to underline that this thing isn’t going away. Right now in India we’re in the second wave which is quite devastating. There are the very simple and awful thoughts of just basic mortality. What it’s going to do to you know many people’s indebtedness, their ability to earn incomes because this is not limited in India for example only to let’s say the relatively elderly but across the population distribution. I think we’re just at the beginning of trying to of seeing what it will do for social cohesion or destruction more likely. I think we had a mild wave last year and what we’re going to see this year as a result… we have yet to see but it will be bad.” — Arjun Jayadev

  66. Melissa Hathaway’s INET article is cited in Bloomberg

    May 24, 2021

    “Ransomware demands have increased exponentially in the last six months, according to Melissa Hathaway, president of Hathaway Global Strategies and a former cybersecurity adviser to Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama. The average ransom demand is now between $50 million and $70 million, Hathaway said. While those demands are often negotiated down, she said companies are frequently paying ransoms in the tens of millions of dollars, in part because cyber insurance policies cover some or all of the cost. She estimated that the average payment is between $10 million and $15 million.” — Kartikay Mehrotra and William Turton, Bloomberg

  67. David Michaels Michael’s INET funded research is featured in SciTech Daily, Focus Technica, Medical Xpress, & Scienmag

    May 24, 2021

    “This survey gives a voice to US health care workers who have been on the frontlines of COVID-19,” David Michaels, a professor of environmental and occupational health at the George Washington University and former administrator of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, said. “Health care workers have valuable first-hand knowledge about this pandemic and this report offers recommendations that could help keep the U.S. on a steady course now and in the future.” …. Michaels and Melissa Perry, a professor and chair of the Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, provided guidance in producing the report. The McElhattan Foundation and the Institute for New Economic Thinking provided financial support for the survey and the report.” — George Washington University

  68. Ledley, Cleary & Jackson’s INET working paper is cited in Missoulian

    May 19, 2021

    “But COVID vaccines are by no means unique — most medicines developed and approved in the United States involve taxpayer investment. Between 2010 and 2019, every single new medicine approved by the Food and Drug Administration included taxpayer-funded research through NIH. Drug companies patent the drugs we pay to develop and then charge us exorbitant prices for them that increase every year — sometimes twice a year.” — Terry Minow, Missoulian

  69. Melissa Hathaway’s INET article is featured in Inside Cybersecurity

    May 19, 2021

    “[T]he U.S. Department of Justice should determine and make clear that paying a ransom is illegal,” Hathaway said in an article posted May 13 by the Institute for New Economic Thinking. “This step would likely force organizations to further invest in their security and ability to withstand and recover from an incident (i.e., increase their resilience). Categorizing ransom payment as an illegal activity would also clearly remove coverage for these types of payments from insurance policies,” Hathaway wrote.” — Charlie Mitchell, Inside Cybersecurity

  70. INET Working Paper on the consolidation of the dairy industry is cited in Homeland Security Today

    May 17, 2021

    “Larger dairy farms inevitably mean a system less geographically dispersed, larger environmental challenges with farm waste, and a less resilient system. The Institute for New Economic Thinking detailed these impacts in a recent report on the pandemic’s effects on dairy farmers, Spilt Milk: COVID-19 and the Dangers of Dairy Industry Consolidation: “The COVID-19 pandemic led to the collapse in commercial demand as restaurants, caterers, schools and other institutional customers were forced to close. Dairy plants serving supermarkets and grocery stores were already operating at close to full capacity when the coronavirus struck. Capital equipment specialized to produce for commercial customers were incapable of producing for consumers served by supermarkets or food banks. Some farmers had no choice but to dump milk.”[9] For the smaller dairy farmers, international (primarily Canadian) competition and price fluctuations are daily economic challenges.” — Charles Luke, Homeland Security Today … [9] Eileen Appelbaum and Jared Gaby-Biegle, “Spilt Milk: COVID-19 and the Dangers of Dairy Industry Consolidation,” Institute for Economic and Policy Research, August 15, 2020, https://www.ineteconomics.org/uploads/papers/WP_134-Appelbaum-and-Gaby-Biegel.pdf

  71. INET Working Paper on the non-inflationary effects of unemployment reductions is cited in The Worker

    May 17, 2021

    “Among those contributions, recent works highlight the deep, radical revision of axioms considered cystic: that hysteresis, the permanence of high unemployment rates over time, is a basic condition to keep inflation under control. Professors Walter Paternesi, Davide Roamniello and Antonella Stirati have empirically demonstrated that this thesis is not permanent and that long-term unemployment can be reversed without a significant spike in inflation (https://www.ineteconomics.org/research/research- papers / on-the-non-inflationary-effects-of-long-term-unemployment-reductions). Another flagship of themainstream that can fall apart.” — Carles Manera, The Worker

  72. Bloomberg Quint covers INET's Law, Economics & Policy Conference

    May 17, 2021

    “The former ambassadors were speaking on a panel discussion at the law economics policy conference titled “Strategic Patience and flexible policies: How India can rise to the China challenge” and organized by INET.” — BQ Desk, Bloomberg Quint

  73. YSI member and INET intern, Atanas Pekanov is appointed acting Deputy Prime Minister for the EFM

    May 12, 2021

    “The new acting Deputy Prime Minister for EU funds is called Atanas Pekanov. The young expert, who recently turned 30, is an economist at the Austrian Institute for Economic Research (WIFO) in Vienna, Austria, and a lecturer at the Vienna University of Economics and Business (WU Wien). … Member of the Young Researchers Initiative of the Institute for New Economic Thinking.” — Darik

  74. Thomas Ferguson is quoted in Rabble on money in politics

    May 12, 2021

    “Political scientist Thomas Ferguson has documented how U.S. big business interests poured money into local and state elections to ensure positive support for their largely unpopular policies. What Ferguson calls “political investment” is the practice of spending serious sums on party competition to keep hand-picked, docile representatives in power.” — Duncan Cameron, Rabble

  75. Arjun Jayadev article in the Hindustan Times describes what is needed to quickly roll the distribution of vaccines in India

    May 10, 2021

    “Pandemic management will also have to overcome the knotty issue of political economy. The blame game between the Union and state governments over an essential commodity such as oxygen is visible in court proceedings. We need a transparent mechanism that is perceived to be fair and trusted by all the stakeholders. Apart from dealing with the allocation of vaccines and other essential medical supplies such as oxygen, this body could suggest the financing pattern for sharing the expenditure on Covid management, including vaccine procurement. … Far too many lives have been lost to Covid. But as a challenge to India (and to humanity), it is certainly not an impossible task to manage the pandemic. But this can only happen effectively with cooperation, coordination, empathy, humility and scientific knowledge. It is not too late.” — Arjun Jayadev, Hindustan Times

  76. Daily Kos features Lynn Parramore's interview on CounterSpin

    May 9, 2021

    “Just now read this fascinating interview by Janine Jackson of fair.org (Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting) with Lynn Parramore of the Institute for New Economic Thinking on how hedge fund managers are damaging American companies by pushing company managements to do stock buybacks. Basically, stock buybacks force up the price of a stock, allowing shareholders to make megabucks when they sell. Such buybacks were difficult until the Reagan administration loosened the regulations in 1982. Why are stock buybacks bad ? Because they divert money from research, from new investments and innovation, and from raising wages. The interview with Lynn Parramore goes into the details.” — Daily Kos

  77. Joseph Stiglitz and Anton Korinek’s INET-funded research is cited in the NY Times

    May 5, 2021

    “In their December 2017 paper, “Artificial intelligence, worker-replacing technological progress and income distribution,” the economists Anton Korinek, of the University of Virginia, and Joseph E. Stiglitz, of Columbia — describe the potential of artificial intelligence to create a high-tech dystopian future. Korinek and Stiglitz argue that without radical reform of tax and redistribution politics, a “Malthusian destiny” of widespread technological unemployment and poverty may ensue.” — Thomas B. Edsall, New York Times

  78. NPR features INET Working Paper on the racial and gender inequality of the pandemic

    May 4, 2021

    “Researchers involved in a new study from Washington University say women could be in trouble financially for years to come because of significant job losses during the crisis. “We have to be somewhat concerned that the larger inequality effects of the current crisis could have these persistent impacts on wages and on career progress in all the groups that are disproportionately affected,” said Steven Fazzari, a professor of economics and sociology at Wash U who co-authored the study.” — Andrea Y. Henderson, St. Louis Public Radio NPR

  79. The NY Times cites INET’s report from the Commission on Global Economic Transformation

    May 3, 2021

    “Yet notable critics like Joseph Stiglitz and Jayati Ghosh, an economist at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, see woefully insufficient production by Western drug companies as a major roadblock to universal vaccination.” — Walden Bello, New York Times

  80. INET's article on the dangers of reopening schools is featured in the Santa Fe New Mexican

    May 1, 2021

    “Right after the CDC made this announcement, the president of the American Federation of Teachers, Randi Weingarten, sent a letter to the Biden administration, citing a study by the Institute for Economic Thinking. … The authors of the study are Dr. Deepti Gurdasani, who did much of the research for the study and is a clinical epidemiologist and statistical geneticist and senior lecturer at the William Harvey Research Institute in London; Dr. Phillip Alveldi, CEO and chairman of Brain Works Foundry Inc, a U.S.-based developer of artificial intelligence-enhanced health care technologies and services; and Thomas Ferguson, the director of research projects for the Institute for New Economic Thinking.” — Dennis Donohue, Santa Fe New Mexican

  81. Lynn Parramore appeared on CounterSpin to discuss her INET article on hedge fund’s blocking green initiatives

    Apr 30, 2021

    “Polluting companies tell us every day how they’re invested in the future; we’ve heard corporations en masse say, “Profits, what? We’re all about the people now!” There’s a certain amount of people-who-make-the-problem-pretending-they’re-the-solution that we can see through, but there’s still plenty going on behind the scenes. We’ll talk with Lynn Parramore, senior research analyst at the Institute for New Economic Thinking, about how hedge funds get in the way of the big changes all kinds of companies need to make to fight climate disruption.” — CounterSpin

  82. Arjun Jayadev appeared on Chayakkada Chats podcast to discuss vaccine equity

    Apr 30, 2021

    “Today joined by Dr Arjun Jayadev, who is a Professor of Economics at the School of Arts and Sciences at Azim Premji University in Bangalore, India. He was previously Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Massachusetts Boston. He is also closely involved with the Institute for New Economic Thinking. I speak to him about the basic links between IPRs and the pandemic; the long-held orthodoxy in economic theory on the importance of IPRs, especially in areas like health; how IPRs lead to suboptimalities like hoarding of knowledge, vaccine grabs and other global inequalities; the relationship between public funding and vaccine production; whether private profits being produced from public investments; and finally, the problem of vaccine nationalism.” — Chayakkada Chats

  83. Project Syndicate cites INET’s report from the Commission on Global Economic Transformation

    Apr 30, 2021

    “To do this properly, we need to understand the structure of markets for knowledge-based products like new vaccines. Currently, we do not: the “market” is a mishmash of competition and side deals. According to a recent paper from the Institute for New Economic Thinking, governments and pharmaceutical companies last year concluded 44 bilateral COVID-19 vaccine deals, many of which have undisclosed details and poorly understood escape clauses. Poor countries were, by and large, left out.” — Kaushik Basu, Project Syndicate

  84. White’s INET working paper is cited in the Balance

    Apr 28, 2021

    “But ultra-low interest rates may be doing more harm than good, economist William White says in a working paper published last month by the Institute for New Economic Thinking. White, a former economic adviser at the Bank for International Settlements, has a number of arguments against this central bank policy. First, while lower borrowing costs do initially accomplish their goal of spurring spending, much of it is on “unproductive purchases” by both households and corporations that only wind up increasing the debt burden. Second, low interest rates can actually destabilize financial markets and the institutions surrounding them, either through inflated prices, encouraging fund managers to take on riskier investments, or hindering how banks and lenders are supposed to do business, White argues. And then there’s the exit problem. Once central banks lower interest rates, it’s very hard to tighten the flow of easy money. “Each cycle of monetary easing contributes to a buildup of undesired side effects that raises the likelihood of future instability,” White writes. “Central banks are then lured into a ‘debt trap’ where they refrain from tightening, to avoid triggering the crisis that they wish to avoid, but that restraint only makes the underlying problems worse.” — Diccon Hyatt, The Balance

  85. Storm and Naastepad’s INET working paper was cited in LSE’s blog on wages in the Eurozone

    Apr 28, 2021

    “Some authors argue that the German export success has nothing to do with wage or unit labour cost moderation and is instead due to the country’s high non-price competitiveness.” — Lucio Baccaro and Tobias Tober, LSE

  86. Thomas Ferguson's article is featured in the International Economy Magazine

    Apr 28, 2021

    “The much-touted “new thinking” on fiscal policy and debt is actually very thin and little of it is new. In the 1990s, economist Luigi Pasinetti clarified the folly of the proposed Maastricht criteria for public finances and forecast the coming disaster with those. Subsequently, many economists, including more than a few working with the Institute for New Economic Thinking, showed in detail how austerity reduces potential output over time and how absurd theories about Phillips Curve trade-offs lead to big underestimates of real rates of unemployment. Running below full employment for long periods blows big holes in public finances and thus piles on debt.” – Thomas Ferguson

  87. INET funded research was cited in the American Families Plan

    Apr 28, 2021

    “A study by Nobel Laureate James Heckman found that every dollar invested in a high-quality, birth to five program for the most economically disadvantaged children resulted in $7.30 in benefits as children grew up healthier, were more likely to graduate high school and college, were less likely to be involved in crime, and earned more as adults.” — The White House

  88. Wolff’s INET funded research on household wealth is the methodology used to determine top wealth gains during the pandemic

    Apr 21, 2021

    “For more on this methodology, see Wolff’s National Bureau of Economic Research paper Household Wealth Trends in the United States, 1962-2013” — Chuck Collins

  89. Arjun Jayadev appeared on CNN News 18 to discuss the latest wave of Covid spreading through India

    Apr 14, 2021

    “To go back a little bit, Covid is possibly the first global event that we’ve actually seen. One year after it really started, we are seeing all these vaccines. It is really quite incredible when you think about the scientific advancement, it has really been something quite extraordinary. But our systems of management globally of knowledge and health are weak and counterproductive and in adequate. I’d say they’re probably best described as unjust and incompetent. Let’s start with this whole question of patent rights. Right from the outset it became quite clear that it was hindering the fight against covid. From the early days if you remember N95 masks we’re a concern, then treatments like remdesivir, so it’s not only a vaccine issue. This was the basis for last years’ call for the Covid technology access pool, which was rebuffed despite widespread support. It was rebuffed by the advanced countries. It’s hard to imagine why this should be the case because such technologies for public health are massive and have positive spill over benefits. Moving now to vaccines, I think the system is even more inefficient when one considers the fact that many companies across the world received significant subsidies for vaccines. Estimates range from about $100 billion and in some cases the entire cost; Moderna and Johnson and Johnson vaccines that were paid for by a public set of money. Such is the case for having patent rights to allow for innovation completely disappears. Now the debate has moved, that it is not actually IP which is the restriction, it’s the ability to produce and manufacturing capacity. But remember eight months ago that did not exist in developed economies. People like the Moderna chief chemist said it takes about three to four months to actually set up these factories. What we should’ve had was a massive transfer in technology to places that could actually do this, completely open access to technology of all sorts, and ramping up production on a sort of global war scale. That has not happened and is it’s still not happening because of these limitations and unfortunately despite India and South Africa making the case in the WTO and despite some better noises from the Biden administration we’re really not seeing much movement.” — Arjun Jayadev

  90. Jack Gao appeared on Arirang to discuss Biden’s infrastructure plan

    Apr 12, 2021

    “There is a lot to like about with this infrastructure plan from what we already know and there seems to be a historical opportunity to get things right. Before answering your question, let me bring us to three trends just for context. Firstly, for decades we’ve had an economic model that benefited a small number of people tremendously and left behind the majority of Americans, resulting in widening inequality and decline in the middle class. The fact that a zip code could predict a lot of things; your health outcome, your lifespan, your success in life is an extremely telling example. Secondly, we’ve had the digital revolution which spanned a good part of the last 15 years that further demonstrated a lot of displacing and polarizing tendencies. If you’re in the wrong parts of the economy so to speak, it really didn’t work that much for you. Thirdly of course, we had the Covid crisis which turbocharged a lot of these trends. A lot of this is to say that sure there’s a lot of roads and bridges to fix and as well as fiscal infrastructure, but how to productively engage more Americans in the economic process through like you said job training and education, through better child care, invest in green recovery, and climate resilience these are paramount tasks.” — Jack Gao, Institute for New Economic Thinking

  91. Lynn Parramore appeared on Between the Lines to discuss the “New Koch Brothers” and stock buybacks are sabotaging America’s green new deal

    Apr 8, 2021

    “So these companies have been hamstrung by these hedge fund activists that are only interested in making a buck as quickly as possible. And they really don’t care about the long-term sustainability or health of the company. Or is it anything the company might want to do in the way of making products in the future? They’re all about the short term. So they are holding American companies back.” — Lynn Parramore

  92. Schularick, Taylor & Jorda’s INET funded research is featured in the FT

    Apr 7, 2021

    “The economists Òscar Jordà, Moritz Schularick, and Alan Taylor studied the sensitivity of house prices to interest rates across 14 countries and 140 years of history. They found that a 1 per cent rise in interest rates reduces the ratio of house prices to incomes by about 4 per cent. In New Zealand, for example, that ratio has risen by about half in a decade, implying a double-digit rise in interest rates to stabilise it.” — Robin Harding, FT

  93. Lynn Parramore appeared on Ian Masters to discuss her latest INET articles

    Apr 6, 2021

    Lynn Parramore appeared on Ian Masters to discuss Biden’s stimulus package and the “New Koch Brothers” wrecking America’s green new deal.

  94. Appelbaum & Batt’s INET funded research is cited in the Boston Globe

    Apr 5, 2021

    “In “Private Equity’s Engagement With Health Care: Cause for Concern?” a report to the Institute for New Economic Thinking, researchers Eileen Applebaum and Rosemary Batt found that wages dropped at urgent care centers after acquisitions by private equity companies. They were 9 to 12 percent lower than hospital wages. More consolidation and Amazon’s relentless drive to suppress costs bode more of the same.” — Brian Alexander, Boston Globe

  95. Diego Comin’s INET funded research is featured in Dartmouth News

    Mar 26, 2021

    “As consumers become richer, they spend more on services such as health and education, the demand for which is much more income elastic, and less on agriculture and manufactured goods, according to a recent study, co-led by Diego Comin, a professor of economics. The results are published in Econometrica. Until now, productivity has often been considered at least as important, if not more, than preferences, in shaping the sectoral composition of the economy. Politicians and business leaders often make claims about why certain sectors in the economy are shrinking, such as the decline in U.S. manufacturing is due to robotics or trade with China. Such assessments are flawed, as the sectoral composition of the economy is mostly driven by preferences and not by productivity, according to the study, which models long-run structural change in the economy.” — Amy Olsen, Darmouth News

  96. Senator Baldwin cites INET's working paper on pharmaceutical funding in the HELP Committee meeting

    Mar 24, 2021

    “From 2010 to 2019 the FDA approved 356 drugs. Recent research from Bentley University finds that NIH funding contributed to every single new drug approved. At a cost to the tax payer of roughly $230 billion dollars. In spite of this contribution the NIH is listed on only 27 of those patents. This suggests that while tax payers provide funding for the bulk of the early stage research they do not get patent protections supposedly secured by the by dole act. In essence American tax payers are paying the highest prices in the world for drugs they already paid to help develop.” — Senator Tammy Baldwin

  97. William Lazonick’s INET funded research is cited in Counter Punch

    Mar 22, 2021

    “As William Lazonick and other analysts have pointed out, stock buybacks artificially inflate executive pay and drain capital that could be put to productive purpose. .[xxv] — Sarah Anderson, Counter Punch [xxv] William Lazonick, “Profits Without Prosperity,” Harvard Business Review, September 2014.”

  98. Schularick, Taylor, & Jorda’s INET funded research is cited in Bloomberg on the most stable investments

    Mar 17, 2021

    “The issue is important because it tends to conflict with a hugely influential study published in 2017, called The Rate of Return on Everything, by Oscar Jorda, Katharina Knoll, Dmitry Kuvshinov, Moritz Schularick, and Alan M. Taylor. This was a mightily ambitious piece of financial archaeology covering 17 countries, and it rendered the startling result that housing performed virtually as well as equities over time, but with much less volatility. The result held true for every country that Jorda and his colleagues examined.” — John Authers, Bloomberg

  99. Steven Fazzari cites his INET article in an interview at Washington University

    Mar 12, 2021

    “I believe they mostly got this right. Just before President Biden took office, I presented some thoughts on what a rescue plan should include to deal with the macroeconomic challenges of the pandemic. I emphasized four broad areas: public health spending, enhanced unemployment benefits, assistance to state and local governments, and so-called “stimulus checks” to households. The legislation the president has signed does a pretty good job in all four areas.” — Sara Savat, Washington University News Room

  100. Lynn Parramore appeared on Wort 89.9 FM to discuss her latest INET article on the “New Koch Brothers”

    Mar 11, 2021

    “Hedge fund managers are torpedoing chances for a successful Green New Deal, according to Lynn Parramore, Senior Research Analyst for the Institute for New Economic Thinking. In her recent article “Meet the “New Koch Brothers” – the Hedge Fund Activists Wrecking America’s Green New Deal“, she talks about how corporate raiders are turning the direction of “green” corporate partners of battery development, software, wind turbines, and more away from long term energy conservation projects toward short-term money-making projects to increase the hedge fund shareholder returns.” — WORT 89.9 FM