Articles
Articles and analyses from the INET community on the key economic questions of our time.

At Sea Without an Anchor
A presentation from The Economics of Post-Factual Democracy, the first annual conference of The Center for Information and Bubble Studies (CIBS) at The University of Copenhagen
Trumping Capitalism?

Why Economists Should Think of Themselves as Plumbers
From physicists to engineers to meds to plumbers: thoughts on Esther Duflo’s ASSA 2017 lecture on rediscovering the last art of economics

Remembering Tony Atkinson as the Architect of Modern Public Economics
Beatrice Cherrier remembers Tony Atkinson’s influential intellectual, educational and institutional contribution to the field of public economics

A Socialist Market Economy With Chinese Contradictions
Beijing’s leaders face a critical dilemma over a credit boom that imperils China’s prospects for a smooth transition to a sustainable economic path

A Moral Challenge to Economists
Extract from the keynote speech by the Rev. Dr. William Barber III at the Institute for New Economic Thinking conference on race and economics in Detroit on November 11

Contemplating the Age of Hyper-Uncertainty
In the 40th anniversary year of John Kenneth Galbraith’s Age of Uncertainty, the 1970s look remarkably stable in comparison with today’s turbulent world

Many Politicians Voting for the TARP Bailout Protected Their Own Wealth
Amid heightened focus on conflicts of interests, new research shows how legislators’ votes on the 2008 bank bailout tracked with the exposure to peril of their personal stock portfolios

Rapid Money Supply Growth Does Not Cause Inflation
Neither do rapid growth in government debt, declining interest rates, or rapid increases in a central bank’s balance sheet

The Retreat from Hyper-Globalization
Flows of goods and services, people and capital have overwhelmed the ability of political processes to accommodate them

Trade Liberalization After the U.S. Election
The TPP is dead, as is the assumption that future free-trade agreements can be negotiated by experts alone