Articles
Articles and analyses from the INET community on the key economic questions of our time.
I like IKE
Imperfect knowledge economics, or IKE to their friends, is popular with all the popular kids. George Soros, Bill Janeway and Anatole Kaletsky were in attendance as Roman Frydman and Michael Goldberg - or more properly, their students - showed the latest work in progress.
Meeting New Challenges in China
The Consequences of a Leaderless Economy
What happens when there’s no leader in the global economy?
Russia to the Rescue of Cyprus?
There is a certain rich irony attached to the sight of corrupt Russian oligarchs now posing as liberal champions of the rule of law as they find themselves sucked into the maelstrom of Cyprus’s ongoing financial crisis.
Jurassic Economics at ASSA-AEA 2013
The History of Economics Society (HES) held four sessions at the Allied Social Science Associations (ASSA) 2013 meeting, in San Diego, Jan. 4-6: “Keynes and the International Monetary System” (co-organized by Robert Dimand and Rebeca Gomez Betancourt), “Writing MIT’s History” (organized by E. Roy Weintraub and having our blog fellow Yann Giraud presenting), “Looking for Best Practices in Economic Journalism: Past and Present” (organized by our blog fellow Tiago Mata), and “Real Business Cycle after Three Decades: Past, Present and Future” (a panel discussion co-organized by Warren L. Young and Sumru Altug).
Open to be open to be open…
INET has chosen the label “openness” to describe New Economic Thinking - “open” for other disciplines, for other methods, for other questions, for other interpretations, etc. It’s easy to hurrah.
2012: A Year in Review
Waste, waste, waste
Blending the Economy and Science
OMT: Slouching toward Eurobills?
The Eurocrisis has many dimensions—bank solvency crisis, sovereign debt crisis, political unity crisis, and economic/unemployment crisis—but time after time it has been the liquidity crisis dimension driving events, and ECB response to the liquidity crisis driving institutional evolution. The reason is simple. Liquidity kills you quick.
What About the Questions That Economics Can’t Answer?
Can economics be morally centered? And perhaps more importantly, should it be?
Welcome to Reading Mas-Colell!
The blog is intended for any student taking an advanced microeconomics course, any faculty member teaching such material, or indeed anyone interested in microeconomics and its role in the discipline.
QE3
A Quick One (Message to Naomi)
Sleepwalking with Heiner
A Response to Heiner Flassbeck’s questions about the Institute’s Council on the Euro Crisis