Working Papers
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			Grantee paper
	  
	Are Women Really More Risk-Averse than Men?Sep 2012 While a substantial literature in economics and finance has concluded that women are more risk averse than men, this conclusion merits reconsideration. 
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			Grantee paper
	  
	Would Women Leaders Have Prevented the Global Financial Crisis? Implications for Teaching about Gender, Behavior, and EconomicsSep 2012 Would having more women in leadership have prevented the financial crisis? 
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			Grantee paper
	  
	Is Dismissing the Precautionary Principle the Manly Thing to Do? Gender and the Economics of Climate ChangeSep 2012 Many public debates about climate change now focus on the economic “costs” of taking action. 
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			Grantee paper
	  
	Income Distribution, Credit and Fiscal Policies in an Agent-Based Keynesian ModelAug 2012 This work studies the interactions between income distribution and monetary and fiscal policies in terms of ensuing dynamics of macro variables (GDP growth, unemployment, etc.) on the grounds of an agent-based Keynesian model. 
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			Grantee paper
	  
	Method to simultaneously determine stock, flow, and parameter values in large stock flow consistent modelsJun 2012 Stock flow consistent macroeconomic models suffer from the lack of a coherent estimation method due to the complicated nature of the modeling process. 
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			Grantee paper
	  
	Macroeconomic Policy in DSGE and Agent-Based ModelsJun 2012 The Great Recession seems to be a natural experiment for macroeconomics showing the inadequacy of the predominant theoretical framework — the New Neoclassical Synthesis — grounded on the DSGE model. 
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			Grantee paper
	  
	The Financialization of the US Corporation: What Has Been Lost, and How It Can Be RegainedJun 2012 Background paper for a presentation to the Seattle University School of Law Berle IV Symposiun, “The Future of Financial/Securities Markets,” London June 14-15, 2012. 
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			Grantee paper
	  
	The Making of America’s ImbalancesJun 2012 This paper tracks the development of sectoral saving and borrowing in the US economy over the past 50 years. 
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			Grantee paper
	  
	Principled Policymaking in an Uncertain WorldJun 2012 Revised text of a presentation at the Conference on Microfoundations for Modern Macroeconomics, Columbia University, November 2010. I would like to thank Amar Bhidé, Roman Frydman, and Andy Haldane for helpful comments, and the Institute for New Economic Thinking for research support. 
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			Grantee paper
	  
	What’s Wrong with Economic Models?Jun 2012 John Kay’s thought-provoking essay The Map is Not the Territory: An Essay on the State of Economics argues that economists have been led astray by excessive reliance on formal models derived from assumptions that bear too little similarity to the world we live in. 
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			Grantee paper
	  
	State-Dependent Effects of Fiscal PolicyMay 2012 We investigate the effects of government spending on U.S. economic activity using a threshold version of a structural vector autoregressive model. 
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			Grantee paper
	  
	Does the Effectiveness of Fiscal Stimulus Depend on Economic Context?Apr 2012 The topic of this session of the INET conference is a question: does the effectiveness of fiscal policy in stabilizing an economy depend on the underlying economic context in which the policy is implemented? 
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			Grantee paper
	  
	Old Lady Charm: Explaining the Persistent Appeal of Chicago AntitrustApr 2012 The paper deals with the mysterious persistence of the Chicago approach as the main analytical engine driving antitrust enforcement in the US. 
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			Conference paper
	  
	Revitalizing the Eurozone without Fiscal UnionApr 2012 The ongoing eurozone crisis has prompted many to argue that monetary union withoutfiscal union was bound to fail. 
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			Conference paper
	  
	Financial Instability after Minsky:Heterogeneity, Agent Based Models and Credit NetworksApr 2012 Albeit the majority of the profession either ignores Minskyís Financial Instability Hypothesis (FIH) or considers it plainly wrong, at least since the mid-80’s a few influential economists —who have certainly not embraced any unorthodoxcredo —have grown more receptive to this idea and eager to incorporate it in their models, even if diluted and sometimes disguised in order to make it more palatable to the conventional “representative” macroeconomist