Working Papers
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			Conference paper
	  
	High Wealth Concentration, Porous Exchange Control, and Shocks to Relative Return: the Fragile State of China’s Foreign Exchange ReserveApr 2011 At a time when China is the favored investment destination in the global market, it seems unlikely that it would ever face capital flight. 
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	Legislators Never Bowl Alone: Big Money, Mass Media, and the Polarization of CongressApr 2011 This is a small paper on a big subject: the polarization of American politics since the mid-1970s. In its early stages this process bore more than a passing resemblance to the opening scenes of a Grade B disaster movie: With almost everyone’s attention focused elsewhere, a series of tiny, seemingly insignificant departures from long standing routines took place. 
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	Too Big to Fail, Too Big to JailApr 2011 The theme of this session is very timely and controversial, on the ability of sovereign governments to supervise Large Complex Financial Institutions (LCFIs), now officially described as G-SIFIs, global systemically important financial institutions. 
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	Global Imbalances: Past, Present and FutureApr 2011 After the inception and, hopefully, the passing of the most dangerous phase of the international financial crisis, economists have returned to the long favoured subject of global imbalances. 
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	Evolving Economic and Financial Systems in IndiaApr 2011 The presentation explains that Indian Economy is basically a market-oriented economy with constant rebalancing between state andmarket. 
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	Corporate Citizenship in a Civil EconomyApr 2011 Many companies around the world have discovered they can benefit financially from integrating environmental, social and governance (ESG) targets in their daily operations and strategy. 
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	Cambridge Talk on HayekApr 2011 Tonight I will talk briefly about the Keynes-Hayek relationship, then will focus on some of Hayek’s insights that may be of relevance today. 
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	Combining International Monetary Reform with Commodity Buffer Stocks : Keynes, Graham and KaldorApr 2011 Central to John Maynard Keynes (1941) original Bretton Woods proposal was an international clearing union that would issue a new international currency by fiat called bancor. Among other functions, this international central bank would finance the stabilization of individual commodity prices through commodity buffer stocks. 
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	The Keynes Plan, The Marshall Plan And The IMCU Plan; Designing the Future International Payments System using the Past Principles of Keynes's Liquidity Theory and Soros's ReflexivityApr 2011 For more than three decades, orthodox economists, policy makers in government and central bankers and their economic advisors, using some variant of old classical economic theory [OCET], have insisted that (1) government regulations of markets and large government spending policies are the cause of all our economic problems and (2) ending big government and freeing markets, especially financial markets, from government regulatory controls is the solutionto our economic problems, domestically and internationally. 
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	It May be Our Currency, but It’s Your ProblemApr 2011 It’s a singular honor to have been asked to deliver the Butlin Lecture. I first met Noel Butlin when I had the pleasure of visiting Australian National University for two months in what was, from my perspective, the summer of 1985. 
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	Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy, Once AgainApr 2011 Some questions can only be answered by educated guess. The question at the centre of this round table pertains to this category. We should not be ashamed of this kind of limitation of our capacity to predict the future. 
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	Political Economy of Controlling Systemic Risk: What Governments Can Do Vs. What Governments Are Willing to DoApr 2010 In directing panelists to distinguish between what governments “can” and “will” do, this session’s title frames economic policymaking as a balancing act. Principled efforts to define and pursue the public interest are contested and repeatedly knocked off course by conflictingpersonal, bureaucratic, and political concerns that impinge on government decisionmakers. 
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	When Wolves Cry “Wolf”: Systemic Financial Crises and the Myth of the Danaid JarApr 2010 Financial crises are staggeringly costly. Only major wars rival them in the burdens they place on public finances. 
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	Marcello De Cecco: Political Economy: What Can Government Do? What Will Government Do?Apr 2010 The crisis of the export led model in the EMU countries and its monetary and financial consequences on European integration. 
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	Inequality and Economic and Political Change: A Comparative PerspectiveApr 2010 This paper describes the broad evolution of inequality in the world economy over the past four decades, and provides a summary account of the relationship between inequality, economic development, political regimes and the functional distribution of income.