5785 Results for “monedas en FC 26 Visité Buyfc26coins.com. Simplicidad y velocidad. Así me gustan las cosas..kxXe”
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Article
Who’s Afraid of John Maynard Keynes?
Aug 30, 2019
An except from Galbraith’s review of Paul Davidson’s Who’s Afraid of John Maynard Keynes? Challenging Economic Governance in an Age of Growing Inequality
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Article
Debt-driven Growth: The decade prior to the Great Recession
Jul 22, 2015
The recent financial crisis has impressively illustrated the dangers of rapid credit growth in a painful way.
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Article
Dancing in the Dark: Creating an Economics for the 21st Century
May 12, 2013
In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, many of our policy makers and top economists are still stumbling in the dark.
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Article
Kansas City-style Financial Reform
Jun 4, 2011
A New Glass-Steagall?
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Video
The Consequences of Money-Manager Capitalism
Oct 20, 2014
In the wake of World War II, much of the western world, particularly the United States, adopted a new form of capitalism called “managerial welfare-state capitalism.”
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YSI Event
YSI @ the 45th Eastern Economics Association Conference
YSI
WorkshopFeb 28–Mar 3, 2019
The Keynesian Economics and Complexity Economics Working Groups announce two special sessions, to be held at the annual conference of the EEA in New York.
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Article
The Crisis of Democratic Capitalism
Nov 5, 2021
Economic journalist Martin Wolf’s address to the Center on Capitalism and Society at Columbia University’s 20th anniversary conference, Economic Policy and Economic Theory for the Future
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesThe Global Impact of Brexit Uncertainty
Dec 2019
Using tools from computational linguistics, we construct new measures of the impact of Brexit on listed firms in the United States and around the world
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesThe Cold War Hot House for Modeling Strategies at the Carnegie Institute of Technology
Oct 2015
US Military needs during the Cold War induced a mathematical modeling of rational allocation and control processes while simultaneously binding that rationality with computational reality. Modeling strategies to map the optimal to the operational ensued and eventually became a driving force in the development of macroeconomic dynamics.
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Article
Worrying About the Deficit is So 17th Century
Jun 6, 2018
In “celebration” of the late Pete Peterson’s 92nd birthday (see guest list), an excerpt from 19th Century historian Lord Macaulay’s History of England, on hundreds of years of unwarranted panic about government debt.
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Article
Neither Clinton nor Trump is engaging with the causes of America’s economic woes
May 17, 2016
Author Rana Foroohar explains why the economic policies being touted by both presidential frontrunners offer none of the new thinking necessary to drive a policy response to revitalize the economy
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Article
Is the Doom of Humanity Really Inevitable? Maybe Not.
Jan 4, 2022
Evidence reveals our remote ancestors were neither brutes nor innocents, but complex beings whose experiments in living have much to teach us. Welcome news as disaster looms in every direction.
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Article
A chronology of economics at Carnegie (in progress)
Apr 22, 2013
To illustrate the previous post on the difficulties in putting together a chronology, here is tentative chronology of economics at Carnegie. It’s still in process, and links, sources and entries will be updated as I read.
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YSI Event
Trento Festival of Economics
YSI Europe Convening 2017
YSI
WorkshopJun 1–4, 2017
The Young Scholars Initiative and its working groups will be hosting meetings and discussions in and around the 2017 Trento Festival of Economics.
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Article
How Dated Theories & Underlying Research Misguide Policy
Jul 15, 2015
The financial crisis of 2008 was unforeseen to a significant extent. One reason is that the dominant academic theories influencing political decision makers ignore recent advances and instead rely largely on models and decision science dating back to the Second World War.
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Article
Housing and the American Dream: Is A House Still a Home?
Feb 23, 2021
Single-family home-ownership—elusive for many today—is an aspiration we ought to abandon
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Article
The Post-Covid Global Economy: Could Negative Supply Shocks Disrupt Other Fragile Systems?
Jan 26, 2023
Possible repercussions of economic crisis on the stability of democracies that already show significant signs of fragility
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Article
From Fed Failures to Inflation and Stablecoins: America’s Trust Is Cracking
Feb 23, 2026
Authors Bill Bergman and Larry Feltes argue that declining public confidence in government and financial institutions is putting the U.S. economy in peril — and a crisis could come faster than you think.
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Working Paper
Conference paperThe international monetary and financial system: its Achilles heel and what to do about it
Apr 2015
This essay argues that the Achilles heel of the international monetary and financial system is that it amplifies the “excess financial elasticity” of domestic policy regimes, ie it exacerbates their inability to prevent the build-up of financial imbalances, or outsize financial cycles, that lead to serious financial crises and macroeconomic dislocations.
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Working Paper
Working PaperBiopharmaceutical Innovation: Corporate Governance for Equitable Global Health
Mar 2026
The global medicine-access crisis is not simply a failure to balance innovation and affordability. It reflects a deeper system in which shareholder-driven pharmaceutical governance and fragmented donor structures undermine public health and block the shift toward more equitable value creation.
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Article
Is the Fed Making Inequality Worse? Yes, New Research Shows.
Apr 11, 2015
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Article
How to Deal with a “Bretton Woods Moment”
Feb 10, 2022
A new global economic system has to be based on a key principle of Bretton Woods: multilateralism
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Article
How This Regional Bank Mortgage Lender Crisis is Different
Jun 12, 2023
Every banking crisis has its own overarching narratives and coincidental streams of various sub-narratives that course through the marketplace day to day.
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Article
Paper: Demography, Inclusive Growth and Youth Employment in Africa
Jan 26, 2022
The youth paradox is accentuated by the effects of Covid-19, while the concrete short- and medium-term prospects for young people remain unclear.
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Webinars and Events
The Future of Work | Are Redistribution Policies Enough?
WebinarModerated by Rana Foroohar with Gordon Hanson and Laura Tyson
Jan 12, 2021
Traditional welfare systems have emphasized the need for redistribution post-production. Are these policies sufficient in the future?
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Book
Power and Inequality
A Reformist Perspective
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Article
Big Pharma Wants to Pocket the Profits From a COVID Treatment You Already Paid For
Jul 7, 2020
Gilead’s shareholders want exorbitant profits from Remdesivir, even though it was the public that enabled its development.
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Article
They Looted Companies — Now They're Looting the Government
May 12, 2025
Economist William Lazonick reveals how the extraction model of American corporations has migrated from business to government.
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesFirm-Level Political Risk: Measurement and Effects
Jul 2019
We adapt simple tools from computational linguistics to construct a new measure of political risk faced by individual US firms: the share of their quarterly earnings conference calls that they devote to political risks.
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Conference Session
The Unfolding Energy Revolution: Lessons from Europe and the United Kingdom
Nov 30, 2017 | 04:00—05:30
A discussion with Michael Grubb, INET Grantee and Professor of Energy and Climate Change at University College of London.
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Grant
Years granted: 2013, 2014, 2015The London and Cambridge Economic Service: New Perspectives on Economic Forecasting and the History of Economic Thought
This research project rescues the work of the London and Cambridge Economic Service, arguably the first body in Britain to collect and disseminate economic statistics.
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Grant
Years granted: 2013Monetary Reform and the Bellagio Group: Selected Letters and Papers of Fritz Machlup, Robert Triffin and William Fellner
This research project compiles and annotates the archival legacy of the Bellagio Group’s founders Fritz Machlup, Robert Triffin, and William Fellner as they sought to reform the international financial system between 1963 and 1974.
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Article
5 Lessons from the End of the Larry Summers Era
Dec 1, 2025
Summers’ influence was immense, but so were his blind spots. It’s time for economics that values people and the planet over power and prestige.
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Article
Five Years on from Lehman: The More Things Change, the More They Stay the Same
Sep 22, 2013
Sadly, it is questionable whether the economy has really improved.
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Article
Meet the Hidden Architect Behind America's Racist Economics
May 30, 2018
Nobel laureate James Buchanan is the intellectual linchpin of the Koch-funded attack on democratic institutions, argues Duke historian Nancy MacLean
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Article
America at the End of Its Tether
Nov 4, 2024
Many voters, feeling disillusioned, are searching in vain for narratives that resonate with their experiences.
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Article
Africa’s Crisis Is Also an Opportunity
Dec 12, 2023
“If we get our policy, politics, and institutions right, African economies and society could gain greater energy and food security, built on green competition and taking strong action on climate change.“ —Professor Chuks Okereke, Director of the Centre for Climate Change and Development at Alex Ekwueme Federal University
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Article
Why journal editors should commission history papers for their anniversary issues
Apr 23, 2015
Writing the history of economic journals is not merely a way to reconstruct the development of new fields and new approaches to economics. It also recasts current debates on peer-review, retractions, open-access, replicability, and bias in scientific publishing in a wider perspective. It answers important questions on the influence of editors, publishers and referees on the development or marginalization of various economic approaches. But such endeavour requires the preservation of journals’ archives, the recognition of historical expertise, and economists’ adoption of a more relaxed and humble approach to their history.
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Article
When the Levee Broke
Sep 4, 2018
Ten years ago, the financial crisis washed away faith and trust in economics as a guide to social prosperity. Filling a void is difficult. We are still hard at work.
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Article
Remembering Tony Atkinson as the Architect of Modern Public Economics
Jan 19, 2017
Beatrice Cherrier remembers Tony Atkinson’s influential intellectual, educational and institutional contribution to the field of public economics
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Grant
Years granted: 2014, 2015Financially Constrained Arbitrage and Cross-Market Contagion
This research project develops a theoretical framework to examine the relation between arbitrage capital and the price properties of different asset markets.
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Article
Benno Ndulu: The pandemic has laid bare the pivotal roles of both the informal sector and SMEs
Jun 3, 2020
An interview with Pr Benno Ndulu, the former Governor of the Bank of Tanzania, for INET’s series on COVID-19 and Africa
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Article
Paper: Regional and Continental Integration in Africa in the Covid-19 Era: New Drivers and Perspectives
Jan 20, 2022
A review of regional integration in Africa
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Article
Dancing in the Dark: Creating an Economics for the 21st Century
Mar 27, 2014
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Article
Economic “fields” as historical objects (not yet)
Jan 31, 2013
The notion of “field” is so pervasive that economists hardly pay conscious attention to it.
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YSI Event
6th Annual UNCTAD YSI Summer School 2023
YSI
ConferenceAug 28–31, 2023
Under the shared premise that no country alone can address the multiple challenges posed by intertwining and intensifying economic, social and environmental crises, this year’s lectures will discuss prospects and obstacles for a green and equitable transformation of the global economy.
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Article
Puerto Rico Is Getting Squeezed, and It Will Cost All of Us
Sep 12, 2017
The path of austerity could spread economic pain and social woes far beyond the Caribbean island, says public debt expert Martin Guzman
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Video
Innovation and the State
Jan 26, 2016
Economic growth and rising prosperity does not happen at the moment of invention. Only an innovation policy aiming to maximise activities throughout the innovation cycle will succeed in capturing economic growth that enhance the welfare of all citizens.
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Partnership
The Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School
Our partnership with the Oxford Martin School at the University of Oxford, is conducting visionary interdisciplinary research on a wide range of economic and public policy challenges.
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Grant
Years granted: 2015German Energy Policy in the Age of Oil and Atoms, 1945–2000
This research project traces the history of German energy policy from 1945 to the present. It explores the political economy behind Germany’s transition from coal, to oil, to green energy, the crises driving these shifts, and the evolving efforts to balance affordability with security and environmental protection.
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Webinars and Events
INET Live | Summit on Climate and U.S. China Relations
ConferenceOct 12, 2021
The pandemic has caused havoc to the world’s health and economy, worsening inequality and disparities already disrupted by geopolitical rivalry, climate change, financialization and technology. Health, wealth and self are entangled in anger over rising inequality and temperatures.
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Grant
Years granted: 2015Copyrights and Creativity: Historical Evidence from Literature, Science, and Music
This research project improves our understanding of the effects of intellectual property rights—and in particular copyrights—on creativity and innovation.
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Working Paper
Conference paperPerverse and virtuous feedbacks between inequality and innovation: Which role for public institutions and public investment?
Apr 2015
In this paper, we deal with the complex relationship connecting inequality to innovation, and the ways through which public investment, in particular public participation to R&D initiatives, may affect it. We first stress that multiple different equilibria may exist in the inequality-innovation space.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011, 2012Economic Thinking and Buddhist Thinking
This research projects aims to understand Buddhist thinking in rational choice terms and apply that to some important contemporary economic problems.
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Site Pages
Terms of Use
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Webinars and Events
Inclusive Development: Role of Employment and Environment
ConferenceMar 28–30, 2023
Inclusive development especially the role of employment opportunities in a changing world of work and the environment in envisioning inclusiveness
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Article
Transforming Corporate Governance to Improve Access to Medicines in the Global South
Mar 30, 2026
Affordable medicines remain out of reach for millions because pharmaceutical innovation is organized around value extraction, not public health. How do shareholder-driven governance and fragmented global health financing reinforce inequity, and what structural reforms are needed to reverse it?
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Article
Independence vs. Accountability in the Evolution of the Fed
May 16, 2016
Peter Conti Brown’s new book explores and debunks a powerful meme shaping public understanding of the role of the Fed
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Article
Keynes passed away 70 years ago today – his copyright follows
Apr 21, 2016
Keynes passed away 70 years ago today, with his copyright now expiring, there is an opportunity to build a digital archive of all his work
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Article
Study Finds Male and Female Economists See the Economy Differently -- Even When Politically Aligned. It Matters for Everyone.
Sep 10, 2025
In a significant new study published by the Institute for New Economic Thinking, Canadian economist Mohsen Javdani reveals that gender shapes views on power, equality, and inclusion in ways politics alone can’t explain.
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Article
History of Economics on the Making
Jun 1, 2015
New topics and approaches make their way into two recent conferences on the history of economics
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Grant
Years granted: 2012, 2013, 2014Free from What? Evolving Notions of 'Market Freedom' in the History and Contemporary Practice of US Antitrust Law and Economics
This research project investigates the reasons behind the US financial crisis by applying the tools of the history of economic thought to the postwar evolution of US antitrust law and economic
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Working Paper
Working PaperPrecedents, Instruments and Targets that the Fed Has Used to Create and Support a Postcrisis Global Safety Net
Sep 2023
Creating the post-2008 global safety net for mega-banks
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Article
Three Questions with Matthew Desmond
Mar 3, 2016
HCEO’s new three-question series will regularly publish quick Q&As with members who will discuss their work, frontiers in the field of inequality that could use more knowledge, and advice for emerging scholars.
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News
INET and World Economic Forum to Collaborate on Future of Economics
Jan 21, 2013
The Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) and the World Economic Forum today announced plans for closer collaboration to foster new approaches to economic thinking.
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News
Rethinking Expectations: The Way Forward for Macroeconomics
Jan 15, 2013
INET is pleased to announce that Roman Frydman, Chair of INET’s Program on Imperfect Knowledge Economics, has published a book with Edmund Phelps, 2006 Nobel laureate and Director of the Center on Capitalism and Society at Columbia University, Rethinking Expectations: The Way Forward for Macroeconomics (Princeton University Press).
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News
INET Responds to L.A. Times Op-Ed Comments
Apr 25, 2012
New economic thinking is no passing fad. The movement for new economic thinking is here to stay - with broad-based, worldwide support from undergraduate and graduate students as well as both young and established professors and Nobel laureates.
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Article
How NAFTA Lost Democrats the South
Sep 15, 2020
For thirty years after the Civil Rights Act, a sizable share of white Southerners still voted Democrat. That changed when the party embraced trade deals that hurt American workers.
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesThe Contributions of Socioeconomic and Opioid Supply Factors to Geographic Variation in U.S. Drug Mortality Rates
Feb 2019
Economic distress in rural areas and opioid exposure in cities are key indicators of overdose deaths
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Webinars and Events
Law Economic Policy Conference
ConferenceSep 28–30, 2016
The National Institute of Public Finance and Policy (NIPFP) in collaboration with the Institute of New Economic Thinking (INET) are organizing India’s first “Law Economic Policy Conference (LPEC 2016)”. The aim is to bring together economic, legal and policy thinkers together to consider policy issues in a holistic manner.
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YSI Event
YSI Workshop @ IAFFE
YSI
WorkshopJun 18–21, 2018
The YSI Gender and Economics Working Group will host a workshop during the pre-conference of the 27th IAFFE Annual Conference. Members of the Gender and Economics WG will also be welcomed to take part in the workshop and mentoring activities organized by IAFFE in the pre-conference.
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Video
The Global Role of the Dollar
Mar 8, 2023
INET Grantee & Academic Advisor Perry Mehrling talks about his new book “Money and Empire: Charles P. Kindleberger and the Dollar System”
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Article
How Economics and Race Drive America’s Great Divide
Dec 10, 2015
Can education stop the country’s backward slide?
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Article
Inclusive American Economic History
Jan 17, 2020
Containing Slaves, Freedmen, Jim Crow laws and the Great Migration
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Webinars and Events
The Future of Work | The Work of Future: How Will Work Be Different?
Webinarmoderated by Steve Clemons with Erik Brynjolfsson, Nancy Folbre and Kai-Fu Lee
Oct 27, 2020
In the future, how will work be different, what jobs are most at risk, what jobs are likely to grow?
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesPricing for Medicine Innovation: A Regulatory Approach to Support Drug Development and Patient Access
Feb 2022
US regulators can step in to ensure drug pricing both supports patient access and drug development
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Partnership
Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation
The Kauffman Foundation provides access to opportunities that help people achieve financial stability, upward mobility, and economic prosperity – regardless of race, gender, or geography.
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Article
How the U.S. New Economy Business Model has devalued science & engineering PhDs
May 9, 2017
This note comments on Eric Weinstein’s, “How and Why Government, Universities, and Industries Create Domestic Labor Shortages of Scientists and High-Tech Workers,” posted recently on INET’s website.
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Article
Joseph Stiglitz and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Talk Social and Economic Justice
Sep 25, 2018
A Nobel Prize-winning economist and the second-most-famous democratic socialist in America sit down together
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Article
Why Research and Innovation Are Vital for Southern European Economies—and Eurozone Survival
Dec 11, 2017
Austerity measures have battered the region and created instability throughout the Eurozone. Here’s one way out of the mess.
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Article
Why This Time Is Different for Ukraine
Jun 15, 2015
The Ukrainian government has committed to implement far-reaching reforms in exchange for the support it is getting from the international community, led by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Understandably, given Ukraine’s disappointing transition history, there is widespread scepticism on whether the country will live up to its commitments. Three failed IMF programmes later, the fundamental question is: Is it different this time?
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Article
Why Economics Needs Economic History
Jul 28, 2013
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Article
Inflation Narratives and Their Consequences
Jul 31, 2023
On the reflexive relationship between inflation and inflation narratives
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Working Paper
Working PaperHitler and the German Coal Industrialists: Passing the Keys to A Kingdom
Nov 2024
The history of the political relations between Hitler and the NSDAP leadership and the German “coal industrialists” from 1926 to 1933
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Article
Why Did Isaac Newton Lose His Shirt in Financial Speculation? Author Alex Pollock Explains.
Nov 4, 2019
Trying to predict the financial future is a fool’s errand, even for a genius
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Article
The Sacrificial Rites of Capitalism We Don’t Talk About
Aug 26, 2019
Author Supritha Rajan argues that self-interested competition may be the official line, but it’s far from the whole story
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Working Paper
Working PaperSetting Pharmaceutical Drug Prices: What the Medicare Negotiators Need to Know About Innovation and Financialization
Sep 2024
Medicare negotiators need to have a deep understanding - both theoretical and empirical - of the learning processes involved in developing a drug to negotiate a price that is fair.
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Working Paper
Working PaperEuropean Natural Gas through the 2020s: the Decade of Extremes, Contradictions and Continuing Uncertainties
May 2025
This paper examines in detail the interrelationships between the EU’s concerns, its energy policies, and the resulting challenges and uncertainties facing European gas through the rest of the decade, and beyond.
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Article
Want to Take on Financial and Governmental Corruption? Hire Women.
May 5, 2015
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Article
Standard Inflation Theory Leaves Out Social Conflict and Costs
Jun 10, 2021
What That Means For Biden’s Inflation Policy Trilemma
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Article
Science and Subterfuge in Economics
Feb 17, 2019
John Kenneth Galbraith noted in 1973 that establishment economics had become the “invaluable ally of those whose exercise of power depends on an acquiescent public.” If anything, economists’ embrace of that role has grown stronger since then.
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Article
Learning from Lehman: Lessons for Emerging Markets from the Financial Crisis
Sep 18, 2013
What can emerging economies learn from the financial meltdown in advanced economies?
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Article
How Sociologists Think About Inequality
May 1, 2015
Most sociologists believe that formal and informal institutions are more critical in explaining the rising inequality observed in advanced economies. In this light, changing institutions such as the ascendance of shareholder-centered corporate governance model, finance-friendly policies since the late 70s, credentialism, and deunionization all contribute to the earnings dynamics at different parts of the distribution.
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Article
Trumping Capitalism?
Jan 24, 2017
Donald Trump’s presidency is a symptom of an interregnum between economic orders – a period that will result in a new balance between state and market. While his administration’s economic policies are unlikely to provide the right answer, they may at least show the world what not to do.
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Article
Secular Stagnation: The Limits of Conventional Wisdom
Oct 1, 2019
Summers and Stansbury mark a dramatic shift from New Keynesian orthodoxy, but only make it halfway to understanding the demand-driven nature of stagnant growth
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News
INET’s Center for Innovation, Growth and Society Discusses Antitrust Policy and Big Tech
Feb 28, 2019
Inaugural conference addresses pressing issues around emerging technologies’ impact on economies and communities
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Webinars and Events
2019 Annual ASEER (GSÖBW) Conference
ConferenceCrossing Borders, Embracing Pluralism: Perspectives on Teaching Socio-Economics and Pluralism in Economics
Feb 21–22, 2019
What is the relationship between pluralist economics and interdisciplinary socio-economics? How does pluralist academic teaching need to be structured in economics or business administration in order to be successful? What should interdisciplinary socio-economic study programs look like, and how should teacher training in the field be designed? What kinds of new study materials, textbooks, and teaching methods are required?
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Article
A Sobering View of High Fuel Prices, Green Energy, and Biden’s Plans to Help Europe
Apr 6, 2022
Veteran researcher sheds light on what’s going on, how long the pain might last, and possible paths forward.
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Article
The Natural Rate of Interest Is Anything But
Jan 28, 2019
Central bankers pursue a “neutral” rate that doesn’t exist
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Article
Failed State, Failed Market: Europe’s Bid to Reprice Social Media Harms
Feb 13, 2026
Europe’s social media crackdown is less about “speech wars” than a long-overdue attempt to price the public damage created by large platforms.