Archive
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Article
Let Them Drink Pollution?
Jan 26, 2016
The tragic crisis in Flint, Michigan, where residents have been poisoned by lead contamination, is not just about drinking water. And it’s not just about Flint. It’s about race and class, and the stark contradiction between the American dream of equal rights and opportunity for all and the American nightmare of metastasizing inequality of wealth and power.
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesHousehold Borrowing and the Possibility of “Consumption- Driven, Profit-Led Growth”
Jan 2016
We first show that, with a Kaleckian structure that is consistent with Pasinetti (1962), the relationship between distribution and growth is more robust than conventional wisdom suggests. Next, we extend our model by incorporating borrowing and emulation effects into workers’ consumption behavior, under different assumptions about how debt is serviced.
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Article
Friendly Fire
Jan 20, 2016
Comments on “German Wage Moderation and the Eurozone Crisis: A Critical Analysis” by Servaas Storm
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Collection
Rebuilding Trust
Trust is an essential part of a functioning economy, yet it is often one of the least understood variables in economics. While trust is difficult to understand and measure in the context of economics, this type of innovative work enables new and important conversations about trust and how it affects the economy.
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Video
Relearning History
Jan 19, 2016
Lessons Ignored From the 1930s
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Video
What Tax Records Can Tell Us About Gender Inequality
Jan 12, 2016
Professor Casarico explains why her focus on gender and the “glass ceiling” can help us push forward economic thinking.
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Article
German Wage Moderation and the Eurozone Crisis: A Critical Analysis
Jan 8, 2016
It is high time to look more closely at the labor cost competitiveness myth.
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Article
Start-Up Governments, or Can Bureaucracies Innovate?
Jan 4, 2016
For most economists and indeed for social scientists in general such a question induces shudders as already asking this seems wrong – aren’t governments more prone to failures than markets, and aren’t governments supposed to provide basic and stable institutions for markets to function?
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Webinars and Events
The Institute at ASSA
DiscussionJan 2, 2016
Join us for a reception at the ASSA conference in San Francisco
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Grant
Years granted: 2014, 2015, 2016High-Dimensional Statistics for Macroeconomic Forecasting
This project brings new mathematical tools and ideas from high-dimensional statistics to bear on the problem of creating reliable macroeconomic forecasting models.
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Grant
Years granted: 2014, 2015, 2016The Center and the Periphery: The Globalization of Financial Turmoil
This research project creates a new database of international capital flows from the early 19th century, when London became the financial capital of the world, until 1931, when international capital markets collapsed.
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Grant
Years granted: 2015, 2016Worlds of Political Economic Thought in Twentieth-Century China
This research project explores Chinese economic thought of the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, with direct relevance to the present day, and in particular focuses on one specific thinker, Wang Yanan, and the intellectual debates he animated and in which he participated as a major theorist.
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Grant
Years granted: 2014, 2015, 2016Liquidity and Asset Returns in Times of Turmoil
This research project examines the role of political and social unrest by analyzing their effects on bond and stock markets over the period 1900-2000.
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Grant
Years granted: 2014, 2015, 2016Becoming “Applied,” Becoming Relevant? Three Case Studies on the Transformation of Economics since the Mid-Sixties
This research project investigates how economists sought to make their science more relevant to real-world issues and policy design from the mid-1960s on, by becoming “applied economists.”
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Grant
Years granted: 2014, 2015, 2016Will Household Wealth (Ever) Recover?
This research project focuses mainly on whether the wealth of the United States middle class recovered and whether wealth inequality continued to rise or moderated over the years 2010 to 2013 following the financial crisis of 2008.