5787 Results for “FC 26 monedas Visité Buyfc26coins.com. Ofertas exclusivas y entrega relámpago. ¡Fantástico!.6AWm”
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Video
The Economics of Being Seen
May 28, 2025
What does economic inequality look like when we account for gender identity, sexual orientation, and lived experience?
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesA Theory of How and Why Central-Bank Culture Supports Predatory Risk-Taking at Megabanks
Dec 2015
This paper applies Schein’s model of organizational culture to financial firms and their prudential regulators.
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesLearning, Expectations, and the Financial Instability Hypothesis
Nov 2015
This paper analyzes what assumptions on formation of expectations are consistent with Minsky’s Financial Instability Hypothesis (FIH) and its corollaries.
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Working Paper
Working paperNetworks and Misallocation: Insurance, Migration, and the Rural-Urban Wage Gap
Sep 2015
We provide an explanation for the large spatial wage disparities and low male migration in India based on the trade-off between consumption-smoothing, provided by caste-based rural insurance networks, and the income-gains from migration.
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Video
Can You Trust the Experts?
Apr 10, 2024
Transparency and ethics are critical.
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Person
Kaushik Basu
C. Marks Professor of International Studies and Professor of Economics, Cornell University Former Chief Economist, World Bank Kaushik Basu is Professor of Economics and the C. Marks Professor of International Studies at Cornell University and the former Senior Vice President and Chief Economist of the World Bank. -
Article
Baby Bonds: A Plan for Black/White Wealth Equality Conservatives Could Love?
Oct 25, 2016
Darrick Hamilton calls for spreading the benefits of asset-ownership to all Americans.
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Article
The Promise of Regrexit
Jul 12, 2016
Europe’s leaders must recognize that the EU is on the verge of collapse. Instead of blaming one another, they should pull together and adopt exceptional measures.
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Article
The Fed, Congress, and the President: The Constitutional Authority to Make Money
Apr 6, 2026
The struggle over the Federal Reserve is not just a dispute about central bank independence. It is a constitutional conflict over democratic sovereignty itself: in a representative system, the power to make money belongs first to the legislature, not the executive.
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesThe New Normal: Demand, Secular Stagnation and the Vanishing Middle-Class
May 2017
The U.S. economy is widely diagnosed with two ‘diseases’: a secular stagnation of potential U.S. growth, and rising income and job polarization. The two diseases have a common root inthe demand shortfall, originating from the ‘unbalanced’ growth between technologically ‘dynamic’ and ‘stagnant’ sectors.
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Working Paper
Conference paperAusterity, Polarity and the Prospect of Regime Change: China
Apr 2013
Since the dawn of this millennium, and long before the current financial turmoil and the subsequent bitter pill of austerity therapy hit the Untied States and the European Union, the Chinese Communist Government has publicly recognized the monumental challenge of polarity.
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Working Paper
Conference paperMonetary and Financial Stability: Lessons from the Crisis and from classic economics texts
Apr 2013
My remarks today will be focused primarily on features of the developed world’s financial system which led to the crisis of 2008 and to the Great Recession that followed, from which we are only slowly and painfully emerging.
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesNavigating the Crises in European Energy
Sep 2022
Price Inflation, Marginal Cost Pricing, and Principles for Electricity Market Redesign in an Era of Low-Carbon Transition
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Article
NGDP target, in practice
Oct 25, 2011
Last week Goldman Sachs published a note in favor of the Fed’s adopting a formal nominal GDP target, while Fed-watchers caught a whiff of a possible change in policy in the works.
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News
Melissa Hathaway’s INET article is cited in Bloomberg
May 24, 2021
“Ransomware demands have increased exponentially in the last six months, according to Melissa Hathaway, president of Hathaway Global Strategies and a former cybersecurity adviser to Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama. The average ransom demand is now between $50 million and $70 million, Hathaway said. While those demands are often negotiated down, she said companies are frequently paying ransoms in the tens of millions of dollars, in part because cyber insurance policies cover some or all of the cost. She estimated that the average payment is between $10 million and $15 million.” — Kartikay Mehrotra and William Turton, Bloomberg