5785 Results for “comprar monedas FC 26 Visité Buyfc26coins.com. El proceso de compra es muy intuitivo..cWdS”
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Article
The Dynamics of the Chicago / MIT Dispute (in the Archives)
Mar 4, 2012
In his notorious “How Did Economists Get It So Wrong” NYT article in 2009, Paul Krugman relied on the freshwater/saltwater distinction to explain that the economists’ inability to predict and solve the current economics crisis was due to the fact that MIT/Harvard economics lost their long dispute against their Chicagoan counterparts.
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Article
How Should the Government Negotiate Medicare Drug Prices? A Guide for the Perplexed
Mar 4, 2024
The “maximum fair price” for a drug must not only be equitable to those with unmet medical needs who may benefit from the use of the drug but also provide equitable returns on both public and private sector investments.
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Article
Trump and Wealth-Price Inflation: Still Running in the Background All the Time
Feb 28, 2025
Consumer demand by America’s most affluent citizens is driving consumer spending, and consumer spending, in turn, is the main force keeping inflation so high
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Article
Why the World Bank’s Governance Reform Is Stuck – and How to Break the Stalemate
Sep 29, 2025
We examine the World Bank’s protracted and conflicted attempts at shareholding reform from 2008 to the present, situating them within the broader context of multipolarity and intensifying geopolitical rivalries.
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Article
Mainstream Macroeconomics and Modern Monetary Theory: What Really Divides Them?
Sep 6, 2018
Despite disparate policy beliefs, MMT and orthodox macro rely on many of the same theoretical foundations
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Working Paper
Grantee paperAggregate Demand, Instability, and Growth
Feb 2013
This paper considers a puzzle in growth theory from a Keynesian perspective.
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Site Pages
Privacy Policy
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Article
Profit Inflation and Markups Once Again
Jun 15, 2023
Inflation and corporate profits, a further discussion, responding to Servaas Storm
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Article
What Does Capitalism Repress? A Jungian Perspective.
Jun 17, 2022
Billions living in insecurity and injustice is hardly a rational system.
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Article
Everyone Versus Google: Will Big Tech Be Held Accountable?
Sep 28, 2023
The tech giant is in the hot seat, but it’s going to be a “big fight,” warns antitrust expert Mark Glick.
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Working Paper
ReportThe Pandemic and the Economic Crisis: A Global Agenda for Urgent Action
Mar 2021
INET’s Commission on Global Economic Transformation - Interim Report on the Global Response to the Pandemic
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Article
A Wake-Up Call on Climate Change and Clean Energy
Mar 30, 2016
A stark warning from Institute researchers on the probability that ‘2°C capital stock’ will be reached in 2017
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Video
The Myth of Maximizing Shareholder Value
Jan 22, 2014
Lazonick discusses how we evolved from a society in which corporate interests were largely aligned with those of broader public purpose into a state where crony capitalism, accounting fraud, and corporate predation are predominant characteristics.
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Article
What You Can Do to Protect Yourself Against a Totally Unnecessary U.S. Government Default
Oct 14, 2013
If Congress and the White House fail to raise the debt ceiling this week and the United States defaults on its debt, what can we expect and how can we protect ourselves against these events?
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Video
How Government Helps, and Wall Street Hurts, the Innovative Enterprise
Aug 21, 2011
Innovation drives economic growth and welfare, and the industrial corporation drives innovation, says William Lazonick. But just how do corporations innovate?
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Working Paper
Working paperNonparametric Euler Equation Identication and Estimation
Sep 2015
We consider nonparametric identification and estimation of pricing kernels, or equivalently of marginal utility functions up to scale, in consumption based asset pricing Euler equations. Ours is the first paper to prove nonparametric identification of Euler equations under low level conditions (without imposing functional restrictions or just assuming completeness).
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Podcast
Nelson Barbosa
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Webinars and Events
Toward an Alternative Macroeconomic Theory
ConferenceBudapest 2010
Sep 6–8, 2010
The Institute joined DIME and Central European University in hosting a conference addressing a key question of economics today: How can we create a new macroeconomic theory that takes into account the true relationship of finance to the real economy and can more accurately anticipate crises?
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News
INET Working Paper on the consolidation of the dairy industry is cited in Homeland Security Today
May 17, 2021
“Larger dairy farms inevitably mean a system less geographically dispersed, larger environmental challenges with farm waste, and a less resilient system. The Institute for New Economic Thinking detailed these impacts in a recent report on the pandemic’s effects on dairy farmers, Spilt Milk: COVID-19 and the Dangers of Dairy Industry Consolidation: “The COVID-19 pandemic led to the collapse in commercial demand as restaurants, caterers, schools and other institutional customers were forced to close. Dairy plants serving supermarkets and grocery stores were already operating at close to full capacity when the coronavirus struck. Capital equipment specialized to produce for commercial customers were incapable of producing for consumers served by supermarkets or food banks. Some farmers had no choice but to dump milk.”[9] For the smaller dairy farmers, international (primarily Canadian) competition and price fluctuations are daily economic challenges.” — Charles Luke, Homeland Security Today … [9] Eileen Appelbaum and Jared Gaby-Biegle, “Spilt Milk: COVID-19 and the Dangers of Dairy Industry Consolidation,” Institute for Economic and Policy Research, August 15, 2020, https://www.ineteconomics.org/uploads/papers/WP_134-Appelbaum-and-Gaby-Biegel.pdf
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Video
Beyond Representative-Agent Macroeconomics
Jan 3, 2014
Corrado DiGuilmi and Laura Carvalho, grantees of the Institute for New Economic Thinking, have individually been exploring two possible alternative analytical entry points: mean field methods from physics and stock flow consistent modeling from accounting. The idea behind their grant is to work together to combine these two approaches, the first bottom-up and the second top-down.
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Article
Income and Wealth Distribution in Germany: A Macroeconomic Perspective
Oct 26, 2014
Household economic surveys, such as the German Socio-Economic Panel, notoriously underestimate the degree of income and wealth inequality at the upper end of the distribution.
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Article
Holiday announcements... History at the ASSA
Aug 21, 2012
Mid August, with the Olympics over, Paralympics and Premiership starting (that’s Soccer for the American readership), it is well and truly the quiet period for most of academia.
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News
Washington Monthly Recognizes Rob Johnson and INET’s Role in the Shift that is Underway in the Economy
Oct 30, 2023
Washington Monthly
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Video
Can Universities Survive Politics?
Jun 11, 2025
Universities have always been centers of learning—and centers of power.
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Article
The Economic Mechanism Behind the Populist Backlash to Globalization
Jul 12, 2021
The increase in populism that import competition causes has its roots in import competition’s adverse effects on local labor markets
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Article
Don't Want a Robot to Replace You? Study Tolstoy.
Feb 20, 2018
Economist Morton Schapiro, president of Northwestern University, and his colleague, literary critic and Slavic studies scholar Saul Morson, argue that—contrary to popular belief—studying the humanities is the key to not getting outsourced.
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Article
Bernanke v. Kindleberger: Which Credit Channel?
Oct 13, 2022
In the papers of economist Charles Kindleberger, Perry Mehrling found notes on the paper that won Ben Bernanke his Nobel Prize.
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Article
Modigliani Meets Minsky: Inequality and U.S. Household Debt Since 1950
May 7, 2020
A look at the American household debt boom
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Article
Economic theory declassified?
Oct 19, 2013
So, most Nobel Prize exegetes went a long way, this week, toward explaining that asset pricing is not primarily born out of theoretical reflection but out of prize-deserving empirical work.
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YSI Working Group News
CALL FOR ABSTRACTS: YSI webinar series on 'What Money Can't Buy' with Michael Sandel
YSI
May 1, 2018
To mark the release of INET’s “What Money Can’t Buy” with professor Michael Sandel, the YSI Philosophy of Economics Working Group and and Finance, Law and Economics Working Group invite young scholars working on issues related to the core issues in Michael Sandel’s lectures to present their work in a series of webinars. Professor Sandel will join the webinars to answer questions about the topics raised in his book, the video lectures and to give comment on the presentations.
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YSI Event
Paradigms of Economic Policy: Examples and Lessons from the Nordics
YSI
WorkshopJun 14–15, 2018
The symposium focuses on the various paradigms of economic and social policy at work in the Scandinavian countries, in light of the most recent macroeconomic developments given by increased inequality, population ageing and automation.
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Curriculum Material
History of Economic Thought Website
Spanning centuries, this website concentrates information and resources on the history of economic thought for students, researchers and all those who are interested in learning about economics from a historical perspective.
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Article
Edward Kane: Hidden Subsidies for Too Big to Fail Banks
Aug 24, 2017
An examination of some little-known ways nation states and central banks prop up megabanks
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Article
Mass Producing Covid-19 Vaccine
Feb 9, 2021
Capacity, Scale, and Control
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesDid Quantitative Easing Increase Income Inequality?
Oct 2015
The impact of the post-meltdown Federal Reserve policy of ultra-low interest rates and Quantitative Easing (QE) on income and wealth inequality has become an important policy and political issue.
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Article
"Shadow" Lobbyists Run Rampant in the Swamp
Oct 27, 2020
Unregistered lobbyists, including former members of Congress, are a key resource for lobbying firms
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Article
Toxic Philanthropy? The Spirit of Giving While Taking
Dec 10, 2018
America’s new “philanthrocapitalists” are enabling social problems rather than solving them
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Article
Black Lives Still Matter
Nov 12, 2016
Alicia Garza, co-founder of the Black Lives Matter Network, shares a vision of how to bring economic opportunity to women of color
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Article
Did Capitalism Fail? Looking Back Five Years After Lehman
Sep 17, 2013
How could reputable ratings agencies – and investment banks – misjudge things so badly?
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Article
Swimming against the Current: A Remembrance of Ronald Coase (1910-2013)
Sep 13, 2013
Ronald Coase, who passed away last week at age 102, spent his academic career swimming against the current.
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Article
How Diversity and Pluralism Build Knowledge: The Case of Economics
Jan 21, 2025
If there is no universally accepted outside authority to tell us how to judge theories then knowledge is only going to progress by means of debate
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Article
Facebook, Acquisitions, and Potential Competition
Oct 21, 2019
Big Tech companies are swallowing up nascent competitors. Why aren’t regulators paying attention?
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Article
What Idea Shapes Our World More Than Adam Smith’s Economics?
Oct 20, 2017
Animal rights, child welfare, social equality are all a direct legacy of the “cult of feeling”
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Article
Ring-fencing Explained
Oct 2, 2012
Everyone wants to ring-fence something, but they can’t agree on what:
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Article
Big Money Drove the Congressional Elections—Again
Feb 11, 2021
The Straight Truth
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Article
Get a TAN, Yanis: A Timely Alternative Financing Instrument for Greece
Mar 12, 2015
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Article
Ayn Rand vs. Elinor Ostrom: The Fight for the Future of Social Media
Mar 9, 2023
The contrasting ideologies at play in this tech sector mirror the conflicting ideologies in economics
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Article
Stock Buybacks Stand in the Way of Biden’s Infrastructure Plan
Apr 7, 2021
Hedge fund managers are pushing American firms to play Wall Street games instead of investing in technologies of the future. China doesn’t have that problem.
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Article
The Road not Taken
Apr 19, 2016
Axel Leijonhufvud showed economists a promising path forward. They should have taken it. Leijonhufvud passed away on May 5, 2022
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Article
Where Did You Go, Vice President Joe?
Mar 4, 2022
President Biden’s first SOTU Address was a missed opportunity to say what he knows to be true: Stock buybacks manipulate the market and leave most Americans worse off
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Article
[PART 1] U.S. Current Account Deficits and German Surpluses: The Role of Income Distribution in Global Imbalances
Nov 25, 2013
Germany’s economic policies are under attack from all sides.
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Article
Who Benefits From New Technologies?
Jun 22, 2020
Do the benefits of new technologies accrue primarily to inventors, early investors, and highly skilled users, or to society more widely as their adoption generates employment growth?
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Article
IMF Calls for New Economic Thinking
Mar 13, 2011
Or Does It?
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Article
The New Federal Reserve
Jan 9, 2011
GFC finance as war finance
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Article
The Coming Crisis in Municipal Bankruptcy
Jul 30, 2012
Where’s the next economic crisis?
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Article
How God, Adam Smith, and the invisible hand changes over time
Jan 5, 2012
So with a suitably provocative title I think we can declare 2012 open.
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Article
How God, Adam Smith, and the invisible hand changes over time
Jan 5, 2012
So with a suitably provocative title I think we can declare 2012 open.
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News
Project Syndicate cites INET’s report from the Commission on Global Economic Transformation
Apr 30, 2021
“To do this properly, we need to understand the structure of markets for knowledge-based products like new vaccines. Currently, we do not: the “market” is a mishmash of competition and side deals. According to a recent paper from the Institute for New Economic Thinking, governments and pharmaceutical companies last year concluded 44 bilateral COVID-19 vaccine deals, many of which have undisclosed details and poorly understood escape clauses. Poor countries were, by and large, left out.” — Kaushik Basu, Project Syndicate
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Video
Why Economists Need the Arts
Sep 13, 2017
Engaging in music, literature and the arts is essential for understanding context and human behavior—which economists so often miss
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Grant
Years granted: 2012, 2013, 2014A Network-Based Analysis of Financial Markets
This research project explores the sources of and remedies for financial instability as well as the relationship between traders’ choice of a price-setting mechanism and market structure and the relationship between market freezes and the amount of intermediation in the market.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011, 2013, 2014, 2015Finance and the Welfare of Nations: The View from Economic History
This research project combines 140 years of economic history with state-of-the-art econometric methods to gain new insights into the relationship between finance, growth, and crises.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011, 2012, 2013Long Term Costs of Macroeconomic Instability: The Destruction of Innovative Networks in Cleveland, Ohio, 1920-1940
This research project will examine the long-term costs of macroeconomic instability in a major metropolitan area and the direct impact of macroeconomic shocks on technological discovery.
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News
Adair Turner: How Do We Get Out of This Mess?
Feb 5, 2013
Turner’s speech at the UK Financial Services Authority
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Article
Asking questions about paradigms and INET
Apr 11, 2012
Dinner has already rolled around on what has been a quick day.
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Video
Life after Capitalism
May 26, 2021
How do we break free of the cycle of restrictive thinking which has plagued economics, and the world?
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Podcasts
Richard Kozul-Wright and Orsola Costantini Discusses UNCTAD’s Trade and Development Report 2020
Nov 20, 2020
The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development’s Richard Kozul-Wright and Orsola Costantini say we can continue misguided policy choices or collectively chart a new path that leads from recovery to a more resilient, more equal and more environmentally sustainable world.
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Video
How Not to Criticize Standard Economic Models
Jul 5, 2017
Mason doesn’t think teaching contending economic theories is effective, and sees the objective of introductory economics courses as teaching students basic tools to understand economic terminology and standard relationship between cause and effect.
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Video
How the Economics of the Economics Profession Resists New Thinking
Feb 22, 2017
Following a thought-provoking panel discussion at the AEA, James Heckman and Rob Johnson discuss peer-reviewed journals and a professional incentive structure that constricts the idea space and reinforces tired orthodoxies in economics.
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Grant
Years granted: 2013, 2014, 2015Identification and Modeling Risk Cascades with Dynamic Network Models
This research project models financial interdependencies in the form of dynamic networks and propose policy and risk measurement tools to pre-identify contagion.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011, 2012Reorienting Fiscal Policy: A Bottom Up Approach
This research project offers a theoretical and empirical reassessment of alternative fiscal policy actions to tease out their advantages and disadvantages.
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Working Paper
Conference paperAnarchic East Asia on an American Tether—and Cushion
Apr 2015
“Oh, the Chinese hate the Japanese and the Japanese hate the Chinese—to hate all but the right folks is an old established rule. The Koreans hate the Japanese and the Vietnamese hate the Chinese, and the North Koreans hate them all. Oh, the People hate the Communists and the Communists hate the People. The Nationalists hate the Communists and the Communists hate themselves. The Confucians hate the Buddhists and the Muslims hate them all. All of my folks hate all of your folks. But during National Brotherhood Week, be nice to people who are inferior to you. It’s only for a week, so have no fear—be grateful that it doesn’t last all year.”
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Grant
Years granted: 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014The Divergence of England
This research project reinterprets the events causing the British Industrial Revolution by showing that the Glorious Revolution of 1688-1689 was significant in causing the divergence of political institutions which led to the divergence of economic institutions and policy.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011Paul Samuelson and the Keynesian Golden Age
This research project develops a much better understanding of Paul Samuelson’s life, work, and broader political-economic vision through archival research at Duke University’s Paul Samuelson archives.
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News
Suresh Naidu - Property Rights and Growth: Lessons from Slavery
Feb 1, 2012
A new angle on the link between property rights and economic growth
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Video
Rekindling the Spirit of Innovation
Apr 24, 2024
What happened to the excitement of creativity?
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Article
Can Philosophy Stop Bankers From Stealing?
Jun 7, 2016
Pernicious cultural norms inside American banks and regulatory agencies have crowded out fundamental moral principles. Ed Kane proposes an antidote.
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Article
The Global Pharmaceutical Industry Isn’t Investing in Products for the Greatest Burden of Human Disease - Are Non-Profits a Solution?
Mar 29, 2024
Programs for expedited review may be preferentially reducing the development costs for conditions with lesser disease burden, potentially making investments in addressing the most significant disease burdens even less appealing and exacerbating the market failure further.
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Article
Apple’s “Capital Return Program”: Where Are the Patient Capitalists?
Nov 13, 2018
Instead of rewarding the taxpayers and employees who actually create value for the tech giant, Apple is doling out massive stock buybacks
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Video
Demystifying Modern Monetary Theory
Dec 27, 2014
Bill Mitchell presents a coherent analysis of how money is created, how it functions in global exchange rate regimes, and how the mystification of the nature of money has constrained governments, and prevented states from acting in the public interest.
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Article
Jurassic Economics at ASSA-AEA 2013
Jan 9, 2013
The History of Economics Society (HES) held four sessions at the Allied Social Science Associations (ASSA) 2013 meeting, in San Diego, Jan. 4-6: “Keynes and the International Monetary System” (co-organized by Robert Dimand and Rebeca Gomez Betancourt), “Writing MIT’s History” (organized by E. Roy Weintraub and having our blog fellow Yann Giraud presenting), “Looking for Best Practices in Economic Journalism: Past and Present” (organized by our blog fellow Tiago Mata), and “Real Business Cycle after Three Decades: Past, Present and Future” (a panel discussion co-organized by Warren L. Young and Sumru Altug).
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Article
Oil and the Energy Crisis of the 1970s: A Reanalysis
Jun 25, 2024
An excerpt from Revolt of the Rich: How the Politics of the 1970s Widened America’s Class Divide by David N. Gibbs, published by Columbia University Press (2024)
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Article
Experts: Negotiating Big Pharma's Prices Won't Stifle Innovation—They Don't Use the Money to Innovate!
Mar 14, 2024
Industry lobbyists vehemently oppose Medicare drug price negotiations. However, physician-scientist Fred Ledley and economist William Lazonick debunk their arguments.
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Article
To Fight Climate Change, Save Energy and Reduce Inequality
Feb 22, 2021
The IPCC was correct in emphasizing the need for early mitigation, but their analysis of possible growth trajectories appears to be faulty.
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Article
Rebirth of the School: Why We Invested in the History of Economic Thought Website
Jun 2, 2016
The Institute is proud to welcome the revival of an indispensable resource for those seeking to understand the evolution of economics in context
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Article
Three Questions with Dean Corbae
Apr 19, 2016
Dean Corbae is a leader of the Markets network and Professor of Finance, Investment, and Banking at the Wisconsin School of Business, where he also holds an appointment in the Department of Economics. His current research focuses on consumer credit and bankruptcy, foreclosures, and banking industry dynamics.
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Article
Warren J. Samuels (1933-2011)
Aug 18, 2011
On this blog, we like to overstate quite a bit our irreverence towards the establishment and in particular our senior colleagues.
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesWhy Diagnostic Expectations Cannot Replace REH
Jan 2022
A formal argument that Kahneman and Tversky’s compelling empirical findings, and those of other behavioral economists, do not provide a basis for a general approach to specifying participants’ “predictable errors.”
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesInequality, Debt Servicing, and the Sustainability of Steady State Growth
Nov 2015
We investigate the claim that the way in which debtor households service their debts matters for macroeconomic performance.
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Working Paper
Working PaperMapping Fragility – Functions of Wealth and Social Classes in US Household Finance
Jan 2024
Examining the crucial role of poverty and inequality in shaping household indebtedness.
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Article
The IMF and the Collateral Crunch
Dec 9, 2011
Why is the IMF getting involved in the Eurocrisis, and why is its involvement taking the form of lending to individual member states of the Eurozone?
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Grant
Years granted: 2014, 2015Macroeconomic Policy over the Business Cycle
This research project provides guidance to policymakers for designing policies that are able to bring economies out of recessions by identifying the best policies to fight unemployment and stabilize the business cycle while alleviating inequality.
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News
Smart Energy Quotes INET-Grantee Michael Grubb on UCL’s Net Zero Market Design Center
Sep 17, 2024
Smart Energy
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Video
Measuring Exploitation in the Global Economy
Dec 10, 2025
Who gains—and who loses—from global capitalism?
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Article
Online Education in the Covid-19 Crisis: “It’s Like Coke Dealers Handing Out Free Samples”
Apr 6, 2020
Economist Gordon Lafer describes a race against the education technology industry to do what’s right for America’s kids
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Article
Axel Leijunhufvud, Wide-Ranging Economist
Jun 1, 2022
An obituary for Axel Leijunhufvud (Sept 6, 1933 - May 5, 2022)
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Article
India: Demonetization and its Discontents
Nov 28, 2016
By suddenly eliminating two widely used bank notes, India’s government risks undermining public confidence in the basic means of exchange
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Article
Nobel Prize Tasseology
Oct 25, 2011
Till is right. It’s not the historian’s task to question the legitimacy of the decisions of the Nobel Committee.
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Article
The Inherent Instability of Credit
Mar 3, 2011
What kind of “Minsky Moment”?
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Article
Why Big Firms No Longer Pay (Much) More
Jan 28, 2018
The corporate titans of yore once offered a sizable wage premium over smaller employers—but not anymore. What happened?
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Video
Cyber Security & Centralized Data, What Could Go Wrong?
Aug 26, 2014
What is the scale of effort that is actually required to initiate global cyber warfare? Amir Herzberg elaborates on cyber security, cyber warfare and basic privacy in the global digital age.