5785 Results for “credit fc 26 ps5 Visitez le site Buyfc26coins.com Site sûr pour acheter des FC 26 coins.yAWj”
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Article
How Media Workers are Organizing in the Dual Economy
Jun 27, 2019
With journalism moving from a stable to a precarious profession, digital media workers have become some of the most organized in the startup world
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YSI Working Group News
The 2008 Global Financial Crisis as History - YSI Webinar series
YSI
Sep 25, 2018
“You never want a serious crisis to go to waste. …This crisis provides the opportunity for us to do things that you could not before.” This YSI Webinar and Reading Group aims to contribute to the historicization of the Global Financial Crisis of 2008 and its repercussions.
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Article
How Do Investors Approach the Stock Market in a Wild Election Cycle?
Jun 1, 2016
Neither the Rational Expectations Hypothesis nor behavioral finance approaches alone provides an adequate predictor of investor behavior, argues Roman Frydman
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Article
How the Wall Street Journal Blew the Story of the Democrats and Inflation
Nov 19, 2024
The firehose of affluent consumption continues to drive inflation, not the stimulus package
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Article
A sparsity based model of bounded rationality
Dec 17, 2014
A more realistic version of how people “maximize utility”
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Article
G2 Trade Balance Explained
Jan 21, 2011
It is all about promises to pay in the future.
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Article
Why Carried Interest is Suddenly the Inequality Flashpoint
Sep 11, 2015
A little-understood rule in the tax code is making headlines. What’s all the fuss?
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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: 2013, 2014, 2015Cognitive Foundations of Economic Microfoundations
This research project formulates a normative theory of learning both preferences and probabilities that explains a broad spectrum of economic behavior heretofore judged irrational.
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Webinars and Events
Indian Development History and New Horizons for Asia
WebinarWith Montek S. Ahluwalia, A. Michael Spence. Chaired by Rob Johnson
Apr 1, 2021
The discussants will illuminate the findings and wisdom in Montek S. Ahluwalia’s book BackStage: The Story Behind India’s High Growth Years (2019) and then explore the challenges for the developing world and Asian geopolitics.
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Article
Where the SPD and Germany would stand today without Agenda 2010
May 17, 2016
The SPD, the Social Democratic Party of Germany, has been collapsing in the popularity polls ever since they in 2003 launched the reform Agenda. What would have come of the party if it had not been for this insane rush to reform? Possibly Gerhard Schroeder could even still be chancellor today. A case for the time machine.
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Article
Joseph Stiglitz: “Deep-seatedly wrong” economic thinking is killing Greece
Aug 19, 2015
The latest austerity deal is terrible for Greece and Europe.
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Article
Austerity Caused Brexit
Aug 2, 2018
Places hit hardest by austerity cuts were more likely to vote for UKIP and Leave
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Article
Drooping Green Shoots
Mar 5, 2015
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News
The Deficit Debate
Oct 5, 2010
Will public deficit reduction encourage private sector growth, or undermine a needed stimulus to recovery & lead to Japan-style stagnation?
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Video
Microfoundations for the Vision of Minsky
Jun 12, 2011
Delli Gatti starts where his dissertation advisor, Hyman Minsky, left off.
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Article
Is The Weak Axiom of Revealed Preference Falsifiable?
Oct 12, 2012
MWG introduces the theory of consumer behavior by presenting two distinct approaches to modeling consumer behavior, the preference-based approach (based upon unobservable preferences generating a utility function) and the choice-based approach (based upon observable choice behavior), and attempting to establish connections between the two.
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Video
Venture Capital in the 21st Century
Jan 29, 2020
Explore economic growth and development through technological innovation with the renowned investor and scholar
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Article
Why Standard Macro Models Fail During Crises
Jun 25, 2014
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Article
Are Our Earnings Really Our 'Just Deserts'?
Oct 5, 2016
A new paper by Nancy Folbre offers an evidence-based refutation of ‘just-world’ assumptions
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Article
Racial Wealth Gap Won't be Fixed by Education Alone
Aug 16, 2016
Renewed attention on America’s stark and growing racial wealth divide requires critical thinking on policy remedies
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Video
Lessons from the Great Depression
Dec 5, 2014
How can we better integrate history into economic analysis?
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News
Mark Thoma Excited about Student Presence at INET Berlin Conference
Apr 13, 2012
Mark Thoma has picked up on a significant aspect of this year’s INET annual conference
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News
READING ROOM: Economics has met the enemy, and it is economics
Oct 15, 2011
The Globe and Mail published a long piece about the dismal science, covering a lot of ground from moral philosophy to rational expectations, from Adam Smith to this year’s Nobel laureate Thomas Sargent, from the Post-Autistic Economics movement to the Institute for New Economic Thinking. Excerpts:
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News
Reinhart and Rogoff Clarify Debt Findings
Aug 10, 2010
What is the relationship between debt and growth rates?
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Webinars and Events
INET at the Trento Economics Festival
ConferenceThe Return of the State: Businesses, Communities, Institutions
Jun 3–6, 2021
Watch INET at the Trento Economics Festival online
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YSI Event
YSI Economic History Workshop @ World Economic History Congress
YSI
WorkshopJul 29, 2018
The YSI Economic History Working Group invites scholars to submit their research on alternative perspectives and different approaches to the study of economic history. The workshop will take place on 29 July, 2018, in Boston, Massachusetts, preceding the World Economic History Congress (29 July - 3 August).
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Video
Innovation And Its Potential To Damage Society
Jun 6, 2014
What if innovation is not an unalloyed good for society? What if it simply adds to our current dystopian dysfunction?
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Video
Financial Regulations In Paralysis
Nov 14, 2014
Bill Black knows banks.
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YSI Event
'How much is Enough?' with Robert Skidelky
YSI
DiscussionOct 12, 2016
The epidemic extension of working hours and difficulty in maintaining work-life balance raises the question of the point of income and leisure satisfaction.
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Video
The Global Haves And Have-Nots In The 21st Century
Nov 15, 2015
This is almost certainly the highest level of relative, and certainly absolute, global inequality at any point in human history. Is there anything we can do to reverse or mitigate this trend?
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Video
Preparing For The Next Financial Crisis
Jun 14, 2014
So how far have we come since Lehman? How much more do we have to do?
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Grant
Years granted: 2015Transport Infrastructure, Long-Run Development, and Policy: Evidence from England and Wales, c.1817 to 2011
This research project will study the long-run interactions between transport infrastructure and economic development using spatially-disaggregated data for England and Wales over the period c.1817—2011. It will look to inform policy toward large investments in physical infrastructures.
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Webinars and Events
INET Live | Climate Debates
ConferenceSeptember 21, 2021 1:00pm - 3:00pm ET & September 22, 2021 9:00am - 12:00pm ET
Sep 21–22, 2021
Scientists have been sounding the alarm for decades about the severe global impact that rising temperatures will have on the environment, economies, health outcomes, and ultimately humanity’s long-term survival. Yet little has been done.
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesMass Incarceration Retards Racial Integration
Apr 2021
Formerly incarcerated Black people emerge from prison with far less education and social skills than white ex-cons. And they have great trouble forming families or earning a good living.
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News
Bofinger's INET article is listed on Daily Kos’s Week-end recommended reading list.
Jan 25, 2021
“Best of Mankiw: Errors and Tangles in the World’s Best-Selling Economics Textbooks Peter Bofinger, former member of the German Council of Economic Experts [Naked Capitalism January 4, 2021] Mankiw has been lambasted a number of times by Adbusters, the Canadian group which originated the call for mass protests that became Occupy Wall Street. Also see Toxic Textbooks: “Mankiw’s textbook seems an ideal place to look for clues as to how both the economics profession and the public which it educates became so ignorant, misinformed and unobservant of how economies work in the real world.” The problem with the leadership of the Democratic Party at the state and national levels is not the caricature of maliciousness that the Trumpists believe, and which the Republicans have used to “feed red meat to their base,” but merely that the leadership has been taught, and believes and swills, the snake oil Mankiw peddles. Below, just a small sample of Bofinger’s detailed take-down of Mankiw.” — NB Books Community, Daily Kos
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Conference Session
America’s Recurring Debt Problem: Are We Approaching a New Tipping Point?
Jun 22, 2017 | 04:30—06:00
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Grant
Years granted: 2015Distributional National Accounts
The objective of this proposal is to build distributional statistics of income and wealth consistent with national accounts aggregates for the United States.
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Grant
Years granted: 2014, 2015Safe Assets and the Evolution of Financial Information
This research project brings together ideas from the literature on robustness in macroeconomics, network theory, and evolutionary game theory to study the way in which perceptions of safe asset status evolve among financial market participants.
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News
Tom Ferguson and Rob Johnson on Debt, Growth, and Austerity
Apr 17, 2011
Deficit Fantasies in the Great Recession
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Podcasts
The Shaman's Call and Finding Your Inner Voice
Jun 8, 2023
Steven Herrmann, Jungian psychoanalyst and author of the books, William James and C. G. Jung and of William Everson: The Shaman’s Call, among others, engages in a wide-ranging conversation about finding one’s calling, the poet William Everson, and the importance of dreams.
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Article
Edward J. Kane: A Short Tribute
Mar 3, 2023
On the passing away of Edward J. Kane
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Video
Framers: Human Advantage in an Age of Technology and Turmoil
Jun 16, 2021
You have the power to reframe and reimagine the 21st century.
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Video
Can America Survive the Rule of a “Stupified Plutocracy”?
Oct 24, 2018
Donald Trump, democracy, and how the wealthy crush the American Dream
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Grant
Years granted: 2012Sustainable Finance Lab Research Program
This research project develops a comprehensive research agenda to formulate proposals that will help make the financial sector sustainable and facilitate a transition to sustainable economic development.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011The Evolution of the Wealth and Income Distributions Across Generations: a Data Collection Project
This research project enhances our understanding of how endowments and subsequent opportunities and shocks explain the evolution of individual and family well-being across generations.
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News
FTD and Global Climate Forum to Host Event at Berlin’s Mercator Project Center
Jun 13, 2012
What is the role of Germany in Europe?
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Video
Religion and the Rise of Capitalism
Sep 10, 2025
How much of modern economics is shaped by religion?
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News
Joseph Stiglitz and Anton Korinek’s INET-funded research is cited in the NY Times
May 5, 2021
“In their December 2017 paper, “Artificial intelligence, worker-replacing technological progress and income distribution,” the economists Anton Korinek, of the University of Virginia, and Joseph E. Stiglitz, of Columbia — describe the potential of artificial intelligence to create a high-tech dystopian future. Korinek and Stiglitz argue that without radical reform of tax and redistribution politics, a “Malthusian destiny” of widespread technological unemployment and poverty may ensue.” — Thomas B. Edsall, New York Times
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Podcasts
James Boyce
Aug 27, 2020
James Boyce, Senior fellow at the Political Economy Research Institute, talks about the many benefits that carbon dividends and carbon pricing would have for a transition towards a greener and more equitable economy
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Podcasts
John Kay and Mervyn King
Aug 13, 2020
John Kay, economist at Oxford University, and Mervyn King of the London School of Economics, discuss their recently published book, Radical Uncertainty: Decision-Making Beyond the Numbers
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Video
What Finance (and Economics) Can Learn from Law
Aug 14, 2011
Without law and legal institutions, financial markets won’t work. That’s what economists discovered about 15 years ago, when former socialist countries turned towards capitalism.
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Grant
Years granted: 2013, 2014, 2015Does Financialization Contribute to Growing Income Inequality?
This research project explores whether the financialization of the US economy has contributed to rising income inequality through complementary analyses at the individual, firm and industry levels.
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Person
Stephen M. Cumbie
Chief Executive Officer and Principal, NVCommercial Incorporated Mr. Cumbie is the Chief Executive Officer and Principal of NVCommercial Incorporated, NVRetail and Metro Management Services, commercial real estate investment, development and services companies which exceed $1.0 billion completed or in-process projects in the Washington, D.C., Richmond, Virginia and Denver, Colorado metropolitan areas. -
Article
Central Banks and Income Distribution: Does the Taylor Rule Push Up Rentier Incomes?
Jul 27, 2023
The effect of monetary policy on the functional distribution of income
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Article
What’s the Fate of Social Security in a Brutally Unequal America?
Feb 1, 2024
White House contenders ignore root causes threatening the program, potentially worsened by cuts. Is it due to reliance on wealthy donors?
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Working Paper
Conference paperIs Innovation a Good Thing? The Innovation Gap in Pink and Black
Apr 2014
Innovation, the commercialization of invention, is both desirable and necessary for growth and higher living standards in modern economies. Innovation’s contribution to the economy is being measured increasingly more precisely, and its contribution has been assessed aseconomically important and growing.
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Working Paper
Working PaperMuth’s Hypothesis Under Knightian Uncertainty
Dec 2022
A Novel Account of Inflation Forecasts
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Article
Google’s Dominance of Online Ads is a Big Deal. Here’s How to Fix It.
Feb 19, 2021
Legal scholar Dina Srinivasan talks to INET’s Lynn Parramore about restoring fairness to a regulatory Wild West.
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Article
Draghi’s Doom Loop(s): More than Just the Euthanasia of the Rentiers
Apr 7, 2015
The tail risks that may be generated by Mario Draghi’s monetary policy innovations in the Eurozone include even more intense versions of Andrew Haldane’s “Doom Loops”
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Article
How German Economists Really Think
Jul 7, 2015
A survey on behalf of the Sueddeutsche Zeitung indicates that German economists are much more American in their thinking than is presumed – with a rising trend.
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Video
Polanyi on Polanyi
Feb 26, 2020
In this series Polanyi reflects on an extraordinary life, and the extraordinary legacy of her family.
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Article
Crisis After Brexit: Let us put an end to the old Europe of denigrators
Jul 5, 2016
No, it’s not bureaucracy that is to blame - It’s the EU that has a problem, because urged by Germany it has pushed a kind of naive globalization, the outgrowths of which contribute to the upswing of dim-witted populists. Not only in the EU. Time for a new paradigm.
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News
Deleveraging Redfined - Part 2: Martin Wolf on the Least-Bad Alternative
Aug 1, 2012
“You can’t get out of debt by adding more debt.”
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Video
Why Economics Needs History
Jul 10, 2011
What challenges will China have to surmount in order to make its currency a true international currency?
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Working Paper
Conference paperEmbedding GroupThink
Apr 2015
This memo outlines key concepts and the methodological approach involved in a recently funded Institute for New Economic Thinking project. Our aim is to pinpoint the relationship between the reception of academic ideas, traced by citation networks with qualitative coding, and positions of institutional and political power.
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News
INET Congratulates the Winners of the 2022 Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel
Oct 11, 2022
Ben Bernanke, Douglas Diamond, and Philip Dybvig were honored for their work on financial instability
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Article
HES 2011, Paul Samuelson and the Beatles
Jun 30, 2011
So, how hard is it to write the history of exceptional figures? Shall we buy film cameras?
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YSI Event
Basel III and the Challenges of Banking Regulation
A webinar series organized by the YSI Financial Stability Working Group
YSI
DiscussionJul 8–Sep 9, 2016
The YSI Financial Stability Working Group will explore the changing nature of banking regulation. The series will look into the history of the Basel regulations, how they are conceived, and the challenges that are posed in their implementation.
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Article
Why Raising the Minimum Wage Makes Economic Sense
Apr 13, 2013
A minimum wage is a small minnow in an ocean of deficient aggregate demand
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Webinars and Events
Future of Work Industry 4.0 and the Pursuit of Social Innovation
ConferenceMay 4, 2016
Does the technology revolution require a new social policy?
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Article
Monopsony in Professional Labor Markets: Hospital System Concentration and Nurse Wage Growth
Jan 19, 2023
Growing consolidation in localized hospital markets appears to restrict nurse wage growth
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Article
Boycott the Journal Rankings
Jul 27, 2018
Journal rankings are a rigged game. The blacklist of history of economic thought journals isn’t a fluke nor a conspiracy—it exposes how citation rankings really work
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Working Paper
Grantee paperVisualising Stock-Flow-Consistent Models as Directed Acyclic Graphs
Aug 2014
We show how every stock-flow consistent model of the macroeconomy can be represented as a directed acyclic graph.
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Working Paper
Conference paperUnpacking and Reorienting Executive Subcultures of Modern Finance
Apr 2015
Recent weeks have surfaced an intense exchange of top-level finger pointing, both between Congress and the leadership of the Federal Reserve System, between Fed officials and executives in the private sector and within the Fed between the Board of Governors and the New York Reserve Bank.
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Person
Ekaterina Cleary
Data Scientist Dr. Ekaterina Cleary is a Data Scientist at Consilium Scientific. She holds a PhD in Biomedical Engineering and Biotechnology from the University of Massachusetts, Lowell and a Master’s Degree in Bioinformatics from Boston University. With prior roles in academia and consulting, she now focuses on clinical trial quality, evidence generation, and the intersection of health policy and reimbursement. -
Article
Contemplating the Age of Hyper-Uncertainty
Dec 19, 2016
In the 40th anniversary year of John Kenneth Galbraith’s Age of Uncertainty, the 1970s look remarkably stable in comparison with today’s turbulent world
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Article
China as bank of the world?
Sep 19, 2011
Can the renminbi displace the dollar as the world’s international money?
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Article
Economists Coming of Age
Jul 7, 2012
Last weekend, I was in Tübingen - very close to my home town: the same smell, the same surreal Swabian idyll that makes you think of Hölderlin and Hesse rather than DSGE.
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News
Exposing Citation Gaming and its Institutional Causes
Sep 16, 2019
A new method developed by INET grantees to estimate country-level citation clubs and self-citations is making waves, with implications far beyond the paper’s initial focus.
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Video
A Turbulent Capitalist Economy: The vision of Anwar Shaikh
Apr 5, 2017
In a recent interview at the INET offices in New York, Anwar Shaikh provided a background to the work and his life in this quest.
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Article
The Lehman Crisis and the Unfinished Business of Financial Reform
Sep 18, 2013
With the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008, a crisis in part driven by derivatives on subprime mortgages, a seemingly obscure sector of the financial market help fuel the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.
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Article
Merger Tests in Practice: A Critical Analysis
May 8, 2023
Current tests for mergers are in practice deeply flawed.
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News
Jack Gao appeared on Arirang to discuss Biden’s infrastructure plan
Apr 12, 2021
“There is a lot to like about with this infrastructure plan from what we already know and there seems to be a historical opportunity to get things right. Before answering your question, let me bring us to three trends just for context. Firstly, for decades we’ve had an economic model that benefited a small number of people tremendously and left behind the majority of Americans, resulting in widening inequality and decline in the middle class. The fact that a zip code could predict a lot of things; your health outcome, your lifespan, your success in life is an extremely telling example. Secondly, we’ve had the digital revolution which spanned a good part of the last 15 years that further demonstrated a lot of displacing and polarizing tendencies. If you’re in the wrong parts of the economy so to speak, it really didn’t work that much for you. Thirdly of course, we had the Covid crisis which turbocharged a lot of these trends. A lot of this is to say that sure there’s a lot of roads and bridges to fix and as well as fiscal infrastructure, but how to productively engage more Americans in the economic process through like you said job training and education, through better child care, invest in green recovery, and climate resilience these are paramount tasks.” — Jack Gao, Institute for New Economic Thinking
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Article
Debating Household Debt
Mar 8, 2017
INET grantee JW Mason has been engaged in an important debate with the Financial Times’ Matthew Klein over the relationship of household debt to income inequality
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Article
Marcello de Cecco (1939-2016)
Mar 10, 2016
Paying tribute to one of the world’s most distinguished economic historians.
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Grant
Years granted: 2013, 2014The Political Economy of Structural Adjustment: IMF Conditionality, 1986-2011
This research project creates a systematic and publically available database of macroeconomic and structural conditions in all IMF loan agreements signed after 1987.
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News
Robert Johnson in Time Magazine about the Failures of the Economics Profession
Jan 18, 2012
What can be done to repair economics so economists can play a productive role in helping society?
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News
How to save the financial system from itself?
Jul 16, 2012
what role central bankers should play to bring the needed change>
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Article
INET Grantee Lazonick’s Research Shapes DC Share Buyback Debate
Dec 22, 2017
Sen. Tammy Baldwin features arguments in questions to SEC nominees, pharmaceutical industry witness
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Conference Session
INET President: Rebuilding A Moral Economics
Oct 21, 2017 | 11:15
Rob Johnson kicks off INET’s “Reawakening” conference with his take on how economists can win back the trust of a world that has rejected experts
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Video
Breaking the Climate Change Stalemate
Oct 2, 2012
Climate change policy is caught in a stalemate between those who fear the environmental consequences of not doing enough and those who fear the economic consequences of overreacting. But controversy over the extent and sources of climate change need not stand in the way of a positive economic policy response.
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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.
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Article
A Quick One (Message to Naomi)
Sep 13, 2012
Yesterday, I had my first introductory economics seminar with my new students.
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesThe Political Economy of Europe Since 1945: A Kaleckian Perspective
Nov 2019
This paper analyzes the early stages of the formation of the Common Market.
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Working Paper
Conference paperChange and Expectations in Macroeconomic Models: Recognizing the Limits to Knowability
Apr 2012
In modern economies, individuals and companies engage in innovative activities, discovering new ways to use existing physical and human capital, and new technologies in which to invest. The institutional and broader social context within which these activities take place also changes in novel ways.
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Working Paper
Working PaperThe Perils of Antitrust Econometrics: Unrealistic Engel Curves, Inadequate Data, and Aggregation Bias
May 2023
Antitrust econometrics relies on often-implausible assumptions
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Article
How to lie with statistics: An economist's guide
Jul 2, 2012
How representation of data can contribute to, or dispel the false certainty of statistical and econometric technique.
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Video
Wealth Inequality in the US and Beyond
Mar 15, 2016
It’s no secret that wealth inequality has grown, both in the US and abroad over the past several decades. What has been particularly notable about the work of Emmanuel Saez is the quantification of that inequality.
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Course
Advanced Microeconomics for the Critical Mind
Oct 3–Dec 19, 2016
This course aims to introduce graduate students to the “standard” basic methods and topics of microeconomics as taught at the Ph.D. level, while providing a very different teaching approach than is prevalent in introductory doctoral-level microeconomics courses. Typically, much effort is focused on mastering a large technical apparatus consisting of axioms, theorems, propositions, and corresponding proofs, often leaving students longing for an informed and critical understanding of the deeper significance of the methods and results.