Archive
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Working Paper Working PaperHow Western states keep the lead in the World Bank: Multipolarity, Geopolitics and the World Bank’s Conflicted Attempts at Shareholding ReformSep 2025 This paper examines 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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Video Why Drug Prices Keep RisingSep 24, 2025 Why are life-saving drugs so expensive—especially when taxpayers already fund much of the science behind them? 
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Working Paper Working PaperThe AI Bubble and the U.S. Economy: How Long Do ‘Hallucinations’ Last?Sep 2025 This paper argues that (i) we have reached “peak GenAI” in terms of current Large Language Models (LLMs); scaling (building more data centers and using more chips) will not take us further to the goal of “Artificial General Intelligence” (AGI); returns are diminishing rapidly; (ii) the AI-LLM industry and the larger U.S. economy are experiencing a speculative bubble, which is about to burst. 
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Research Program Historical American Political Finance Data at the National ArchivesINET’s new data archive of historical political finance records at the National Archives assembles all campaign finance reports filed by political parties and presidential candidates up to 1974, the year before the Federal Election Commission was established. 
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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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Video Religion and the Rise of CapitalismSep 10, 2025 How much of modern economics is shaped by religion? 
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Article Engendering Pluralism: How Gender Diversity Can Transform EconomicsSep 8, 2025 How women economists expand orientations and perspectives that can transform economics into a pluralistic, critically engaged, and socially responsive discipline. 
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Working Paper Working PaperThe Flawed Welfare Foundations of Pro-Free Trade ArgumentsSep 2025 The argument that free trade is always the correct policy is based on a flawed welfare analysis. Free trade results in winners and losers and economists are not competent to analyze the impact on well-being as a whole or the spillover social consequences of the discontent of the losers. 
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Article Labor Day 2025: The Great Crash (of the Economists)Aug 29, 2025 Contrary to what many economic models suggest, salaries aren’t constantly recalibrated based on skills or technology. They follow the economy and politics—and common sense: hire when needed, promote from within, and slow hiring when budgets tighten. 
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Article Economists Warn: Trump’s Intel Move Looks Like Performance, Not PolicyAug 26, 2025 Two economists who have studied Intel warn that Trump’s move to take a stake in the company amounts to flashy optics, incoherent strategy, and a creeping politicization of economic policy. 
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Article Jim Chanos on Crypto, AI, and Casino CapitalismAug 26, 2025 The famed short-seller reminds us that technology might advance, but we’re still a pretty predictable bunch of apes. 
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Video The Fall of IntelAug 20, 2025 How America’s chip leader lost its edge. 
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Working Paper Working PaperEngendering Pluralism in Economics: Gendered Perspectives from an International Survey of EconomistsAug 2025 How women economists expand orientations and perspectives that can transform economics into a pluralistic, critically engaged, and socially responsive discipline. 
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Video Who Wins and Who Loses When AI Makes DecisionsAug 13, 2025 What are the hidden risks and trade-offs in letting machines decide — and how can we protect fairness without stifling innovation? 
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Article Uneven Development Without Social Relations—The Trouble with Nievas and Piketty’s Unequal ExchangeAug 5, 2025 Why do market-centric fixes for “unequal exchange” fall short? Sidelining social relations and production power turns colonialism into a pricing problem—and hides the mechanisms that keep uneven development in place.