Archive
-
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.
-
Working Paper
Working PaperConsidering Returns on Federal Investment in the Negotiated “Maximum Fair Price” of Drugs Under the Inflation Reduction Act: an Analysis
Mar 2024
The empirical analysis of public sector investments and the health value created by the drugs selected for Medicare price negotiations provides a cost basis for the assessment of the maximum fair price.
-
Video
Sanctions: To Russia with Love
Feb 28, 2024
James Galbraith flips the script on sanctions. How has Russia adapted?
-
Article
Can Baby Bonds Fight the Wealth Gap and Racial Inequality? Connecticut Aims to Find Out.
Feb 27, 2024
Connecticut is the first state to fund and enact a baby bonds program, inspiring more states to create their own plans. Can it make a difference?
-
Video
Navigating Economic Crises
Feb 21, 2024
How can we better prepare for financial downturns?
-
Webinars and Events
Meeting of Young Minds in Frontiers of Economics (MYM)
ConferenceFeb 20–22, 2024
Challenges And Emerging Perspectives
-
Webinars and Events
LEPC VI: Ideas for Building the Future
ConferenceFeb 16–18, 2024
India: Climate Change, Technology, and Growth
-
News
INET in India (February 2024)
Feb 14, 2024
The media coverage of the INET team’s February 2024 visit to India. Prof. Michael Spence, Chair of the Commission on Global Economic Transformation (CGET), along with INET Governing Board Chair Dr. Rohinton Medhora, and INET President Dr. Rob Johnson, took part in this visit.
-
Video
Empowering Communities
Feb 14, 2024
Jo-Anne Rolle emphasizes the critical role of entrepreneurship and technology in revitalizing local economies and addressing societal issues.
-
News
Business Insider quotes and cites Lazonick’s INET-funded research on Boeing’s stock buybacks.
Feb 12, 2024
Business Insider quotes and cites William Lazonick’s INET-funded research on Boeing’s stock buybacks. Cross-posted in MSN, Yahoo Finance, Business News, AOL, News Break, Star News, and Web Today.
-
News
The Economic Times quotes Rob Johnson’s presentation at the Global Business Summit
Feb 12, 2024
The Economic Times quotes Rob Johnson’s presentation at the Global Business Summit in India. Cross posted in Pune Media and BM Business News
-
News
Times Now News features and quotes Rob Johnson’s presentation at the Global Business Summit
Feb 12, 2024
Times Now News features and quotes Rob Johnson’s presentation at the Global Business Summit in India.
-
Article
Inflation and Power
Feb 12, 2024
It was a mistake to accept a ‘reference price’-determination process for basic commodities led by finance
-
Video
The Baby Formula
Feb 7, 2024
A fair start for every child? Let’s make it reality.
-
Article
Trump, Populism, and the Republican Establishment: Two Graphs From New Hampshire
Feb 2, 2024
This year’s New Hampshire primary testifies to the disintegration of the Republican Party
-
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?
-
Video
A Paradigm Shift Towards Ecological Restoration
Jan 31, 2024
“We need to figure out new ways to relate to the earth.”
-
Article
Monetary Policy, Illiquidity, and the Inflation Debates
Jan 29, 2024
The key issue is the regulation of the liquidity of all financial markets, and not just that of the banking system
-
Working Paper
Working PaperMonetary Policy and Illiquidity
Jan 2024
It is not just all about banking system liquidity
-
Partnership
IITB
The Indian Institute of Technology Bombay
-
Partnership
GIPE
Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics
-
Video
Can Crypto Be Socially Valuable?
Jan 24, 2024
The Impact of Public Blockchains and Private Pools
-
Article
Bagehot on Money: A Bridge Between Bankers and Economists?
Jan 22, 2024
Reinterpreting Bagehot’s mature work as the origin of the key currency tradition
-
Working Paper
Working PaperBagehot’s Classical Money View: A Reconstruction
Jan 2024
Read in the context of his time, Bagehot’s book Lombard Street appears as an attempt above all to reveal the dynamic of globalization when global money was sterling.
-
Webinars and Events
Labor Market Volatility Today: From Understanding Volatility to Reducing Financial Insecurity
WebinarJan 18, 2024
An expert panel will discuss the latest research on the experiences of workers facing volatility of their time and income, how this volatility impacts their financial outcomes over time, ways current policies help or hinder workers cope with labor market volatility, and other possibilities for change.
-
Video
Busting the Bankers' Club
Jan 17, 2024
Finance for the Rest of Us
-
Article
Occupation, Gender, and Labor Market Volatility
Jan 16, 2024
When working within the same employment spell, female workers, particularly those of color and those working in low-wage service and care jobs, earn significantly less when facing greater volatility than their male counterparts or those working in non-service, non-care occupations.
-
Article
Finally, an Economist Takes on the Topic of Power
Jan 16, 2024
Alessandro Roncaglia has mulled the topic of power over his long and distinguished career – a topic most economists avoid. His new book explores the historical dynamics of power and asks how we can change its distribution today.
-
Working Paper
Working PaperLabor Market Volatility and Worker Financial Wellbeing: An Occupational and Gender Perspective
Jan 2024
Research on labor market experience does not explain the link between the volatility low-wage workers encounter and their earnings and it leaves open numerous pressing questions, such as what, if anything, can be done to reduce racial and ethnic differences in economic well-being.
-
Article
As Presidential Hopefuls Spar on Social Security, This Expert Separates Fact from Fiction
Jan 12, 2024
Eric Laursen, author of The People’s Pension, explains to INET’s Lynn Parramore what’s at stake for Americans in a year of sneak attacks and misinformation.
-
Video
How Stock Buybacks Fuel the Racial Wealth Gap
Jan 10, 2024
Lenore Palladino explains how stock buybacks drive inequality, and why we desperately need a policy shift.
-
Article
Unhappy New Year: How Austerity is Making a Comeback in Berlin and Brussels
Jan 4, 2024
Germany’s debt brake and EU fiscal rules will make it well neigh impossible for EU countries to fund the investments needed to decarbonize their economies.
-
Video
Barbara Bergman: Pioneering Feminist Economist & Advocate for Economic Diversity
Jan 3, 2024
Bergman’s groundbreaking work in the field of feminist economics challenged conventional economic theories and emphasized the significance of power, patriarchy, and social provisioning.
-
Article
American Household Debt: A Reappraisal
Jan 2, 2024
Which households are more exposed to financial risk and to what extent is their debt systemically relevant?
-
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.
-
Partnership
Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR)
The Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) was established in 1999 to promote democratic debate on the most important economic and social issues that affect people’s lives. In order for citizens to effectively exercise their voices in a democracy, they should be informed about the problems and choices that they face. CEPR is committed to presenting issues in an accurate and understandable manner, so that the public is better prepared to choose among the various policy options.
-
Video
The Ghost Budget
Dec 20, 2023
Paying for America’s Post 9/11 Wars
-
Article
Renowned Political Scientist: Can We Really Save American Democracy?
Dec 19, 2023
In an exclusive interview, Benjamin Page discusses urgent reforms needed to tackle critical challenges, from undemocratic institutions to economic inequality.
-
Article
How GM’s $10-Billion Buyback May Ice Its EV Transition
Dec 18, 2023
Reindustrialization vs Financialization
-
Video
The Economics of Abundance
Dec 13, 2023
In part 2 of our conversation with Professor Jessica Gordon Nembhard, she goes deeper into the power of cooperatives and their positive impacts on society and democracy.
-
Article
Africa’s Crisis Is Also an Opportunity
Dec 12, 2023
“If we get our policy, politics, and institutions right, African economies and society could gain greater energy and food security, built on green competition and taking strong action on climate change.“ —Professor Chuks Okereke, Director of the Centre for Climate Change and Development at Alex Ekwueme Federal University
-
News
The White House Cites INET's Working Paper on Government Funding of Pharma R&D
Dec 8, 2023
The White House cited Ledley’s INET working paper on the NIH’s seed funding of FDA approved pharmaceuticals in their fact sheet on new actions to lower health care and prescription drug costs.
-
Article
Is American Banking Safe? You Might Not Like The Answer from Two Fed Veterans
Dec 4, 2023
Walker Todd and Bill Bergman expose the untold story of banking instability, regulatory battles, and the struggle to protect the public from financial chaos
-
News
INET Welcomes Jamie Daves as its Newest Governing Board Member
Dec 4, 2023
New INET Governing Board Member Announcement
-
Article
The Dutch Earthquake
Nov 30, 2023
Why did so many Dutch voters vote for the far-right Geert Wilders?
-
Video
Quantifying Sexual Harassment
Nov 29, 2023
Giulia Zacchia focuses on the dynamics of power and gender in the labor market, revealing how sexual harassment not only impacts individual women but also perpetuates broader societal inequalities.
-
Article
Democratic Reform at a Time of Dire Troubles
Nov 27, 2023
What sort of effective democratic political system does the United States want and need?
-
Video
Sympathy for Homo Economicus
Nov 22, 2023
Is self-interest the best way to organize society? If monetarism has taught us anything, the models aren’t at fault, it’s our application of them that’s flawed. Perhaps we just need to do a better job of letting markets guide us? Homo Economicus explains why greed is good.
-
Article
What Does Mustard Gas Have in Common with Crypto and Blockchain?
Nov 20, 2023
In his new book, Let Them Eat Crypto, Peter Howson cautions that the technologies are not just fraudulent but causing indefensible harm to both humanity and the planet.
-
Video
Visions of Inequality
Nov 15, 2023
Branko Milanovic takes us on a historical journey through the evolution of economic inequality in his latest book. Milanovic connects these foundational ideas to contemporary issues, revealing the intricate tapestry of economic, social, and political forces that drive inequality today.
-
News
Lynn Parramore's Interview with Jim Chanos is Featured in a Dozen Publications
Nov 13, 2023
Lynn Parramore’s INET interview with Chanos is suggested reading in the FT, and has been cross-posted or summarized in the following media outlets: Naked Capitalism, MSN, Yahoo, Business Insider, AOL, Markets Insider, Latest Finance, Trade for Profit, Tech Telegraph, Best Stocks, Motor Mouth, Trading View India, Trading View, Benzinga, Hataf News, Forex TV, Business News and WN.
-
Article
Jim Chanos: “The Crypto Ecosystem Is Well-Suited for the Dark Side of Finance.”
Nov 9, 2023
The famed short-seller talks Sam Bankman-Fried, why Wall Street is still so keen on crypto, and how technology is making us dumber.
-
Video
Intersectional Political Economy
Nov 8, 2023
Unpacking the relationship between exploitation and group identity, Folbre offers a nuanced perspective on societal structures, and the pressing need for cooperative strategies to address global crises. Her insights pave the way for a more equitable and sustainable future in this illuminating discussion on intersectionality, political economy, and social justice.
-
Article
The Golden Age of AI Complementarity?
Oct 30, 2023
Recent developments in AI have added fuel to debates that have long simmered amongst economists, which could lead to a rethinking of economics itself.
-
News
Washington Monthly Recognizes Rob Johnson and INET’s Role in the Shift that is Underway in the Economy
Oct 30, 2023
Washington Monthly
-
News
The Atlantic Cites Eileen Appelbaum and Rosemary Batt’s INET Working Paper on Private Equity in Healthcare
Oct 29, 2023
The Atlantic
-
Article
Theories of Economic Crises
Oct 24, 2023
The theoretical approaches to analyzing crises have behind them contrasting conceptions of the way the economy works
-
Video
Sellers Inflation
Oct 18, 2023
Is inflation just a number game or does it hold deeper societal implications?
-
Article
After Poland’s Elections: Democracy and Keynesianism?
Oct 16, 2023
In accepting mass unemployment, post-communist governments and the democratic parties that constituted them removed the economic foundation for Poland’s democracy.
-
News
INET congratulates Dr. Claudia Goldin
Oct 13, 2023
We heartily congratulate her on receiving the Nobel Prize in Economics.
-
Webinars and Events
Political Economy of Contemporary South Asia
ConferenceINET-YSI conference @UC Berkeley
Oct 13–14, 2023
Two-day workshop on: Dialectics of Globalism and Nationalism, Inequality and Populism, Agrarian and Urban Crises, Data and Social Justice
-
Article
In the Footsteps of Ptolemy: The ‘Science of Monetary Policy’ and the Inflation of 2021-2023
Oct 9, 2023
The impenetrability of this continuously expanding Ptolemaic New Keynesian paradigm is maddening
-
Working Paper
Working PaperThe Art of Paradigm Maintenance: How the ‘Science of Monetary Policy’ tries to deal with the inflation of 2021-2023
Oct 2023
The re-emergence of inflation threw the ‘science of monetary policy’ off the rails. Do the new tweaks to the theory work?
-
Article
Antitrust Enforcement in the Crosshairs
Oct 6, 2023
Post-Chicago Economists vs. New Brandeisians on the New Merger Guidelines
-
Video
(Un)Learn Economics
Oct 4, 2023
The economists are not what they seem.
-
Article
What the UAW and Everyone Else Need to Know About CEO Pay
Oct 2, 2023
What is GM CEO Mary Barra’s take-home pay? (It’s more than you are being told)
-
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.
-
Video
Financial Hurdles in the Green Revolution
Sep 27, 2023
Can finance stop hindering and start helping the green transition?
-
News
INET Welcomes Dr. Neva Goodwin as its Newest Governing Board Member
Sep 25, 2023
New INET Governing Board Member Announcement
-
Article
Is Too Big to Fail Over?
Sep 22, 2023
We have made progress but not enough to forestall crises
-
Video
Empowering Women in Economics
Sep 20, 2023
Professor Rebeca Gomez Betancourt explores the transformative roles of pioneering women like Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Hazel Kyrk in the field of economics.
-
Article
Creating the Post-2008 Global Safety Net: Fed Precedents, Instruments, and Targets
Sep 18, 2023
The “liquidity” support provided by the Fed to megabanks through cross-border lending in fact acted as subsidies
-
Working Paper
Working PaperPrecedents, Instruments and Targets that the Fed Has Used to Create and Support a Postcrisis Global Safety Net
Sep 2023
Creating the post-2008 global safety net for mega-banks
-
Article
Reflections on the 15th Anniversary of the Lehman Brothers Failure
Sep 15, 2023
What lessons need to be drawn on this anniversary?
-
Video
The Lehman Disaster and Why It Matters Today
Sep 13, 2023
On September 15, 2008, Lehman Brothers, a giant investment bank with a storied history, filed for bankruptcy. The shock was profound; world markets melted down.
-
Article
What Has the World Learned from COVID-19? So Far, Not Nearly Enough
Sep 12, 2023
By all accounts infection rates have ebbed. But were we good or were we lucky?
-
Article
How Shareholder Value Fixation Turns AI and Robotics into a Recipe for Failure
Sep 11, 2023
New technologies are not the problem. It’s a system distorted by a flawed ideology.
-
Article
Postscript: A Further Look at ProMarket’s Economics
Sep 8, 2023
ProMarket’s new “Addendum to Retraction,” written it appears in response to our recent INET post, doubles down on its critique of our piece which showed that it is feasible for increased output to lead to reduced welfare. The ProMarket addendum is notable for its economic errors.*
-
Video
Crime vs. Class
Sep 6, 2023
Unveiling the U.S. Prison System
-
Article
The Mythology of Horizontal Merger Efficiencies
Aug 31, 2023
Economists had to distort economic theory to fashion their merger “efficiency” arguments
-
Working Paper
Working PaperThe Horizontal Merger Efficiency Fallacy
Aug 2023
By permitting business definitions of “efficiency” to leak over into the antitrust lexicon, antitrust scholars have done a great disservice
-
Video
Economics Isn't Settled
Aug 30, 2023
Why is the History of Economic Thought important?
-
Article
Labor Economist: AI May Bring a Boom in Horrible Jobs
Aug 28, 2023
Losing jobs isn’t the only thing workers have to worry about. AI may make many jobs worse.
-
YSI Event
6th Annual UNCTAD YSI Summer School 2023
YSI
ConferenceAug 28–31, 2023
Under the shared premise that no country alone can address the multiple challenges posed by intertwining and intensifying economic, social and environmental crises, this year’s lectures will discuss prospects and obstacles for a green and equitable transformation of the global economy.
-
Article
The Scourge of Corporate Financialization: Income Inequity, Employment Instability, Productive Fragility
Aug 21, 2023
Stock buybacks as a mode of predatory value extraction
-
Article
Now You See It, Now You Don’t: Antitrust Arguments “Chicago Style”
Aug 17, 2023
ProMarket and the Consumer Welfare Standard An output increase is not sufficient to increase welfare. Allocation—how goods are distributed—matters.
-
Article
How to Fix Monetary Policy in Advanced Countries
Aug 14, 2023
The monetary policies of major central banks in advanced economies have had negative consequences and thus need to be fixed
-
Working Paper
Working PaperWhy The Monetary Policy Framework in Advanced Countries Needs Fundamental Reform
Aug 2023
Monetary policy should be guided much more by financial sector developments and much less by near-term targets for inflation.
-
Article
Climate Finance: Where Does the Money Come From and Who Gets It?
Aug 7, 2023
Reaching climate goals means rich countries must invest in sustainable technologies in developing countries with huge energy needs.
-
Article
As the Ukraine War Drags On, It’s Time to Reassess the Impacts of Sanctions
Aug 2, 2023
The bundle of sanctions was initially designed and imposed in haste, with little basis to assess historic performance.
-
Article
Inflation Narratives and Their Consequences
Jul 31, 2023
On the reflexive relationship between inflation and inflation narratives
-
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
-
Working Paper
Working PaperIs “Inflation First” Really “Rentiers First”? The Taylor Rule and Rentier Income in Industrialized Countries
Jul 2023
Central banks strongly favored rentier incomes in their reaction functions
-
Article
We Need a Double Pronged Public-Private Approach to Food Security
Jul 19, 2023
Dr. Agnes Kalibata, President of AGRA, on how the Ukraine conflict has been a big wake-up call for many African governments, the huge importance of investing in soils, and her frustration at the slow pace of climate mitigation.
-
Video
The Economics of Childhood
Jul 19, 2023
If we can measure mobility, we can raise a better society.
-
Article
Why is Getting Old So Hard and Expensive in America? New Book Challenges How We Think.
Jul 18, 2023
In The Measure of Our Age, elder justice expert M.T. Connolly, who served as coordinator of the Department of Justice’s Elder Justice Initiative, offers both a warning and challenge: the systems we rely on to protect us as we age haven’t caught up to our longevity. Good news: we have the tools to build better ones.
-
Article
Subsidizing Chemical Fertilizers is Counterproductive
Jul 13, 2023
By reducing our reliance on chemical fertilizers, policymakers could turn today’s food crisis into a genuine opportunity towards shifting subsidies from agribusiness-led to agroecological-led farming systems
-
Article
The Origins of the Investment Theory of Party Competition
Jul 13, 2023
Preface to the Japanese Edition of Golden Rule
-
Video
Background Is Not Destiny
Jul 12, 2023
Do we care about children, or do we just care about our own children?
-
Article
Economics v. the Earth: New Book Explores the History of a Tense Relationship
Jul 6, 2023
Fredrik Albritton Jonsson and Carl Wennerlind reveal how centuries of belief in infinite growth on a finite planet have put us all in danger