5785 Results for “monedas en FC 26 Visité Buyfc26coins.com. Simplicidad y velocidad. Así me gustan las cosas..kxXe”
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Video
Women Foot the Bill for Economic Growth, Parity Requires Social Investment
Mar 22, 2017
Pursuing equality while growing the economy requires reframing social spending as a form of investment.
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Working Paper
Conference paperEfficient Markets: Fictions and Reality
Apr 2010
Eugene Fama, one of the founders of the so-called “Efficient Markets Hypothesis” (EMH), articulated early on the basic narrative that underpins it: “competition… among the many [rational] intelligent participants [would result in an] efficient market at any point in time [in which] the actual price of a security will be a good estimate of its intrinsic value” (Fama, 1965, p. 56).
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Working Paper
Conference paperAndrew Haldane: Financial Arms Races
Apr 2012
Elephant seals have got too big for their beaches. A large specimen might weigh over 8000 lbs (3700 kg).Their size has a simple evolutionary explanation. Large males fight for the right to mate with a whole beach full of females. For elephant seals it is, quite literally, winner-takes-all. And the key to winning is simple – size.
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Working Paper
Conference paperTowards a New Monetary Constitution in Europe: The Proposal of the German Council of Economic Experts (GCEE)
Apr 2013
After the announcement of Mario Draghi, the ECB president, to do “whatever it takes” to preserve the integrity of the European Monetary Union (EMU) in July 2012 and the establishment of the Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT) program in September 2012, the crisis of EMU is far from being resolved.
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Working Paper
Conference paperPressures on Pensions
Apr 2014
Debate about the pension crises has centered on certain questions such as: Are greedy government workers bankrupting states? Arepension-slashing politicians backed by big money saving the day? Or do the budget problems of state and localgovernments have more to do with wasteful corporate subsidies than pensions? What are the real policy solutions to the pressures placed on pensions?”
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Person
Melissa Vergara Fernández
Lecturer, Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Groningen Research focussed on the use of economic models, with a particular interest in the characterisation that philosophers have made of this scientific practice. Her current research is on model failure, an aspect of the modelling practice strikingly relevant given the alleged responsibility of models in the most recent economic crisis. -
Video
Don't Be Evil. Rana Foroohar on Big Tech.
Nov 13, 2019
The Financial Times correspondent on the libertarian streak in Silicon Valley
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Video
Join Us in Working Together Online
Apr 1, 2020
Quarantine or not, it can be hard to stay connected, but INET’s Young Scholars Initiative (YSI) is here for this generation’s new economic thinkers.
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesThe Price of a Vote: Evidence from France, 1993-2014
Feb 2018
Money in politics is not a strictly American phenomenon. In France, despite strong campaign finance laws, campaign donations have a direct influence on legislative and municipal election results.
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News
Euractiv: Catalonia, a viable independent state?
Oct 23, 2017
“Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz tells EURACTIV.com that the region would be accepted in the EU and therefore become a viable independent economy if it applied, but the former chair of the UK’s Financial Services Authority Adair Turner disagrees.”
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesThe Equal Employment Opportunity Omission
Dec 2016
On June 2, 1965, under a mandate established by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the U.S. Congress created the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) to enforce federal anti-discrimination laws related to employment. The expectation was that African Americans would be prime beneficiaries of the EEOC.
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Working Paper
Conference paperLegislators Never Bowl Alone: Big Money, Mass Media, and the Polarization of Congress
Apr 2011
This is a small paper on a big subject: the polarization of American politics since the mid-1970s. In its early stages this process bore more than a passing resemblance to the opening scenes of a Grade B disaster movie: With almost everyone’s attention focused elsewhere, a series of tiny, seemingly insignificant departures from long standing routines took place.
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Conference Session
Reclaiming the Commons: Can Economics Help?
Sep 28, 2021 | 01:50—02:50
Climate change is a collective problem that has largely been addressed through market-based solutions focused on individual actors. Economics has been a driving factor behind this market approach. The push for continued and perpetual economic growth is seen by many as incompatible with climate action. What is the role of economics in addressing the climate crisis? Can existing economic paradigms deliver an equitable low-carbon future?
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News
Dina Srinivasan’s INET funded research is discussed in Adweek
Nov 12, 2020
“Dina Srinivasan, a fellow with the Thurman Project at Yale University, noted how Google’s dominance in both search and display advertising are interrelated. Google’s power in the search market is not irrelevant to the advertising business, she noted in a recent academic paper.” — Ronan Shields
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Video
Why We Must Resist Conventional Economic Wisdom
Apr 17, 2019
Dani Rodrik says that when ideas become conventional wisdom, we are blind to their limitations
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News
Washington Post Features Bill Lazonick's Research
Aug 16, 2018
The Washington Post cites William Lazonick’s INET paper on shareholder value
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Section
The Money View
The idea of this blog is to engage current financial news and policy debates from the standpoint of the classics of monetary theory. We ask, “What would Bagehot say?”, “What would Minsky say?”, “What would Fischer Black say?” Like them, our starting point is the idea that capitalism is essentially a financial system, which means that we need to take a money view in order to understand how it works.
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Webinars and Events
Pandemics and Innovation
WebinarSep 28, 2020
An INET organized panel under the auspices of the 2020 Trento Economic Festival
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Video
The Search for the Soul of Business
Jun 1, 2022
Corporate responsibility needs to evolve if businesses are going to rebuild trust and provide real value for society.
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Video
A Hereditary Meritocracy
Oct 23, 2019
The University of Chicago’s Raghuram Rajan explains how inequalities in the education system lock in a hereditary hierarchy of success
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Video
How Liberals Normalized Conservative Ideas
Aug 28, 2019
The New York Times’ Binyamin Appelbaum explains the role Democratic presidents, from Kennedy to Obama, in moving economic policy to the right
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Video
The Dangerous Ideological Bias of Economists
Jun 24, 2020
“We do not publish papers about our own profession.” – Top Five Journal
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Podcasts
Wendy Brown
Jun 18, 2020
UC Berkeley political theorist Wendy Brown talks to Rob Johnson about how the pandemic and protests against police brutality lay bare a crisis of neoliberalism.
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesEstimates of the Natural Rate of Interest and the Stance of Monetary Policies: A Critical Assessment
Jan 2019
Starting with the literature on the estimates of the natural rate of interest, this paper critically analyzes the modern practice of identifying the benchmark rate of monetary policy with an equilibrium or neutral interest rate reflecting “fundamental forces” unaffected by monetary factors.
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Video
The Economic Legacy of Racism
Sep 28, 2016
If additional education is not the solution to racial inequality, what is?
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Working Paper
CommentaryOn Neoliberalism: Comments to Mirowski
May 2016
The following is based on Chapter 1 of my forthcoming book, Crisis and Sustainability. The Delusion of Free Markets.
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Video
Too Big to Fail and the State of Finance Today
Sep 21, 2013
What do we need to do to get the financial sector back on track?
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Working Paper
Conference paperThe New York Times and American Tax Policy: Representing Citizens or Echoing Elites?
Apr 2015
A recent New York Times article observed that Americans want action to address inequality. 2016 presidential candidates from both parties also acknowledge that inequality is a pressing concern. But not one of the candidates has proposed to do anything meaningful about it, sharing wealthy Americans’ (understandable) opposition to any solution (Scheiber 2015). Perhaps nothing has been done because there is nothing to do about it.
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News
Grant application deadline approaching: September 15, 2011
Sep 12, 2011
Reminder
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Site Pages
Press Photos
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Video
The Crisis of Democratic Capitalism
Feb 10, 2023
Financial Times columnist Martin Wolf discusses his just-released book
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News
Thomas Ferguson is quoted in Rabble on money in politics
May 12, 2021
“Political scientist Thomas Ferguson has documented how U.S. big business interests poured money into local and state elections to ensure positive support for their largely unpopular policies. What Ferguson calls “political investment” is the practice of spending serious sums on party competition to keep hand-picked, docile representatives in power.” — Duncan Cameron, Rabble
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Video
The Privacy Paradox
May 12, 2021
Can big data strengthen global inclusivity and trust?
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News
INET research showing countries that prioritized health policies fared better economically is cross posted in Le Monde
Dec 15, 2020
Three American researchers, crossing the figures for growth and mortality due to the Covid-19 pandemic from many countries, conclude that containment is effective, provided it is accompanied by strong public subsidies.
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News
Storm’s INET funded research is discussed in Naked Capitalism
Jan 25, 2021
“One of the main reasons Italy’s economy is in such dire straits is its strict adherence to the EMU’s macroeconomic rule book — in particular the rules on fiscal austerity and structural reforms — as Dutch economist Servaas Storm painstakingly details in his article ‘Italy: How to Ruin a Country in Three Decades’” — Nick Corbishley, Naked Capitalism
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Podcasts
Jacqueline Novogratz: Why We Need a Moral Revolution
Nov 23, 2020
Social entrepreneur Jacqueline Novogratz discusses her book Manifesto for a Moral Revolution and the crisis facing a pandemic-riddled world.
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Podcasts
Christine Passarella
Jul 24, 2020
Rob Johnson talks to educator Christine Passarella about her program Kids for Coltrane, and the educational value of the jazz great.
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Podcasts
Anna Deavere Smith
Jun 1, 2020
Dramatist and NYU professor Anna Deavere Smith talks to Rob Johnson about the power of storytelling in times of crisis.
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Video
Between Rational and Irrational
Nov 27, 2019
Columbia University’s Richard Robb talks about his new book on human behavior
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Collection
11 New Economic Thinkers You Should Watch
In commemoration of the 200th episode of INET’s New Economic Thinking video series, we’re highlighting 11 new economic thinkers who embody the INET spirit: creative thinking, passion for social justice, and fearlessness in breaking the status quo. If you like what you see, make sure to check out our YouTube channel for more!
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Video
The Gay Wage Penalty—and Premium
Aug 1, 2018
Gay men earn 20% less than straight men, but gay women earn up to 20% more than straight women. Why?
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News
Times Now News: America has been afflicted by an ideology that doesn’t work, says Joseph Stiglitz
Apr 30, 2018
Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, in an exclusive interview with timesnownews.com, talks about what is wrong with current American capitalism, rise of a new kind of politics emerging from dissent towards government and more. Here are some excerpts from the interview.
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Working Paper
Conference paperExplaining Dualism in a Gender Perspective: Gender, Class and the Crisis
Oct 2017
In the economic literature, several scholars have addressed the narrative of a two-stage European crisis. In a first stage, the so-called “he-cession”, men would have been hit the most by the economic recession induced by the financial crisis. Shortly thereafter, in the “she-austerity” stage, women would have suffered the heaviest burdens of the fiscal retrenchment measures. If that were the case, the policy response to the crisis would be producing an increase in the – already high pre-existing – gender inequality.
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News
Euractiv: Oxfam chief: ‘We also feel the lack of trust among citizens’
Oct 24, 2017
“Winnie Byanyima believes it is high time to come up with fresh thinking in the world of politics and economy. But first, deeper self-criticism is needed across the board because all fields, including the NGO sector, are affected by a lack of trust from citizens.”
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Video
Making Finance Work for Innovation
Aug 12, 2013
How can we get the financial sector back to serving its intended function?
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Video
The Euro Crisis - The German Perspective
Sep 4, 2013
Kiel Institute President Dennis Snower talks about the euro zone crisis
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Article
Insights from Bagehot, for these Trying Times
May 11, 2012
Here is a talk I gave recently at Wake Forest University.
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Article
Roiling India Politics Risks Economic Reforms
Jan 24, 2014
India’s economic leaders are determined to rein in skyrocketing inflation, but the country’s volatile political landscape may prevent reforms from taking hold.
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Video
What's so Interesting About Interest?
Mar 30, 2022
Nobody likes to be in debt, but we owe even more to interest itself.
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News
Tony Lawson’s INET conference paper was cited in Econopoly
Mar 10, 2021
It is an attitude typical of conventional economists that sees the claim to qualify as technicians who deal with “social engineering”, on the basis of a “true” economic theory. Disrespectful of the epistemological (i.e. research methods) and even ontological principles (concerning the conception of the world). — Riccardo D’Orsi, Econopoly …. Citation: Lawson, T. (2010). Really Reorienting Modern Economics . Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET), April 10.
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News
Lynn Parramore joined the This is Hell! podcast to discuss her recent article on the surge in deaths of despair amid the pandemic
Feb 9, 2021
“Cultural theorist Lynn Parramore on the deep social effects of economic precarity, and her article “Epidemic of Despair Could Haunt America Long After COVID” at the Institute for New Economic Thinking. https://www.ineteconomics.org/perspectives/blog/epidemic-of-despair-could-haunt-america-long-after-covid” — Chuck Mertz,This is Hell!
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Podcasts
David Sirota
Jul 6, 2020
David Sirota, Jacobin Magazine editor-at-large and former speechwriter for Bernie Sanders, talks to Rob Johnson about the future of democratic socialism in America after the Sanders campaign.
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Podcasts
Sarah Kendzior
Jun 8, 2020
Journalist and author Sarah Kendzior talks to Rob Johnson about how the Uzbekistan’s experience of authoritarianism within a nominally democratic framework could be the future of the U.S.
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Podcasts
Michael Sandel
Jun 10, 2020
Harvard political philosopher Michael Sandel talks to Rob Johnson about the implications of the wave of protests sweeping the U.S. and their role in fomenting a spirit of civic activism.
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Podcasts
Gaurav Dalmia & Jayant Sinha
Jun 2, 2020
INET board member Gaurav Dalmia and former Indian Finance Minister Jayant Sinha discuss how India can emerge from the pandemic with greater prosperity
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Podcasts
James Manyika
May 28, 2020
James Manyika, Chairman of the McKinsey Global Institute, talks to Rob Johnson about the merits of protecting people, not jobs, in the face of the pandemic and automation
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Video
The Moral Limits of Markets
Dec 3, 2013
What happens when a market-based economy becomes a market-based society?
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Video
Is History Important?
Sep 4, 2019
An animated look at economic history with Robert Skidelsky
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News
INET research into big tech's monopoly power is cited in the FT
Dec 15, 2020
“That starts to take tech regulation to a place that’s more similar to financial regulation, which is where it should be. On that note, check out this very interesting INET paper by Dina Srinivasan, which looks at how Google monopolises advertising markets in ways that would be prohibited in other electronic trading markets.” — Rana Foroohar, Financial Times
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Podcasts
Robert Skidelsky
Aug 3, 2020
Historian Lord Robert Skidelsky reads a letter that John Maynard Keynes wrote to Friedrich Hayek about “The Road to Serfdom,” and then discusses with Rob Johnson the tense relationship between the two famous economists.
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Podcasts
Fatima Denton
Jul 20, 2020
Dr. Fatima Denton, Director of the Institute for Natural Resources in Africa at the United Nations University, Ghana, talks to Rob Johnson about the need for global cooperation and coordination in the wake of the pandemic.
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Podcasts
How Local Projects Can Change People's Notion of What Is Possible
Dec 7, 2020
Hilary Doe, the founder and president of the Michigan-based organization Scout, talks about the ways in which successful local projects can have profound effects on people’s consciousness about what is politically possible
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Podcasts
Warrington Hudlin
Jun 10, 2020
Filmmaker Warrington Hudlin taks to Rob Johnson about the protests against police brutality, the long history of racial oppression in the U.S., and his adaptation of Les Misérables set in the outskirts of contemporary Paris.
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Podcasts
Folashade Soule
May 19, 2020
Folashade Soule, Senior Research Associate at the Blavatnik School of Government at the University of Oxford, talks to Rob Johnson about Africa’s relationships with the United States and China in light of the pandemic.
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Video
What the ‘Dual Economy’ Model Reveals About Today’s America
Jan 30, 2017
Professor Temin sees the US economy as bifurcated along lines analogous to the situation described in developing world economies by W. Arthur Lewis.
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Video
How Investors Use Stories to Tame Uncertainty
Jul 4, 2011
If you want to understand how fund managers choose a portfolio, why not ask them?
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News
US Economy on Cliff's Edge: INET's Rob Johnson on the Fiscal Cliff
Dec 30, 2012
What it will mean for the U. S. economy to go over the “fiscal cliff.”?
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News
READING ROOM: Adam Curtis on the history of economic think tanks in the UK
Sep 22, 2011
A story about the rise of the modern Think Tank and how in a very strange way they have made thinking impossible.
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Podcasts
Dennis Kelleher: A Financial System That Extracts Wealth Instead of Creating It
Oct 13, 2020
Dennis Kelleher, President of the NGO Better Markets, outlines how the financial system is serving the wealthy, how it has been reformed in the past and how it can be reformed again to serve Main Street instead of Wall Street.
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Podcasts
Paul Jay
Jul 8, 2020
Documentarian Paul Jay talks to Rob Johnson about how major investment fund managers, such as BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street, exercise enormous control over public companies, where they use voting rights to stymie efforts to curb climate change.
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News
Washington Post: Don’t Let Pay Increases Coming Out of Tax Reform Fool You
Feb 6, 2018
In their op-ed in the Washington Post, INET grantee William Lazonick and Rick Wartzman show how companies are spending their tax savings on investors, not workers.
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Video
Bottom Up Fiscal Policy: Direct Employment of the Unemployed
Dec 11, 2011
To cure unemployment, mostly we prime the pump: we devise fiscal strategies on the presumption that jobs follow economic growth. But the strategies have not worked, unemployment remains high.
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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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Podcasts
Doug Carmichael
Sep 21, 2020
INET’s Strategy Consultant Doug Carmichael talks about how many of our institutions, such as the economics profession, our political system, and our education system, are inadequate for dealing with the multiple crises we face.
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Working Paper
Conference paperCapitalism in the age of robots: work, income and wealth in the 21st-century
May 2018
Adair Turner, Chair of the Institute for New Economic Thinking, Lecture at School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, Washington DC April 10th 2018
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Webinars and Events
The New Economic History of India
ConferenceMay 11–12, 2017
The History Project will hold its fifth conference on May 11-12, 2017 at the University of Cambridge. The conference will be concerned with the economic history of India, particularly in relation to exchanges across frontiers, the history of the law, and the history of economic thought.
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Video
Trading Fear for Hope
Jun 22, 2022
Frank McCourt discusses his work to reinspire hope in the American experiment, and to build the framework necessary for that better tomorrow.
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News
Lynn Parramore appeared on Wort 89.9 FM to discuss her latest INET article on the “New Koch Brothers”
Mar 11, 2021
“Hedge fund managers are torpedoing chances for a successful Green New Deal, according to Lynn Parramore, Senior Research Analyst for the Institute for New Economic Thinking. In her recent article “Meet the “New Koch Brothers” – the Hedge Fund Activists Wrecking America’s Green New Deal“, she talks about how corporate raiders are turning the direction of “green” corporate partners of battery development, software, wind turbines, and more away from long term energy conservation projects toward short-term money-making projects to increase the hedge fund shareholder returns.” — WORT 89.9 FM
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News
Lynn Parramore appeared on Wort 89.9 FM to discuss her latest INET article on the “New Koch Brothers”
Mar 11, 2021
“Hedge fund managers are torpedoing chances for a successful Green New Deal, according to Lynn Parramore, Senior Research Analyst for the Institute for New Economic Thinking. In her recent article “Meet the “New Koch Brothers” – the Hedge Fund Activists Wrecking America’s Green New Deal“, she talks about how corporate raiders are turning the direction of “green” corporate partners of battery development, software, wind turbines, and more away from long term energy conservation projects toward short-term money-making projects to increase the hedge fund shareholder returns.” — WORT 89.9 FM
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Video
Wall Street Is Better at Gambling Than Finance
Aug 8, 2018
Dennis Kelleher of Better Markets explains how we can stop the financial industry from gaming Washington
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Video
The Path to Prosperity in a Post-Global World
Oct 19, 2022
Has the solution to global tensions been waiting at home all along?
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News
CNN cited Fred Ledley’s INET Working Paper on the NIH’s Seed Funding into FDA-Approved Pharmaceuticals
Jun 16, 2025
CNN
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News
Institute for Public Accuracy summarized Lynn Parramore's article
Mar 4, 2021
“The piece gives a series of case studies. Parramore summarized the problem: “Players on Wall Street have been torpedoing our chances of averting environmental catastrophe for years. A group of billionaire financiers has made sure the companies the government must partner with to fight climate change are focused on one thing only – making these men (they all seem to be men) even richer. Instead of leading the world in climate change technology, firms like Apple, GE, and Intel have been pressured to become the personal piggy banks of powerful moneymen — known as hedge fund activists — who can’t see beyond the next quarterly report.” — Institute for Public Accuracy
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News
Alberto Baccini’s INET funded research on the impact of publishing incentives
Oct 29, 2020
“Alberto Baccini, an economist at the University of Siena in Italy, says that people assessing research should be aware that the process can have an influence on academics’ behavior. ‘For each research assessment, you can find some behavior that changes in a way that is not desirable for society,’ he says. A 2019 study conducted by Baccini and colleagues found that researchers in Italy have been citing their own work or that authored by other researchers based at Italian institutions more frequently in response to a 2010 policy that is used to make decisions on promotions based on the number of citations researchers accumulate.” — INET Grantee Alberto Baccini
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Video
Human Capital in the Industrial Revolution
Nov 13, 2012
Did the industrial revolution increase the relative demand for skilled labor, or decrease it?
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Grant
Years granted: 2012, 2013, 2014Distributional Impacts of Climate Policy: A Comprehensive Approach
This research project addresses a need for a more comprehensive estimation of the distributional impact of various policies attempting to limit carbon emissions in the United States.
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News
INET Research on Pharma in The American Prospect
Jun 28, 2022
Ekaterina Cleary, Matthew Jackson and Fred Ledley’s INET research on government innovation in pharmaceuticals was cited in The American Prospect
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Video
Are We Destined for a Slow Growth Future?
Apr 5, 2018
Steve Fazzari argues that stimulating demand is the key to jump-starting stagnant economies
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Podcasts
Fanta Traore: Sadie Alexander Received her Ph.D. in Economics 100 Years Ago
Jun 17, 2021
Fanta Traore, the CEO of the Sadie Collective, in an ode to Alexander’s legacy, is leading the next generation of Black women economists in the pursuit of social change
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Grant
Years granted: 2011, 2012, 2013,Robustness of Policy Analysis to Departures from Model-Consistent Expectations
This research project develops an approach to policy analysis in the context of a macroeconomic model that does not assume that people in the economy forecast the economy’s future evolution under any given policy in the same way as the policy analyst’s own model does.
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News
Barron’s Cited Fred Ledley’s INET Working Paper on the NIH’s Role in Approved Pharmaceuticals
Apr 7, 2025
Barron’s
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News
Yahoo Money features Cai & Baker’s INET working paper
Mar 5, 2021
“Making matters worse, the Black unemployment rate might be much higher, according to a new analysis by the Institute for New Economic Thinking. The unemployment rate is calculated using data from the Current Population Survey. But that survey has a much lower response rate from Blacks than from white Americans, leading to more misclassifications in the official unemployment rate. For Blacks, the response rate is 72%, while the response rate is 90% for whites. Factoring that in, the unemployment rate for Black workers could be at least 2.6 percentage points higher than the monthly rate by the BLS, leaving it at 12.5% in February, the analysis found. For whites, the increase is much smaller at 0.7 percentage point. “The Current Population Survey has been missing a larger share of the population over time, particularly among Blacks,” said Baker, who is also an author of the analysis. “You have to ask what’s the situation for the people they’re not talking to.” — Denitsa Tsekova, Yahoo Money
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Grant
Years granted: 2014, 2015, 2016Rising Inequality as a Structural Cause of the Financial and Economic Crisis
This research project investigates whether rising inequality has contributed to the macroeconomic imbalances that erupted in the present crisis, based on a Kaleckian macroeconomic model.
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News
FT Alphaville asks: Is the Renminbi overvalued?
Jun 10, 2012
“A chronic trend of this sort would indicate that the yuan was now overvalued versus the dollar,”
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News
Rolling Stone cites Fred Ledley’s INET working paper on the NIH seed funding of pharmaceuticals
Mar 31, 2024
A Rolling Stone article by Andrew Perez cited Fred Ledley’s INET working paper on the NIH seed funding of pharmaceuticals.
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Site Pages
Newsletter
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News
Young People Tire of Old Economic Models
Apr 23, 2012
how economics students have begun to push back against the stale ideas that were proven wrong during the recent financial crisis.
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Education
Young Scholars Initiative (YSI)
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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.
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Person
Sam Altman