5785 Results for “fc credit store Visitez le site Buyfc26coins.com Plateforme sécurisée pour les FC 26 coins.Isgj”
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Article
Race and Economics: Exploring Headwinds and Resilience
Dec 8, 2016
The Institute for New Economic Thinking’s recent Detroit event on race and economics noted both the structural impediments faced by African-Americans, and the impressive gains made in some communities despite those headwinds
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Video
A Paradigm Shift Towards Ecological Restoration
Jan 31, 2024
“We need to figure out new ways to relate to the earth.”
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Article
Why “Green Growth” Is an Illusion
Dec 5, 2018
Wishful thinking and tinkering won’t cut it. Nothing short of a mass mobilization for deep de-carbonization across the global economy can avert the looming climate catastrophe.
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Article
Euro Summit Statement Explained
Oct 27, 2011
Okay, so here is the statement, but what does it mean? Felix Salmon offers an unnamed advisor’s flowchart. Let’s see if Money View thinking can do better.
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesUnderstanding the Great Recession
Dec 2015
Some Fundamental Keynesian and Post-Keynesian Insights, with an Analysis of Possible Mechanisms to Achieve a Sustained Recovery
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Article
Wanted to buy: $2T in safe assets
Jul 16, 2011
Two FT pieces by Tracy Alloway caught my eye this week: this article from Tuesday’s print edition, and this post on Alphaville today.
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Article
Behind Europe's Populist Backlash: The Hunger Games of Mainstream Economics
Jan 6, 2015
The turmoil of Brexit and the populist challenge across Europe are consequences of austerity policies that have brought misery to millions of ordinary voters. In this interview first published last January, Servaas Storm warned of the dangers of economic decision making divorced from democracy and from the social consequences of its prescriptions
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Article
Why Did Isaac Newton Lose His Shirt in Financial Speculation? Author Alex Pollock Explains.
Nov 4, 2019
Trying to predict the financial future is a fool’s errand, even for a genius
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Video
Another Financial Crisis Could Be Coming
Jun 20, 2018
Michael Greenberger says unregulated credit default swaps could take down the economy—and taxpayers—again
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Article
Why We Need New Measures of Potential Output—and What They Tell Us
May 16, 2019
Everyone is waking up to the fact that estimates of what is possible in the economy are way off: this paper explains why
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News
Adair Turner Oxford Book Launch
Nov 30, 2015
Lord Adair Turner visited the Oxford Martin Lecture Theatre on Tuesday 24 November for a well-attended INET Oxford event launching his latest book ‘Between Debt and the Devil: Money, Credit, and Fixing Global Finance’ (Princeton University Press).
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesSovereigns versus Banks: Credit, Crises and Consequences
Feb 2014
Two separate narratives have emerged in the wake of the Global Financial Crisis. One interpretation speaks of private financial excess and the key role of the banking system in leveraging and deleveraging the economy. The other emphasizes the public sector balance sheet over the private and worries about the risks of lax fiscal policies. However, the two may interact in important and understudied ways.
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Article
What Lehman Brothers Tells Us About American Capitalism
Jun 11, 2019
Ben Power, who adapted the play “The Lehman Trilogy,” talks about the eponymous family’s role in the creation and destruction of American wealth
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Article
After QE2, what then?
Apr 17, 2011
And what was QE about anyway?
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Article
Crisis Averted: Understanding LTRO2
Feb 29, 2012
Fundamentally, the ECB is trying to keep the ongoing sovereign debt crisis from turning into a full-fledged bank credit crisis.
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Article
Blanchard, the NAIRU, and Economic Policy in the Eurozone
Mar 31, 2016
A recent policy brief by Blanchard (2016), based on an earlier paper (Blanchard, Cerutti, Summers 2015) raises a number of interesting points concerning the NAIRU and the Phillips Curve, which are further discussed in the comment on the paper by Ball (2015).
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Grant
Years granted: 2013, 2014Managing Uncertainty: An Anthropology of Financialization in post-Mao China
This research project develops a new field of anthropology: the anthropology of financialization, focusing on China and two main institutions of financialization, management consultancies and fund managers.
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Article
Engendering Pluralism: How Gender Diversity Can Transform Economics
Sep 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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Video
Who Wins and Who Loses When AI Makes Decisions
Aug 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
Can It Happen Again?
Jun 26, 2011
The view from BIS
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Grant
Years granted: 2014, 2015, 2016From Innovation to Financial Market Failure: An Anatomy of 18th Century Mortgage-backed Securities
This research project studies the innovation of mortgage-backed securities in the 18th century in order to understand the effects of securitization on financial and real markets.
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Article
Britain’s EU scorecard, a dissent on China stimulus, and the productivity puzzle
Jun 7, 2016
What we’re reading: A weekly scan of published items relevant to the Institute’s work
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Article
Demystifying Monetary Finance
Aug 17, 2016
The debate about so-called helicopter money is burdened by deep fears and unnecessary confusions: some worry that monetary finance is bound to produce hyperinflation; others argue that, in terms of increasing demand and inflation, it would be no more effective than current policies. Both cannot be right.
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Article
Thoughts On Skidelsky's Rant Against The Current Economics Curriculum
Jun 9, 2015
The extremely wise Robert Skidelsky has an excellent rant against Anglo-Saxon economics departments
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Article
Diversity and Excellence: Not A Zero Sum Game
Mar 11, 2019
As young scholars, we have formulated a new plan for fostering diversity in both identity and scholarly thinking in economics—preconditions for academic rigor.
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Article
Can Capitalism Work for Women of Color?
Nov 8, 2016
Getting rid of barriers to economic security is possible with the right policies at the right time.
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Article
Globalization and Its Big Data: The Historical Record in Financial Markets
Oct 14, 2021
In the 19th Century, “hypothecations” provided investors with valuable information on sovereign fiscal resources
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Article
Anatomy of a Banking Crisis
Mar 27, 2023
There is a banking crisis. Again. Banking regulators were asleep at the switch. Again.
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Article
Accounting for Ourselves: What Fedwire Tells Us About Fed Losses, Cost Recovery, and Risk
Aug 5, 2025
Without transparent accounting practices and proper risk management, the Federal Reserve’s current financial losses—unprecedented in scale—and the questionable accounting practices it uses to downplay their impact threaten public trust, economic stability, and the integrity of fiscal policy.
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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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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)
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Article
Financial Deregulation: A Question of Efficiency or Distribution?
Jan 13, 2015
How can we better protect Main Street from the externalities of Wall Street?
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Working Paper
Working PaperGood Policy or Good Luck? Why Inflation Fell Without a Recession
Sep 2024
A major factor in the decline of inflation is the simple fact that America’s workers were, in general, unable to raise their nominal wages in line with the rise in the cost of living
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Article
Monetary Finance: Mechanics & Complications
May 23, 2016
Eight years after the 2008 crisis the global economy is still stuck with low growth, too low inflation, and rising debt burdens. Massive monetary stimulus has failed to generate adequate demand, and some commentators suggest that we are “out of ammunition” with which to counter deflationary pressures.
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Article
Is the Fed Making Inequality Worse? Yes, New Research Shows.
Apr 11, 2015
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Article
Piketty's World Inequality Review: A Critical Analysis
Jan 2, 2019
Thomas Piketty and his colleagues have insisted that tax records are better for measuring inequality than income surveys. They’re wrong.
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Article
Ten Years after Bear Stearns, U.S. Financial Stability Is again in Danger
Mar 12, 2018
Banks are pushing for deregulation and roll backs of Dodd-Frank’s regular check-ups on their financial health. We should be worried.
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Podcasts
On Finding Repair and Relief from the Commodification of Social Design
Feb 3, 2022
Terrence McNally, the host of the podcast Free Forum: A World that just Might Work, interviews Rob about the current state of the world and what needs to happen for us to get out of the mess in which we find ourselves.
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Article
Why Hysteria Over the Italian Budget Is Wrong-Headed
Oct 10, 2018
Reactions to the size of the proposed plan rely on discredited assumptions and betray a fundamental misunderstanding of economic growth—and austerity
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Webinars and Events
INET Guide to the 2017 EEA Meeting
ConferenceFeb 23–26, 2017
A reference guide to all Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) community presentations at the Eastern Economic Association’s (EEA) 2017 annual meeting
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News
INET Welcomes Two Governing Board Members
Aug 7, 2018
Arminio Fraga and Richard Vague bring their economic expertise to INET
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Article
Looking for a Libertarian Who’s Not Afraid of History
Dec 2, 2021
A response to Phillip Magness in The Wall Street Journal
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Article
Minimum Wages & Job Loss
May 6, 2016
As empirical evidence continues to roll in, can the theoretical orthodoxy continue to hold their ground?
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Article
Is Too Big to Fail Over?
Sep 22, 2023
We have made progress but not enough to forestall crises
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Article
The Financial World Five Years after Lehman Brothers
Sep 16, 2013
What have we learned about the American political economy from the crisis and its aftermath?
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Article
What is Missing in Flassbeck & Lapavitsas
Feb 22, 2016
More on substance, coherence, and relevance in the Eurozone debate.
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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?
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Article
Finance and the Death of Trust
Oct 27, 2013
The destruction of trust is not an accident.
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Article
Shadow banking’s enduring perils
May 9, 2016
Five lessons from the last crisis — for managing the next one
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Article
The Real Cause of the Italian Bank Bailouts and Euro Banking Troubles
Jul 19, 2017
How a Banking Union Has Created Deep Divisions that Undermine the Eurozone’s Stability
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Article
We're in a Moment of Collective Trauma. But There Are Glimmers of Hope
Jun 2, 2020
A special note from INET board member john a. powell
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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
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Article
John Whittaker: Eurosystem balances explained
Dec 12, 2011
[The following guest post is by John Whittaker, from whom we have learned much of what we know about how the European payments system works. See his terrific papers here and here, both of which reward close study. He has been looking over the last couple Money View posts, and the comments to those posts, and has this to say.]
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Article
New CDC Guidelines to Reopen Schools Could be Dangerous
Mar 19, 2021
School re-opening push based on outdated science is poorly timed in face of coronavirus resurgence
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News
Central Bank & Monetary Policy After the Global Financial Crisis
DebtSep 25, 2015
Join Columbia University Dean Merit E. Janow for a talk by Lord Adair Turner, Chairman, Institute for New Economic Thinking.
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Video
How Populists Use Economics to Exploit Crisis
May 13, 2020
MIT Sloan Assistant Professor Emil Verner discusses his research into credit markets, and the role of economics in the rise of populism.
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Article
Economics at Chicago, 1939-1955: the scope of our ignorance
Jun 26, 2012
The University of Chicago is well-known for as the place where a famous group of economists, including Milton Friedman, Georges Stigler, Gary Becker, among others, developed a method for analyzing economic facts based on Marshallian price theory, a vision of the evolution of macroeconomic aggregates called monetarism, and an approach to individual liberties and the role of the state known as (neo)liberalism.
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Article
America Needs Intel Economically and Politically—But Is It Too Late?
Aug 12, 2024
Patrick Gelsinger stepped down as INTEL’s CEO on December 1. We published an analysis last August that provides context for why this is significant for the company and the US economy.
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Article
The Inconvenient Truth about Climate Change and the Economy
Dec 5, 2018
The new IPCC Report is overly optimistic about global productivity growth and fossil fuel energy use. More dramatic, immediate action is needed
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Article
It’s Time for a Debt “Jubilee”
Sep 11, 2020
Why freeing American households and businesses from crippling private debt would be a boon to the economy. Article reposted from DemocracyJournal.org.
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Article
Noam Chomsky on the Populist Groundswell, U.S. Elections, the Future of Humanity, and More
Mar 20, 2018
The renowned linguist, cognitive scientist, and historian on where we stand as an economy, as a country, and as human beings
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Article
The Failure of Free-Market Finance
Sep 16, 2013
Five years after the collapse of the U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers, the world has still not addressed the fundamental cause of the subsequent financial crisis – an excess of debt. And that is why economic recovery has progressed much more slowly than anyone expected (in some countries, it has not come at all).
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Article
China and the Supply Chain: A Comment on the June 2021 White House Review
Jun 23, 2021
Contrary to rhetoric from Democrats and Republicans, the U.S. has an economic interest in trade and peace with China
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Article
AIG on the Potomac
Feb 11, 2011
The future of government mortgage support
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Grant
Years granted: 2013, 2014Macroeconomic Instability and Microeconomic Financial Fragility: A Stock-Flow Consistent Approach with Heterogeneous Agents
This research project introduces heterogeneous microeconomic behavior into a demand-driven stock flow consistent model to study the links between microeconomic financial fragility and macroeconomic instability.
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Article
The Greek Revolt Against Bad Economics Threatens European Elites
Jul 9, 2015
A look behind the scenes of the Greek referendum and what could happen next.
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Video
China and the Challenge of Economic Reform
Aug 27, 2015
Bursting Bubbles leave a mess – in the markets, throughout the real economy, in societies, in politics and with policymaking.
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Podcasts
Richard Vague
Aug 21, 2020
Richard Vague, Secretary of Banking and Securities for the state of Pennsylvania and INET board member, discusses with Rob Johnson the need for stronger economic measures, the different economic strategies of the US and China, and the dangers of enormous private debt burdens
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Article
The Wealthless Recovery
Feb 16, 2015
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Article
Financial Globalization versus the Nation State
Sep 29, 2011
At its core, this rolling crisis is really about financial globalization.
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Article
Europe Ground Zero
Sep 29, 2011
Financial Globalization versus the Nation State
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Article
The Fed and the “Soft Landing” - Policy or Luck?
Sep 30, 2024
The biggest factor in accounting for the strength in the economy is the continuing importance of the wealth effect in sustaining consumption by the affluent.
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Article
The Decline of the US Labor Share Across Sectors
Nov 21, 2019
The U.S. economy is increasingly becoming a dual economy, where high productivity sectors—such as manufacturing—and high pay sectors—such as finance and professional services—co-exist with low pay and low productivity sectors that employ most workers.
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Video
Globalized Finance and the Crisis of 2008
Feb 2, 2016
The world economy is just starting to recover from the most disastrous episode in the history of financial globalisation. Understanding what happened is essential.
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News
Le Monde: L’impact des dons sur les résultats électoraux est un sujet central En savoir plus sur
Feb 15, 2018
Julia Cagé explains the impact of money on French elections
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Article
Profound Changes in Economics Have Made Left vs. Right Debates Irrelevant
May 31, 2016
New economic thinking has the potential to make political debates far more productive
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Article
Three Questions to Judy Klein
Feb 27, 2012
Judy Klein is Professor of Economics at Mary Baldwin College in Virginia. She is the author of Statistical Visions in Time: A History of Time Series Analysis 1662-1938, (Cambridge 1997) and co-editor of The Age of Economic Measurement (Duke 2001), and co-author of The Strange Career of Cold War Rationality (in preparation)
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Article
The IMF Worries About EME Corporate Leverage
Oct 2, 2015
Hot on the heels of the BIS, now comes the IMF Global Financial Stability report, “Corporate Leverage in Emerging Markets–A Concern?”. Yes, a concern, and just in time for the annual meeting in Peru next week.
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Article
Stiglitz: Economics Has to Come to Terms with Wealth and Income Inequality
Dec 15, 2014
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Article
The New Federal Reserve
Jan 9, 2011
GFC finance as war finance
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Webinars and Events
Shadow Banking and Alternative Finance in China
WorkshopMay 27, 2016
The recent growth in the scale and different forms of shadow banking and alternative finance mechanisms in China poses many questions of understanding, from its sustainability; different forms of credit growth; to the role of local government financing, and; the tensions between financial reform policy and practice.
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Article
History of applied economics: now what?
Apr 17, 2013
There is a “tendency to neglect applied economics in writing the history of economic thought,” Roger Backhouse and Jeff Biddle remarked in 2000. They then followed the “applied” trail back into the XIXth and early XXth centuries, at a time the scope and nature of economics were debatted by continental and especially British political economists
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Article
Hijacked and Paying the Price - Why Ransomware Gangs Should be Designated as Terrorists
May 13, 2021
Ransomware gangs have been causing extensive damage. It’s time that the government takes them more seriously.
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Article
Should the state be doing more to fix the economy?
May 13, 2016
What we’re reading: A weekly scan of published items relevant to the Institute’s work
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Article
CDS Deja Vu
Feb 6, 2011
Speculation, stabilizing or destabilizing?
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Article
Inside Job
Jan 23, 2011
And the nominees for Best Documentary are…
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Grant
Years granted: 2013, 2014, 2015Modeling Minsky's Financial Instability Hypothesis - A Dynamical Systems Approach
This research project improves the mathematical capabilities of non-Neoclassical economics and uses modern techniques from nonlinear dynamical systems to model the expansion and contraction of credit and its effect on real economic output and asset prices.
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Article
How the Disappearance of Unionized Jobs Obliterated an Emergent Black Middle Class
Jun 15, 2020
Since the 1980s, the enemy of equal employment opportunity through upward socioeconomic mobility has been the pervasive and entrenched corporate-governance ideology and practice of maximizing shareholder value.
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Article
Place-Based Economic Conditions and the Geography of the Opioid Overdose Crisis
Jun 20, 2019
There is not one opioid crisis in America—there are many. And supply-focused measures won’t stop them.
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Article
Larry Summers: Reagan’s Tax Plan Was Better Than Trump’s
Dec 20, 2017
Summers discusses inequality, the GOP tax plan, and our economic future
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Article
Big Money Drove the Congressional Elections—Again
Feb 11, 2021
The Straight Truth
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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
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Article
Tariff Turmoil and the Money Markets: Single Payer Insurance to the Rescue
Jun 2, 2025
In Treasury markets, there are no libertarians, only grateful recipients of single-payer insurance for ailing financial markets.
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Article
Your Summer Holiday Spot Needs Climate Action Now
Sep 2, 2022
Because global warming doesn’t take a holiday
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Article
Inflation in a Time of Corona and War
Jun 6, 2022
Evidence-based answers to the main (policy) questions concerning the return of high inflation
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Article
What Was the Real Cost of the Great Recession?
Aug 18, 2013
We are coming up to the fifth anniversary of the Lehman crash in September 2008. How bad was it? Have we fixed the problems?
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Article
Liquidity Trap & Excessive Leverage
Mar 11, 2016
How excessive debt hurts the economy and why to curb it.
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Webinars and Events
The Paralysis From Above: COP26 and Beyond for the Developing World
WebinarDec 1, 2021
For several weeks, representatives of governments across the globe gathered in Glasgow to discuss plans for climate mitigation and adaptation. But the meetings were dominated by representatives of the world’s most advanced economies, often to the detriment of the places where the majority of the world’s population lives: the developing world.
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Podcasts
COP26: The Paralysis from Above
Jan 13, 2022
In a replay of INET Live’s webinar, following the COP26 climate conference in Glasgow last December, Richard Kozul-Wright of UNCTAD, Patrick Bond of the University of Johannesburg, and author Maude Barlow discuss the disproportionate impact climate change has on the developing world and the ways to best address it.
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Article
Oil Prices, Oil Profits, Speculation, and Inflation
Jun 26, 2023
The role of speculation in the crude oil market in the increase in the WTI crude oil price.