5785 Results for “FC 26 monedas Visité Buyfc26coins.com. Ofertas exclusivas y entrega relámpago. ¡Fantástico!.6AWm”
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Working Paper
Working PaperMove Fast and Break Everything: Crypto, Democrats and Deregulation
Jan 2026
After FTX’s collapse, crypto looked finished. Yet Washington revived it, culminating in Trump’s GENIUS Act and a surprising Democratic shift. How much did money and affluence predict pro-crypto votes, amid widening deregulation and cyber risk?
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Podcast
Evan Osnos
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Article
How to Recognize New Economic Thinking
Apr 14, 2015
The Institute for New Economic Thinking responds to an evident need for innovative approaches to understanding economic and financial processes.
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Article
Emerging Markets and the Balance of Payments: Challenges to Growth and Sustainability
Mar 13, 2023
A model that captures key vulnerabilities and structural weaknesses of developing countries’ trade and production structures.
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Article
The Future of Work: What’s at Stake
Sep 29, 2020
INET explores how technological and economic changes are affecting employment
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Video
Beyond Borders: Global Justice & Economic Patriotism
Feb 19, 2025
What if billionaires paid their fair share—no matter where they lived?
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Video
Globalization, Populism, & the Politics of Resentment
Feb 12, 2025
How did hyper-globalization fuel populist backlash?
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Article
Dakar Dialogue Brings Politics Back into Economic Thinking
Mar 2, 2020
A report from the Commission on Global Economic Transformation’s meeting in West Africa
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Podcast
Matt Stoller
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Podcasts
The Rise and Fall of the Neoliberal Order
Jun 9, 2022
Cambridge University’s professor of American History Gary Gerstle discusses his most recent book, about how the neoliberal order came about, why it is faltering, and the indeterminacy of what comes next.
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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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Podcasts
How Do We Create the Financial Conditions for a Green New Deal?
Oct 14, 2021
Political economist, author, and public speaker Ann Pettifor talks about her latest book, The Case for a Green New Deal, which not only lays out the urgency for such a deal, but also proposes a roadmap for both national and global financial reform to make it possible.
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Podcast
Michael Sandel
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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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Podcasts
The Rise and Fall of the Black Blue-Collar Middle Class, part 1
Jul 1, 2021
Umass Lowell Economics professor William Lazonick, outlines the history of how government and economic conditions favored the rise of a Black blue-collar middle class from the 1960”s to the 1970’s, and how shifts in policy and in the economy caused its unmaking from the 1980’s onwards.
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Article
Mexico’s Auto Industry Between Radical Change and Trade Wars
Oct 26, 2021
Between a rock and a hard place
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Working Paper
CommentaryWhy We Need a Second Bretton Woods Gathering
Nov 2018
We need a new system of rules for the digital 21st century that enhances global digital cooperation and welfare. Nothing less than a historic gathering of the world’s key decision makers will get us there.
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Podcast
Brian Barnier
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Partnership
The AirNet
The Academic-Industry Research Network—theAIRnet—is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit research organization devoted to the proposition that a sound understanding of the role of business in the economy requires collaboration between academic scholars and industry experts.
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Webinars and Events
The Political Economy of Ecological Change and Economic Security in the Global South
ConferenceJul 1–2, 2024
The intricacies of the political economy that play out across countries in the Global South have profound significance for understanding the nature of ecological change and economic security that confront our world today.
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Podcasts
Beyond Industrialism: Building Communities That Work for People
Jan 30, 2025
Fred Block, Research Professor of Sociology at UC Davis, joins Rob Johnson to discuss his latest book, The Habitation Society, which explores the need to move beyond industrial-era economic models to create an economy that prioritizes community well-being. Block critiques how economic policies have fueled inequality and stagnation while offering solutions—such as restructuring public finance—to foster prosperity for all.
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Article
Paper: Digital Access and Economic Transformation in Africa
Mar 14, 2022
An overview of the current digital access landscape in Africa
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Article
Enlightenment Then, Enlightenment Now
Oct 20, 2017
What can today’s economists learn from the 18th century Scottish thinkers who grappled with societal and economic change?
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YSI Event
Political Economy of Capitalism
YSI
WorkshopAug 27–29, 2018
The Economics of Innovation Working group and the Economic History Working Group together with the Département d’histoire, économie et société at the University of Geneva, are launching the event Political Economy of Capitalism to be held in Geneva, Switzerland, on 27-28-29 August 2018.
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Podcasts
We Need a Resilient Society
Sep 30, 2021
Princeton economics professor Markus Brunnermeier discusses his recently released book, The Resilient Society, which argues that in crisis-prone situations societal resilience is a crucial component for averting outright disaster and outlines how we might achieve that resilience.
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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 Moral Burden on Economists
Apr 13, 2017
In his 2017 presidential address to the National Economic Association, Professor Darrick Hamilton warned that treating economics as a morally neutral ‘science’, and the discipline’s limited attention to structural barriers and overemphasis individual agency, has resulted in bad economics, and bad policy particularly as it relates to racial disparity.
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Article
Why We Need a Global Public Economics
May 7, 2018
Global public goods, from health to peace to security, crisscross national and social boundaries. We need a new economic theory to understand their pivotal role in the global economy.
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YSI Event
Call for Papers - “Institutional Responses to Financial Crises 1870 to 2017”
YSI Economic History Workshop
YSI
WorkshopMay 12–13, 2017
The Economic History Working Group and the Financial Stability Working Group are organizing a two day seminar on May, 12th-13th in New York. The theme for the will be “Institutional responses to financial crises 1870 to 2017”.
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Article
Latest Institute Grants Announced
Jul 17, 2015
The Institute for New Economic Thinking has awarded $2 million in grants to fund 21 different projects as part of the latest round of its research grant program.
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Webinars and Events
Strategy Roundtable During UN General Assembly (UNGA)
DiscussionSep 23, 2024
Strategizing on Addressing the Planetary Emergency and Unlocking Opportunities for an Exponential Just Transition
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Article
Automotive Value Chains in a Brave New World
Jan 11, 2022
The pandemic and electrification are shaking the foundations of the auto industry
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Article
A Poetic Challenge to Global Capitalism That Will Rend Your Heart
Jun 21, 2018
Edoardo Nesi’s new book tracks the destructive march of globalization and neoliberal capitalism through his own life and the places, like Italy, that lie broken in its wake.
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Article
How Gender Roles, Implicit Bias and Stereotypes Affect Women and Girls
Oct 27, 2016
Young women of all races and gender identities are powering movements from Black Lives Matter to immigration reform to reproductive justice to minimum wage and beyond. Researchers need to support their progress with metrics that capture the spirit they are building
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Podcasts
Music, its Commercialization, and Politics
May 6, 2021
Activist and poet John Sinclair and Rob Johnson discuss the early days of the counterculture, Sinclair’s role in MC5, and the transformation of music from art to commodity when the music industry’s commercial power blossomed in the early 1970s.
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Article
Tunisia in Turmoil: When Supply-Side Orthodoxy Meets an Angry Citizenry
May 23, 2016
Mass protests challenging the government to focus on job-creation rather than on market liberalization and trade deals may carry a cautionary message to Western policy makers, too.
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YSI Event
Skills Workshop at the EU Parliament
Annual Meeting of the Finance, Law, and Economics Working Group
YSI
WorkshopMay 29–30, 2017
This two-day skills workshop / annual meeting of the Finance, Law, and Economics Working Group (FLE) aims to connect participants with politicians (MEP), lobbyists, NGOs, and practitioners working in fields related to law and finance. It will comprise workshops and visits with representatives, which will facilitate exchanges between academia and politics. Participants will gain fresh insights into the decision-making and lobbying processes in Brussels, allowing them to translate their ideas into actions and create a stronger social impact.
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Working Paper
Working paperEquality Denied: Tech and African Americans
Feb 2022
EEO-1 employment data document the vast over-representation of Asian Americans and vast under-representation of African Americans at tech companies in recent years. How did this happen?
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News
INET Leadership Meets with Portugal’s Finance Minister and Eurogroup President
Apr 12, 2019
Group discussed pressing issues in the eurozone and the need for new economic thinking
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Article
The Hidden Cost of Privatization
Jun 13, 2017
Why some goods and services should stay in the public domain
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Podcast
William Overholt
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Article
Fateful Collision: NATO’s Drive to the East Versus Russia’s Sphere of Influence
Jan 7, 2022
How did this dire situation come about?
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News
INET Welcomes Jamie Daves as its Newest Governing Board Member
Dec 4, 2023
New INET Governing Board Member Announcement
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Article
The New Normal
May 19, 2017
Demand, Secular Stagnation and the Vanishing Middle-Class
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Article
The One-Earth Balance Sheet
Jul 23, 2021
Getting the whole spectrum of governments, academia and civil society to track “natural capital” would help create shared efforts toward solving shared problems like the climate crisis.
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Podcast
Gerald Horne
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Article
Who's Responsible Here?
Mar 9, 2020
Establishing legal responsibility in the fissured workplace
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Article
Edward Brown: “Growth with ‘DEPTH’ should guide economic transformation in Africa”
Oct 2, 2020
In this interview, Folashadé Soulé and Camilla Toulmin discuss with Edward K. Brown, Senior Director, Research and Advisory services at the African Center for Economic Transformation (ACET) based in Accra, Ghana, on the effects of COVID-19 on regional integration and economic transformation in Africa, and the role of ACET and African think tanks in advising African governments respond to the crisis.
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Webinars and Events
International Conference on Artificial Intelligence (Al), Privacy, and Governance
ConferenceNov 30–Dec 2, 2024
This conference aims to explore important issues of economics of AI, good governance, humanization of AI technologies, privacy, considerations of creative thinking and imagination, and take a comprehensive look at the challenges and opportunities of AI technologies.
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Podcasts
US Healthcare Strangled by Massive Insurance Profits and Money in Politics
Feb 17, 2022
Former health insurance executive turned whistleblower and investigative journalist Wendell Potter discusses the many ways in which the private health insurance system of the US is not serving anyone well except the insurance companies’ owners
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Article
Indian Economic Policy: Stimulus, Deficits and Privatisation
May 20, 2020
Over five phased announcements last week, the Indian government set in motion an unprecedented fiscal stimulus. Gaurav Dalmia looks at India’s near-term economic challenges and offers a prescription on how privatisation can help India achieve its objectives.
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Podcast
Anna Deavere Smith
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YSI Event
Globalization and the Developing World
YSI Latin America Convening 2017
YSI
ConferenceJun 17–21, 2017
The Young Scholars Initiative is hosting its regional convening for Latin America in Mexico City from 17-21 June.
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Article
Is This Time Different? Data, Artificial Intelligence, and Robots
Oct 14, 2020
A summary of INET’s latest Future of Work episode
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Grant
Years granted: 2014, 2015Innovation and the State: How Should Government Finance and Implement Innovation Policy?
This research project offers a historical taxonomy of organizational ways that governments fund and implement industrial and innovation policy as well as a taxonomy of contemporary implementation practices.
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Webinars and Events
Advanced Graduate Workshop in Development and Globalization
WorkshopJul 4–17, 2016
The Advanced Graduate Workshop in Development, led by Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz is interested in identifying the complex interactions that influence well-being, development and growth.
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Article
Macroeconomics and the Italian Vote
Aug 6, 2018
To understand the rise of the League and 5 Star Movement, look at economic indicators
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Podcast
Cornel West
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Article
Start-Up Governments, or Can Bureaucracies Innovate?
Jan 4, 2016
For most economists and indeed for social scientists in general such a question induces shudders as already asking this seems wrong – aren’t governments more prone to failures than markets, and aren’t governments supposed to provide basic and stable institutions for markets to function?
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Article
Dilemma Not Trilemma: The Global Financial Cycle and Monetary Policy Independence
Sep 6, 2013
The global financial cycle has transformed the well-known trilemma into a ‘dilemma’. Independent monetary policies are possible if and only if the capital account is managed directly or indirectly. This column argues the right policies to deal with the ‘dilemma’ should aim at curbing excessive leverage and credit growth. A combination of macroprudential policies guided by aggressive stress‐testing and tougher leverage ratios are needed. Some capital controls may also be useful.
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Podcasts
China & U.S. - A Clash of Two Gilded Ages
Dec 2, 2021
Yuen Yuen Ang, political science professor at the University of Michigan and author of the book, China’s Gilded Age, argues that the US and China have more in common than we usually think and that it makes more sense to see the conflict as a clash of two gilded ages instead of a clash of civilizations.
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Article
Fighting for Gender Equality in Economics Is Not Nearly Enough
Mar 1, 2019
The field of economics is aggressively sexist and biased against new and unconventional ideas. Revelations about gender and ethnic discrimination show the need to reorient the whole system toward more freedom, respect, openness, and pluralism. But how?
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Article
Hungry for Development: The leadership of the Global South from G20 to COP30
Nov 9, 2025
Since 2007, recurring food-price spikes reveal hunger as a problem of market design and underinvestment, not scarcity. With Brazil’s COP30 on the horizon, aligning climate commitments with food systems could cement policy space to manage markets and advance the right to food.
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Webinars and Events
Climate Change Adaptation and Resilience in Agriculture: Strategies for Sustainable Development in South Asia
ConferenceMar 17–19, 2025
The IFMR Graduate School of Business, Krea University, in collaboration with the Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) and its Young Scholars Initiative (YSI) is organising a conference on Climate Change Adaptation and Resilience in Agriculture: Strategies for Sustainable Development in South Asia
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Article
Why We Need Diversity and Pluralism in Economics, Part II
Mar 22, 2019
INET talks to Jayati Ghosh and Marina Della Giusta
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Article
The Impact of the War in Ukraine on West Africa Requires a Disaggregated Analysis
Dec 12, 2022
An interview with Gilles Yabi, executive director of the West African Think Tank WATHI, on food security in Africa
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Article
How Biden Can Protect Workers on Day 1
Nov 13, 2020
By fully utilizing the power of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), President Biden could take meaningful steps to keep workers safe during the pandemic, even without Congress’s help
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Podcasts
Jamil Anderlini
Jun 16, 2020
Financial Times Asia editor Jamil Anderlini talks to Rob about the lasting legacy of the Opium Wars on Chinese foreign policy, and the future of Hong Kong.
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Podcasts
The Path to Prosperity in a Post-Global World
Oct 20, 2022
Financial Times columnist and author Rana Foroohar talks about her new book Homecoming: The Path to Prosperity in a Post-Global World
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Podcasts
The Return of Asia in the 21st Century
Apr 14, 2022
Distinguished Fellow at the Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore, Kishore Mahbubani, discusses his latest book, The Asian 21st Century, in which he relates US decline to the rise of plutocracy and Asia’s renewed rise - after having fallen behind in the last 200 years - to its growing sense of dynamism, optimism, and diversity. This is the 200th episode of the podcast Economics and Beyond with Rob Johnson.
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Article
How President Biden Can Fix our Trade Problem
Dec 16, 2020
Trump’s approach largely failed because the problem can’t be solved by tariffs. Here’s the answer.
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Podcast
Tolu Olubunmi
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Podcasts
The Vicious Cycle of Mass Incarceration and Racial Injustice
Jul 6, 2021
MIT economic historian Peter Temin discusses parts of his forthcoming book, focusing on the history of mass incarceration of uneducated Blacks and how it has created a permanent class of poor Black Americans
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Podcasts
On Developing a Vision for a Better Society
Aug 30, 2021
Gisele Huff, education policy specialist and president of the Gerald Huff Fund for Humanity, along with john a. powell, director of UC Berkeley’s Othering & Belonging Institute, talk about the motivations and process behind the soon-to-be-released report, “Convening on Automation, Opportunity, and Belonging: Vision and Foundations for a Better Society.”
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Podcast
Yanis Varoufakis & Danae Stratou
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesSpilt Milk: COVID-19 and the Dangers of Dairy Industry Consolidation
Aug 2020
Consolidation in the dairy industry has created separate, inflexible supply chains for consumers and commercial markets. When COVID killed commercial demand, perfectly good milk and cheese was wasted.
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Article
Dollar Dominance is Financial Dominance
Nov 23, 2022
What Strategies can Break This Dependency?
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Podcast
Rana Foroohar
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News
Pope Francis Joins Joe Stiglitz and Rob Johnson in Creating New Economic Thinking
May 13, 2019
INET Global Commission to collaborate with Pope Francis and Scholas Occurrentes on bringing the voices of young people into the economics profession
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Article
Marxian Economics: The Oldest Systems Theory Is New Again (or Always?)
Apr 9, 2015
The best new economic thinking in an age of the dominance of rent-seeking will be Marxian economic thinking
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Podcast
Benjamin Grant
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Article
U.N. Secretary-General Meets with INET Global Commissioners
Nov 12, 2018
António Guterres and CGET Commissioners discuss cooperating on inequality, climate change, multilateralism, and more
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Podcast
Sarah Kendzior
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Grant
Years granted: 2015Financial Innovation and Central Banking in China: a Money View
This research project develops a “Money View” analysis of the recent evolution of China’s financial system.
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Podcast
Jamil Anderlini
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Article
Global Commission Brainstorms on Africa’s Economic Transformation Ahead of WEF Africa
Sep 9, 2019
An update from the meeting of the Commission on Global Economic Transformation (CGET) in Cape Town
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Podcast
Susan Piver
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Video
Our Thousand-Year Struggle over Technology and Prosperity
May 17, 2023
In honor of the just-announced Nobel Prize in Economics for Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson, and James Robinson, we re-post an Economics and Beyond podcast episode from last year, featuring Johnson, discussing Johnson and Acemoglu’s latest book, Power and Progress.
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Podcast
john powell
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Podcast
Warrington Hudlin
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Article
Travelling Knowledge and Tools
Sep 15, 2015
News about a wonderful workshop, “Knowledge Transfer and Its Contexts”
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Article
How Neoliberal Thinkers Spawned Monsters They Never Imagined
Nov 19, 2019
Political theorist Wendy Brown explores new threats to democracy and society
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Podcast
Jeremy Lent
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Article
The Growing BRICS Economies: An INET Series
Apr 12, 2018
The BRICS countries—Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa—play a crucial and growing role in the world economy. Sanjay Reddy kicks off our series exploring shifting social and economic dynamics within these countries, and what they mean for the global economy.
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Grant
Years granted: 2015The Epistemological and Statistical Limits of the Economic Sciences in Identifying Causalities
This research project explores the underlying limits—especially of the social and economic sciences—in identifying causalities including, among other aspects, the strong epistemological and statistical limitations of and assumptions behind the methods applied.
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Grant
Years granted: 2014, 2015Shadow Banks in China: Causes, Impacts and Policy Options
This research project explores the causes and consequences of the rise of China’s shadow banks based on the Modern Money Theory and its extension on the analysis on modern financial systems.
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Podcasts
Podcasting and the Fragile Public Discourse
Mar 18, 2021
Tiger Gao, founder and host of the podcast “Policy Punchline” at Princeton University, talks about the potentials of podcasting for challenging the fragmented and changing media landscape. Part 1 of 2
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Podcast
Camilla Toulmin
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Podcast
Jayati Ghosh
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Podcast
Ed Pavlic