Archive
-
Article
Not the Fix—The Tell: The Meaning of a $100,000 H-1B Fee
Oct 20, 2025
The new $100,000 H-1B fee tacitly acknowledges what early policy architects signaled: expanding temporary tech visas can depress domestic wages. By bringing the fully loaded cost of a new H1B hire closer to what the local market would require to recruit and retain comparable talent, it narrows the wedge between visa-enabled staffing and hiring Americans at market rates.
-
Article
Drug Price Wars: What Can Really Tame Big Pharma?
Oct 14, 2025
Here’s the breakdown on what’s really driving America’s runaway drug prices — and whether any of the current plans stand a chance to lower your pharmacy bill.
-
Article
Bretton Woods: A System That Can’t Be Fixed—But Can Be Made Fairer and More Effective
Oct 13, 2025
The IMF and World Bank can no longer function as instruments that discipline some member countries while deferring to others. Their challenge is to transform the exercise of power among member countries into a framework of mutual respect and cooperation.
-
Article
Time Bomb: How Uninsured Stablecoins and Crypto Derivatives Threaten Financial and Economic Stability
Oct 6, 2025
The GENIUS Act is a disastrous law that poses grave and unacceptable threats to our financial and economic future. Congress must remove those threats by (1) repealing the GENIUS Act and passing legislation that requires all stablecoin providers to be FDIC-insured banks, and (2) adopting legislation that requires all crypto derivatives to comply with the rules governing non-digital derivatives under Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act.
-
Article
Unlocking America’s Political Finance History: Campaign Data from the National Archives
Oct 4, 2025
INET’s new data archive of historical political finance records at the National Archives assembles all campaign finance reports filed by political parties and presidential candidates up to 1974, the year before the Federal Election Commission was established.
-
Article
The AI Bubble and the U.S. Economy: How Long Do “Hallucinations” Last?
Oct 2, 2025
This paper argues that (i) we have reached “peak GenAI” in terms of current Large Language Models (LLMs); scaling (building more data centers and using more chips) will not take us further to the goal of “Artificial General Intelligence” (AGI); returns are diminishing rapidly; (ii) the AI-LLM industry and the larger U.S. economy are experiencing a speculative bubble, which is about to burst.
-
Working Paper
Working PaperHistorical American Political Finance Data at the National Archives: A Preface to the INET Edition
Sep 2025
INET’s new data archive of historical political finance records at the National Archives marks a major step toward filling this factual void. This INET Working Paper outlines what users need to know to navigate the archive effectively and locate the data they require.
-
Article
Why the World Bank’s Governance Reform Is Stuck – and How to Break the Stalemate
Sep 29, 2025
We examine the World Bank’s protracted and conflicted attempts at shareholding reform from 2008 to the present, situating them within the broader context of multipolarity and intensifying geopolitical rivalries.
-
Article
Economist Chris Hughes on the Fed, Crypto, and the Danger of Trump’s Vision
Sep 24, 2025
Hughes discusses his recent book Marketcrafters, and how markets are deliberately built with outcomes that can serve the public good – or not. He uses this lens to unpack today’s economic flashpoints, from the Fed to crypto to climate.
-
Working Paper
Working PaperHow Western states keep the lead in the World Bank: Multipolarity, Geopolitics and the World Bank’s Conflicted Attempts at Shareholding Reform
Sep 2025
This paper examines the World Bank’s protracted and conflicted attempts at shareholding reform from 2008 to the present, situating them within the broader context of multipolarity and intensifying geopolitical rivalries.
-
Working Paper
Working PaperThe AI Bubble and the U.S. Economy: How Long Do ‘Hallucinations’ Last?
Sep 2025
This paper argues that (i) we have reached “peak GenAI” in terms of current Large Language Models (LLMs); scaling (building more data centers and using more chips) will not take us further to the goal of “Artificial General Intelligence” (AGI); returns are diminishing rapidly; (ii) the AI-LLM industry and the larger U.S. economy are experiencing a speculative bubble, which is about to burst.
-
Research Program
Historical American Political Finance Data at the National Archives
INET’s new data archive of historical political finance records at the National Archives assembles all campaign finance reports filed by political parties and presidential candidates up to 1974, the year before the Federal Election Commission was established.
-
Article
Study Finds Male and Female Economists See the Economy Differently -- Even When Politically Aligned. It Matters for Everyone.
Sep 10, 2025
In a significant new study published by the Institute for New Economic Thinking, Canadian economist Mohsen Javdani reveals that gender shapes views on power, equality, and inclusion in ways politics alone can’t explain.
-
Video
Religion and the Rise of Capitalism
Sep 10, 2025
How much of modern economics is shaped by religion?
-
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.