INET in the News
-
A challenge to dollar domination?
May 26, 2012
FT Alphaville uses a Lord of the Rings metaphor to describe the state of global currencies.
-
Stephen Kinsella: A “nutter in a balloon” gives you perspective
May 24, 2012
Stephen Kinsella has some advice for economists: “Sometimes, all you need is a nutter in a balloon to change your perspective. And perspective is everything.”
-
Sen Warns of Europe’s Well-Meaning Mistakes
May 23, 2012
If proof were needed of the maxim that the road to hell is paved with good intentions, the economic crisis in Europe provides it
-
China’s RMB Exodus
May 21, 2012
Will China correct this imbalance by allowing the RMB to appreciate? Or will it dump dollars onto forex markets?
-
INET Goes to Paris
May 21, 2012
INET Executive Director Robert Johnson delivered a keynote address at the OECD Forum in Paristoday.
-
What are economists for, anyway?
May 20, 2012
Who does the economist serve: powerful interests or society?
-
Economics Is Not Math
May 20, 2012
Mathematician Michael Edesess has a dose of reality for economists.
-
Calls for Financial Architecture Fix
May 20, 2012
What’s wrong with our economic recovery?
-
Joseph Stiglitz, Anya Schiffrin Celebrate Book Releases
May 20, 2012
Attendees at the book party were treated to an assortment of wine, sushi, and intriguing conversation on the rooftop of Schiffrin’s parents’ Upper West Side apartment.
-
How to Kill Financial Regulation…and the Global Economy
May 14, 2012
“While it’s incredibly difficult to get a regulatory reform passed, it’s far easier – and more profitable to politicians – to kill it.
-
Regulation? What Regulation?
May 13, 2012
Being the smartest guys in the room doesn’t prevent you from making bad decisions.
-
NH Media Features INET Imperfect Knowledge Economics Project
May 1, 2012
Human beings aren’t mechanical. And mechanistic economic theories can’t account for uncertainty or political instability and individual creativity.
-
A Berlin Consensus?
Apr 29, 2012
The Washington Consensus is dead.
-
INET Responds to L.A. Times Op-Ed Comments
Apr 25, 2012
New economic thinking is no passing fad. The movement for new economic thinking is here to stay - with broad-based, worldwide support from undergraduate and graduate students as well as both young and established professors and Nobel laureates.
-
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.
-
Huffington Post Features INET Financial Stability Documentary, With Introduction by Rob Johnson
Apr 22, 2012
The Huffington Post spotlights the INET financial instability video, produced by Four Corners Media, accompanied by an extensive written introduction fromINET Executive Director Robert Johnson.
-
Day 2 Wrap Up - Berlin Conference
Apr 13, 2012
Read how did the second day of the Berlin conference go
-
Mark Thoma Excited about Student Presence at INET Berlin Conference
Apr 13, 2012
Mark Thoma has picked up on a significant aspect of this year’s INET annual conference
-
Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) Announces Major Fund-Raising Initiatives
Apr 13, 2012
The Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) today announced a significant infusion of funding that over the coming years will make the organization self-sustaining and enable INET to dramatically expand its global reach, scale, and scope.
-
George Soros's Speech at Opening Session - INET Berlin
Apr 12, 2012
Soros’s remarks about the 2008 crash
-
Berlin Conference in the News
Apr 12, 2012
INET’s Berlin Conference, “Paradigm Lost: Rethinking Economics and Politics,” opened yesterday and continues to receive enthusiastic coverage from both local and international press.
-
Mark Thoma Weighs in on INET Berlin and IKE
Apr 12, 2012
Mark Thoma offers a thorough, nuanced take on Roman Frydman’s theory of Imperfect Knowledge Economics (IKE) and George Soros’s ideas on the inability of people to predict the outcomes of financial and social change, which Soros calls “fallibility” and “reflexivity.”
-
Day 1 Wrap Up - Berlin Conference
Apr 11, 2012
Read how did the day of the Berlin conference go
-
INET at Oxford Interdisciplinary Research Center Announced
Apr 11, 2012
A new interdisciplinary research center to explore and challenge conventional economic thinking has been created by the Oxford Martin School in collaboration with the Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET).
-
Registration Opens for YSI Commons in Berlin
Mar 22, 2012
Registration is now open for YSI Commons, at INET’s Plenary Conference, Berlin April 12-15.
-
Overwhelming Response to YSI in Berlin: INET’s Class of 2012
Mar 14, 2012
We reserved 25 slots, but we got 563 applications. Something had to be done.
-
How to Tackle the Challenge of Sovereign Debt
Mar 7, 2012
The G20 must address the problem of sovereign debt.
-
Demise of Chinese Exports Greatly Exaggerated
Mar 7, 2012
Is China’s manufacturing sector in decline?
-
Sovereign Debtors in Distress: Are Our Institutions Up to the Challenge?
Feb 24, 2012
In Europe and the United States, political and economic breakdowns have become untenable.
-
Suresh Naidu - Property Rights and Growth: Lessons from Slavery
Feb 1, 2012
A new angle on the link between property rights and economic growth
-
Robert Johnson in Time Magazine about the Failures of the Economics Profession
Jan 18, 2012
What can be done to repair economics so economists can play a productive role in helping society?
-
INET in Berlin: The Conference Program
Jan 17, 2012
We are pleased to announce the program of INET’s annual plenary conference in Berlin.
-
INET in Berlin: The Annual Plenary Conference to Take Place on April 12-14, 2012
Jan 11, 2012
The Institute for New Economic Thinking will host its third annual plenary conference in Berlin fromApril 12 to 14, 2012.
-
2011 and Beyond: What lies Ahead for the Global Economy?
Dec 12, 2011
INET Advisors Help Answer
-
Charles Goodhart: Europe After the Crisis
Oct 20, 2011
Goodhart brings back on the table the 2% minimalist federal fiscal counterpart to monetary union: “As has been exemplified in the recent crisis, it is problematical to try to issue money without the power to support that via taxation. Equally without access to money (notably via taxes), the power to undertake counter-cyclical, or cross-country, stabilisation is limited. So, the second proposal is to revisit the exercise that was done, some twenty years ago, to assess what fiscal changes might be needed to accompany a single currency.”
-
READING ROOM: Economics has met the enemy, and it is economics
Oct 15, 2011
The Globe and Mail published a long piece about the dismal science, covering a lot of ground from moral philosophy to rational expectations, from Adam Smith to this year’s Nobel laureate Thomas Sargent, from the Post-Autistic Economics movement to the Institute for New Economic Thinking. Excerpts:
-
The Map Is Not the Territory: An Essay on the State of Economics
Oct 3, 2011
INET presents you a paper that deals with the relationship between economics and the world we live in. John Kay spells out methodological critiques of economic theory in general, and of DSGE models and rational expectations in particular. The paper builds on two articles that Kay, Fellow at St. John’s College of Oxford University and Visiting Professor at the London School of Economics, recently published in the Financial Times (scroll down to find the links). It is concerned with the relation of quantitative models to the world in which we live, and with evergreens such as the implications of unrealistic assumptions in economic theory. Highly recommended reading. INET forwarded Kay’s paper to a handful economists and invited them to respond. In the following days, we are going to publish direct responses to the paper by a handful of prominent economists. Follow the INET Blog and stay tuned to what is going to be a healthy discussion.
-
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.
-
Grant application deadline approaching: September 15, 2011
Sep 12, 2011
Reminder
-
INET and CIGI are Now Accepting Research Proposals for the Fall 2011 Grant Program
Aug 1, 2011
The Institute for New Economic Thinking and The Centre for International Governance Innovation are calling for new research proposals in areas of vital importance to the field of economics for the Fall 2011 grants cycle.
-
INET and CIGI Award Spring 2011 Grants
Jul 11, 2011
INET and CIGI Award Spring 2011 Grants: The grants offer a diversity of approaches and global perspectives that target critical issues that have been neglected by conventional economic analysis.
-
Check out the New Book “Capitalism 4.0” by Anatole Kaletsky
Jun 27, 2011
Anatole Kaletsky explains the recent global crisis in sweeping historical context, and points out the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity now opening up to economists - particularly the younger generation.
-
Tom Ferguson and Rob Johnson on Debt, Growth, and Austerity
Apr 17, 2011
Deficit Fantasies in the Great Recession
-
Dissident vs Mainstream Tension at New Economic Thinking Conference
Apr 9, 2011
What is the right way to achieve change?
-
Students in Bretton Woods: The Next Generation of Economic Thinking
Apr 8, 2011
It’s day two of INET’s Conference in Bretton Woods and a new energy has filled the halls and sessions with the arrival of nearly thirty student attendees.
-
New Book from INET Advisory Board Member Barry Eichengreen
Jan 9, 2011
There’s a good column at voxeu.org by INET Advisory Board Member Barry Eichengreen, where he introduces his new book, titled Exorbitant Privilege: The Rise and Fall of the Dollar and the Future of the International Monetary System.
-
Avoiding a Bleak Future for the Euro
Dec 14, 2010
In a recent piece in the Financial Times, George Soros makes the case that, to avoid a bleak future for the euro and the European Union in general, Europe should take steps to recapitalize banks before bailing out member states. In the piece, Soros discusses issues that INET is very interested in exploring further, such as the idea that flaws in macroeconomic theory helped lead to the financial crisis of 2008.
-
How would Joe Stiglitz Would Fix the Economy
Nov 16, 2010
Can the Economy be Saved? The Los Angeles Times recently asked a number of economic experts about whether they thought the post-financial crisis economy can be saved, and if so, how.
-
The Deficit Debate
Oct 5, 2010
Will public deficit reduction encourage private sector growth, or undermine a needed stimulus to recovery & lead to Japan-style stagnation?
-
America Needs Stimulus, Not Virtue
Oct 4, 2010
What does America need?
-
Moving Beyond Washington’s Stale Economic Debate
Aug 30, 2010
In a recent column in the Huffington Post, INET advisory board member Jeffrey Sachs made the case that the economic debate in Washington has become “stale” and politicized - and needs to be reframed. This is poignantly relevant to INET, as we begin to make headway on helping to create a new economic paradigm.
-
Front Page of the NYT: Scholars Test Web Alternative to Peer Review
Aug 23, 2010
The New York Times has now pushed to the front page of today’s paper an issue of real relevance to INET: how new web tools are beginning to upend traditional peer review in academia.
-
Joseph Stiglitz in the Financial Times on the Need for a New Economic Paradigm
Aug 18, 2010
Joseph Stiglitz, noted economist, Nobel Laureate and Institute advisor, had a letter published in the Financial Times yesterday. In it, he noted the need for new ways of thinking about economics, and how this can be achieved.
-
Reinhart and Rogoff Clarify Debt Findings
Aug 10, 2010
What is the relationship between debt and growth rates?
-
China Needs Slower, Better Growth
Aug 8, 2010
Is China growing too fast?
-
How to Avoid a Third Depression: Richard Koo Testifies Before House Committee
Aug 3, 2010
On July 22nd, Richard Koo, the chief economist from Nomura Research Institute, testified before Congress’ Committee on Financial Services. The subject: what the U.S. can do to avoid sinking into a depression.