#INET2017
Material from, and related to, INET’s 2017 conference: Reawakening
The Real High Income Trap: Political Money, Political Establishments and Power
Not just an American dilemma: is political money in dual economies the biggest problem of all?
The Future of Macroeconomics
The Future of the Eurozone
What's the Future?
James Heckman on Intergenerational Issues
Why Do Estimates of Immigration's Economic Effects Clash So Sharply?
Emerging Economies
Identity Norms and Narratives
Truth or Consequences: Lessons from Past Democratic Collapses
New Developments in the Economics of Imperfect Knowledge
How we can create useful economic theory that recognizes that the future is radically uncertain?
Technology and Economic Development
INET and Economics in Cambridge
Adam Smith and the Scottish Enlightenment
In the Long Run Are We All Dead?
Core Fractures and International Relations
Doubling Down on Failure Subsidizing More One Way Bets?
Populist Revolts: Economics, Culture, Race, Gender?
Debt Traps, Public and Private
The Growth of a Dual Economy
“Dual Economy” models were developed to explain growth in the developing world. Now they appear necessary to comprehend the high income trap that afflicts the world’s most developed economies.
Reversing Dual Economies?
What can policy do to remedy the spread of dual economies in the developed world?
Gains from Trade
Macroeconomics of Gender
Taking the Con Out of Economics? The Limits of Negative Darwinism
A Decade of Stagnation, Why?
INET President: Rebuilding A Moral Economics
Scottish First Minister Opens #INET2017
Redefining Inequality
Nobel Laureates to Co-Chair Independent Commission on Global Economy
Joseph Stiglitz, Michael Spence and a global team of leading thinkers are calling for new thinking & new rules for the world economy
Enlightenment Then, Enlightenment Now
What can today’s economists learn from the 18th century Scottish thinkers who grappled with societal and economic change?
The Economics of Uncertainty
Studies in psychology, neuroscience, biology, and many of the social sciences have long illustrated that human beings react very different from what economics textbooks tell you to expect when they are operating under conditions of radical uncertainty.
The Four Horsemen of the Econopocalypse
If standard economic theory can’t explain a traffic jam, how can it cope with crises?