Archive
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Working Paper
Working PaperMyth and Reality in the Great Inflation Debate: Supply Shocks and Wealth Effects in a Multipolar World Economy
Jan 2023
A critical reappraisal of the case in favor of monetary tightening pressed by inflation hawks is overdue.
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Video
Training Thinkers
Dec 28, 2022
Will Milberg discusses the unique history of The New School for Social Research, and why its traditions are particularly relevant today.
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Article
Meet the Grinch Stealing the Future of Gen Y And Z
Dec 20, 2022
Salaries in the U.S. aren’t keeping up with inflation, despite pandemic-related increases in some sectors. That’s a major threat to the future for all working Americans – especially the youngest.
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Article
High-level Panel Discussion: Development Prospects in a Fractured World
Dec 15, 2022
As 2022 comes to a close, panelists discuss the immediate prospects for the global economy, the dangers of a lost decade for developing countries and what needs to be done to put the SDGs back on track.
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Article
Bankman-Fried, Political Money, and the Crash of FTX
Dec 15, 2022
How Showering Money on Both Parties Paralyzed Regulators
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Article
Why Economists Should Support Populist Antitrust Goals
Dec 13, 2022
Despite the accumulation of serious and unsolvable problems, the Consumer Welfare Standard survives and continues to be taught to students for reasons unrelated to theoretical consistency and empirical confirmation.
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Article
Il faut une analyse désagrégée des conséquences de la guerre en Ukraine sur les économies en Afrique de l’Ouest
Dec 13, 2022
Entretien avec Gilles Yabi, directeur exécutif du Think Tank ouest-africain WATHI, sur la sécurité alimentaire en Afrique
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Working Paper
Working PaperWhy Economists Should Support Populist Antitrust Goals
Dec 2022
The Consumer Welfare Standard is severely limited or defective, preventing it from being an appropriate standard for modern antitrust.
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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
Sick with “Shareholder Value”: US Pharma’s Financialized Business Model During the Pandemic
Dec 6, 2022
Evidence sharply contradicts PhRMA’s contention that its member companies need unregulated drug prices to generate profits that they then reinvest in drug innovation.
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Webinars and Events
Global Inflation Today: What Is to Be Done?
ConferencePERI Conference, featuring INET Research Director Thomas Ferguson and INET Grantees
Dec 2–Nov 3, 2022
Emerging out of the COVID lockdown, inflation in the U.S. and globally has risen to the highest levels in 40 years. On December 2-3, PERI will host a conference to explore the causes of this global inflation spike. Conference participants will also provide critical perspectives on the austerity macroeconomic policies being implemented globally to control inflation and will propose alternative policies capable of managing inflation without imposing austerity and rising mass unemployment.
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Working Paper
Working PaperMuth’s Hypothesis Under Knightian Uncertainty
Dec 2022
A Novel Account of Inflation Forecasts
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Article
Food Security in Africa: “This Crisis Has Shown the Limits to Africa’s Resilience”
Dec 1, 2022
“We risk a global decoupling in which East and West face off in a cold war, and Africans are caught in the middle,” says Professor Carlos Lopes in an interview with Folashadé Soulé and Camilla Toulmin
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Article
Top Antitrust Expert: We Need a New Approach to Giant Tech Firms Like Google
Nov 28, 2022
Economist Cristina Caffarra, a leader in competition and antitrust, warns that ever-expanding tech giants raise concerns about the extent of their power.
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Webinars and Events
India: The Path to Sustained Growth for the Next Decade
ConferenceNov 28–30, 2022
The 5th edition of the Law Economics Policy Conference (LEPC) is jointly organized by the Institute for New Economic Thinking, INET and FLAME University.
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Article
Dollar Dominance is Financial Dominance
Nov 23, 2022
What Strategies can Break This Dependency?
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Article
Worker’s Wages & Leverage Are the Real Targets
Nov 18, 2022
Why did Corporate Democrats “cede” the economic argument? Are they really fighting inflation or trying to weaken workers’ bargaining power? INET’s Thomas Ferguson joins Paul Jay on theAnalysis.news.
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Article
You’re Living in a World Wrought by the Federal Reserve. Notice Anything Wrong?
Nov 17, 2022
In her new book, veteran Wall Street watcher and economist Nomi Prins warns that central bank strategies deployed since the financial crisis are destroying the real economy, worsening inequality, and creating societal chaos.
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Webinars and Events
Vikasarth 2022 Session 3: Industrialisation and the Case of Educated Unemployed 6:00pm-8:00pm IST
WebinarNov 17, 2022
Thirty Years of Indian Economic Reforms: Assessing the Growth and Development of Kerala
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Article
Green Power Pools and Electricity Pricing: Practical Ways Out of the UK Energy Crisis
Nov 15, 2022
The current energy market structures, including the short-run-marginal-price-on-all nature of the current wholesale market, are not fit for a transition to a renewables-dominated system.
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Working Paper
Working PaperSeparating electricity from gas prices through Green Power Pools: Design options and evolution
Nov 2022
Moving away from fossil fuels, towards a system with a far greater contribution from variable renewables, means that the current system is not fit for purpose.
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Article
Sécurité alimentaire en Afrique: « Nous apportons des réponses de court terme à des problèmes de moyen-long terme »
Nov 10, 2022
Quels sont les problèmes à long terme qui doivent être résolus et quelles sont les solutions disponibles?
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Article
Food Security in Africa: “We Are Bringing Short Term Responses to Long Term Problems”
Nov 10, 2022
What are the long-term problems that need to be addressed and what solutions are out there?
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Article
Trump and the Republican Base: A Machine Learning Approach (Revisited)
Nov 7, 2022
Economic issues are a primary part of Trump’s appeal to his base
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Article
Collateral Damage From Higher Interest Rates
Nov 5, 2022
Why to Be Wary of Another Volcker-Type Monetary Tightening
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Working Paper
Working PaperInflation in the Time of Corona and War: The Plight of the Developing Economies
Nov 2022
Fears of ‘stagflation’ have come back to haunt macroeconomic policy makers all over the globe
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News
Herman Daly (1938-2022)
Nov 3, 2022
The economist Herman Daly passed away on October 28, 2022. Read one of the last interviews he gave.
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Article
New Research Shows “Hostile Sexism” in Congress Thwarts Female Leaders. Just Ask Janet Yellen.
Nov 2, 2022
The debilitating challenges women face in being heard are detrimental to economic prosperity and to democracy itself.
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Video
The Laws of Capitalism
Oct 26, 2022
All things can be coded as capital, with the right legal coding.
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Article
How Corporations “Get Away With Murder” to Inflate Prices on Rent, Food, and Electricity
Oct 19, 2022
Antitrust expert Hal Singer shows how big businesses in certain industries are taking advantage of inflation worries to jack up prices far beyond their cost increases, all the while raking in robber-baron profits.
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Video
The Path to Prosperity in a Post-Global World
Oct 19, 2022
Has the solution to global tensions been waiting at home all along?
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Article
A Nobel Award for the Wrong Model
Oct 18, 2022
Diamond-Dybvig-Bernanke is a flawed model of banking that has no room for a lender of last resort
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Article
Bernanke v. Kindleberger: Which Credit Channel?
Oct 13, 2022
In the papers of economist Charles Kindleberger, Perry Mehrling found notes on the paper that won Ben Bernanke his Nobel Prize.
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News
INET Congratulates the Winners of the 2022 Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel
Oct 11, 2022
Ben Bernanke, Douglas Diamond, and Philip Dybvig were honored for their work on financial instability
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Video
A Creative Philosophy for Mathematical Economics
Oct 5, 2022
Interdisciplinarity is critical in pushing the humanities to better understand humans.
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Article
Big Tech: Not Only Market But Also Knowledge and Information Gatekeepers
Oct 4, 2022
How do we regulate an information utility?
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News
Rohinton Medhora Appointed INET Board Chair
Oct 4, 2022
Medhora has served on INET’s Board since 2012 and is a distinguished fellow and former president of the Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI).
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Article
Economist Offers Stark Climate Reality Check. Plus a Bit of Science-Based Hope.
Sep 27, 2022
In a new book, Alligators in the Arctic and How To Avoid Them, Peter Dorman shows how flawed academic models, faulty assumptions and unrealistic schemes grossly underestimate what’s needed to stop catastrophic warming. He argues for a straightforward carbon emission budget – plus the active citizenship required to fight big businesses that want to keep doing business as usual. Lynn Parramore explores his findings and talks to the economist about the path forward.
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Webinars and Events
Vikasarth 2022 Session 2: Emigration, Consumption Boom and the Service Economy
Webinar6:00pm-8:00pm IST
Sep 22, 2022
Thirty Years of Indian Economic Reforms: Assessing the Growth and Development of Kerala
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Video
Development, Climate Change & Capitalism
Sep 21, 2022
Ying Chen discusses her work to better understand development, labor and environmental impact in the Global South, focusing in particular on the realities of Chinese economic policy as it has evolved.
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Collection
Symposium on the Inflation Reduction Act
Servaas Storm, Steven Fazzari, and Thomas Ferguson comment on the Inflation Reduction Act
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Article
The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA): A Brief Assessment
Sep 15, 2022
Servaas Storm’s commentary for an INET symposium on the Inflation Reduction Act
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Article
How Inflation Reduction Became Export Promotion
Sep 15, 2022
Thomas Ferguson’s commentary for an INET symposium on the Inflation Reduction Act
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Article
Electricity Markets, Climate Change, and the European Energy Crisis
Sep 5, 2022
Price inflation, marginal cost pricing, and principles for electricity market redesign in an era of low-carbon transition
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Grant
Years granted:The Methodology of Systematic Risk
This research project explores the factors producing “herding” in the economics profession and professional investment community with the goal of articulating policy changes appropriate to the organization of the economics profession and its practices in particular.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011,Money and Empire: A Biography of the Dollar
This research project recounts the intellectual history of the dollar as an international reserve currency, starting with World War I, which brought the international gold standard to an end, and continuing all the way up to the present global financial crisis.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011, 2012, 2013,Robustness of Policy Analysis to Departures from Model-Consistent Expectations
This research project develops an approach to policy analysis in the context of a macroeconomic model that does not assume that people in the economy forecast the economy’s future evolution under any given policy in the same way as the policy analyst’s own model does.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014,Legal Fiction: An Intellectual History of the COASE Theorem
This research project provides us with a greater understanding of why the Coase theorem came to captivate the minds of economics and legal scholars and how its impact on economics and law reshaped both the theoretical landscape and legal-economic policymaking.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014,Economics: Value Neutral or Value Entangled
This research project demonstrates the ways in which fact and value are entangled in economic concepts and the implications of this entanglement for the ways in which various economic problems are approached.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014,Estimation of Stock Flow Consistent Models
This research project develops, estimates, calibrates, and deploys a new class of stock flow consistent macroeconomic models to try to understand Ireland’s macroeconomic collapse since 2007.
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesNavigating the Crises in European Energy
Sep 2022
Price Inflation, Marginal Cost Pricing, and Principles for Electricity Market Redesign in an Era of Low-Carbon Transition
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News
Michael Grubb on BBC Panorama
Sep 5, 2022
Michael Grubb appears on BBC Panorama to discuss his INET research on European energy 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
6 Economic Experts Reveal the Truth About the Inflation Reduction Act
Aug 30, 2022
Is it good for your wallet? A climate bill in disguise? Landmark action or nothingburger? Economic experts assess the Democrats’ legislative victory for the Institute for New Economic Thinking.
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Article
Beware of Toxic Innovation
Aug 29, 2022
How big tech barons crush innovation—and how to fight back
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Article
Goats and Graduate Students: Working with and Learning from Lance Taylor
Aug 24, 2022
In memory of Lance Taylor
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Article
China’s Development Path: Indigenous Innovation and Global Competition
Aug 22, 2022
China’s successful technological development path stands in contrast to the corporate financialization model in the United States
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesChina’s Development Path: Government, Business, and Globalization in an Innovating Economy
Aug 2022
China’s successful technological development path stands in contrast to the corporate financialization model in the United States
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Article
Does Nature Have Rights?
Aug 16, 2022
Ruskin scholar Jeffrey Spear, author of “Dreams of an English Eden: Ruskin and his Tradition in Social Criticism,” discusses how the insights of a key 19th-century thinker can help us build a new paradigm for protecting the planet – and save us from ourselves.
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Article
In Tribute to Lance Taylor (1940 - 2022)
Aug 16, 2022
Everyone at INET is saddened by the news that our colleague Lance Taylor passed away on Monday, August 15th, 2022. His loss leaves a giant hole in our hearts as well as in the field of economics. His talents and achievements were prodigious and we will miss his cheerful and inspiring presence. Words help little on such occasions, but we would like to extend our condolences to his wife Yvonne, and his children Signe and Ian.
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Article
America, Land of the Dying? Alarming Study Shows U.S. Killing Its Own Population
Aug 8, 2022
Researchers find that the nation had become an outlier among other rich countries in mortality rates long before the pandemic – and that Americans are dying younger than their peers abroad.
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Video
Intellectual Property Is Broken
Aug 3, 2022
Why are we incentivizing wealth at the expense of health?
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Article
How Public Real Estate Investment Trusts Extract Wealth from Nursing Homes and Hospitals
Aug 1, 2022
Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) are considered “passive” investors and are exempt from corporate tax. But in reality, they play a very active role in reshaping whole industries, like healthcare.
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YSI Event
5th Annual UNCTAD-YSI Summer School
Challenges and Opportunities of a New International Economic Order
YSI
WorkshopAug 1–6, 2022
The 5th UNCTAD YSI Summer School provides an opportunity to explore the Challenges and Opportunities of a New International Economic Order. The school will bring together UNCTAD experts, academics, diplomats, and young scholars from across the globe for lively and stimulating intellectual debates.
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesThe Role of Public REITs in Financialization and Industry Restructuring
Jul 2022
Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) are considered “passive” investors and are exempt from corporate tax. But in reality, they play a very active role in reshaping whole industries, like healthcare.
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Video
Diversity Is Development
Jul 27, 2022
INET grantee Vamsi Vakulabharanam describes his work to gather parallel social threads—such as class, caste, gender and religion—to better understand the mechanisms of inequality in India, and why this can lead to better outcomes around the world.
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News
Rob Johnson on Background Briefing with Ian Masters
Jul 20, 2022
Rob Johnson joins Background Briefing with Ian Masters to discuss public concern about inflation
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Video
Economics Is Neglecting You
Jul 20, 2022
The conventional measures of economic well-being are dangerously limited, and we are seeing the resulting policy consequences play out daily.
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Article
What Happens when Big Brother Meets Big Tech
Jul 13, 2022
Author and law professor Maurice Stucke warns that as fundamental privacy rights vanish, your personal data can and will be used against you.
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Article
What A Green Monetary Policy Could Look Like
Jul 12, 2022
Central banks can encourage climate-friendly investments by offering financial institutions favorable haircuts on green collateral
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesMonetary Policy for the Climate? A Money View Perspective on Green Central Banking
Jul 2022
Central banks can encourage climate-friendly investments by offering financial institutions favorable haircuts on green collateral
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Article
Wage Stagnation and Productivity: Challenging the Conventional Analysis
Jul 7, 2022
Stagnating real wages may have contributed to the slowdown of US productivity
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Working Paper
Working PaperPermanent Scars: The Effects of Wages on Productivity
Jul 2022
A persistent regime of low wages may determine very negative long-term consequences on the economy.
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Video
The World After Capital
Jul 6, 2022
We are in the midst of another global transformation, but this time we might have the tools to get it right.
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Article
The Fed Tackles Kalecki
Jun 30, 2022
Ratner and Sim’s “Who Killed the Phillips Curve – A Murder Mystery”
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Article
The Lost World of Sovereign Bankruptcy and the Future of Government Default
Jun 29, 2022
Pari passu clauses were deliberately crafted to gain an upper hand in sovereign bankruptcy disputes brought to the London stock exchange’s jurisdiction
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Working Paper
Working Paper SeriesPari Passu Lost and Found: The Origins of Sovereign Bankruptcy 1798-1873
Jun 2022
Pari passu clauses were deliberately crafted to gain an upper hand in sovereign bankruptcy disputes brought to the London stock exchange’s jurisdiction
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Video
Fear and Loathing in Expertise
Jun 29, 2022
Expertise is broken. Trust is eroding. Enough is enough.
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News
INET Research on Pharma in The American Prospect
Jun 28, 2022
Ekaterina Cleary, Matthew Jackson and Fred Ledley’s INET research on government innovation in pharmaceuticals was cited in The American Prospect
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Article
Why The Ukraine Crisis Will Make Little Difference to Dollar Supremacy
Jun 24, 2022
The depth of the U.S. securities market helps ensure dollar hegemony
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Article
A Comment on Lysandrou and Nesvetailova
Jun 24, 2022
James K. Galbraith responds on the U.S. dollar system
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Article
The World Trade Organization After the 12th Ministerial Conference
Jun 22, 2022
New mandates must beget new organizing
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Video
Trading Fear for Hope
Jun 22, 2022
Frank McCourt discusses his work to reinspire hope in the American experiment, and to build the framework necessary for that better tomorrow.
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Article
What Does Capitalism Repress? A Jungian Perspective.
Jun 17, 2022
Billions living in insecurity and injustice is hardly a rational system.
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News
Michael Greenberger in Salon
Jun 17, 2022
Michael Greenberg’s INET working paper on derivatives regulation is featured in Salon
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Article
A Playlist That Conjures the Ferocity and Flair of Detroit
Jun 16, 2022
How can we develop a deeper, more human and multifaceted understanding of the past?
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Article
Gun Money Predicts Congressional Voting Better Than Party Alone
Jun 15, 2022
An analysis of gun lobby contributions to Republicans and Democrats
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Webinars and Events
Piketty: Quality of Life for Billions of People is at Stake
WebinarThomas Piketty discusses his new book: A Brief History of Equality
Jun 13, 2022
Can society continue its long-run trajectory and commit to institutional, legal, social, fiscal, and educational systems that can advance equality?
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Article
Why What’s Going on Right Now at the WTO Matters
Jun 10, 2022
Besides the crucial COVID-19 vaccine patent waiver, far more is at stake at this ministerial than is generally known.
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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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Working Paper
Working PaperInflation in the Time of Corona and War
Jun 2022
Are there alternative, less socially costly, ways to bring inflation down?
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Video
Peace is the Result of Diplomacy, Never of War
Jun 6, 2022
Columbia University’s renowned economist Jeffrey Sachs talks about the lessons he has learned from consulting with governments around the world, about how global problems, such as the war in Ukraine, will only be solved via efforts to understand the other side, never through force.
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Article
The Libertarian Anti-Apartheid White Supremacy of W.H. Hutt
Jun 2, 2022
James M. Buchanan’s defenders argue he was not racist because of his ties with the anti-apartheid economist W.H. Hutt, but this defense fails miserably
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Working Paper
Working PaperSetting the Record Straight on the Libertarian South African Economist W. H. Hutt and James M. Buchanan
Jun 2022
Despite his opposition to South Africa’s apartheid, Hutt embraced notions of black inferiority
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Article
Axel Leijunhufvud, Wide-Ranging Economist
Jun 1, 2022
An obituary for Axel Leijunhufvud (Sept 6, 1933 - May 5, 2022)
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Video
The Search for the Soul of Business
Jun 1, 2022
Corporate responsibility needs to evolve if businesses are going to rebuild trust and provide real value for society.
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Article
Giant Tech Firms Plan to Read Your Mind and Control Your Emotions. Can They Be Stopped?
May 31, 2022
Author and law professor Maurice Stucke explains why the practices of Google, Amazon, Facebook, and Apple are so dangerous and what’s really required to rein them in. Hint: Current proposals are unlikely to work.
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Article
Your Money and Your Life: Private Equity Blasts Ethical Boundaries of American Medicine
May 18, 2022
In a harrowing new book, scholar Laura Katz Olson pulls back the curtain on a shadowy Wall Street threat that is taking over health care companies – and preying on human lives.
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Video
How to Unf★ck America
May 18, 2022
Over the last four decades, the US economy has done quite well for the top 1%, but it has been stagnant for most Americans. This was not an accident, nor the natural workings of the market and certainly not an inevitability. US policies have been deliberately structured since 1980 to redistribute income upwards. In other words, the system has been rigged.
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Video
[ECO]NOMICS
May 18, 2022
Climate change is already here, and we are on a path towards catastrophic global warming. Governments have failed to curb carbon emissions, and fossil fuel production continues to increase. This is not merely a political failure; it is also a failure of economic analysis.