Filter by
4186 results found
-
Blog
Conference: Reclaiming the Keynesian Revolution
(click to enlarge) -
Canada Income Inequality: Study Shows Government Policies Growing Less Effective at Narrowing Gap
Huffington Post Canada, February 3, 2012. Copyright © 2012 TheHuffingtonPost.com, Inc. All rights reserved. As debate about income inequality mounts, a new study [see Working Paper No. 703] underscores how important public investment in social programs like education and health care is in narrowing the rich-poor divide. At a time when Ottawa prepares to beat […] -
Blog
How to Delay the Next Financial Meltdown
Dimitri Papadimitriou and Randall Wray deliver a second installment of their joint assessment of the risks that a renewed global financial crisis might be triggered by events in Europe or the United States. In their latest one-pager they move past disputes over etiology and lay out their solutions for both sides of the pond: addressing [...] -
One-Pager No. 24
Delaying the Next Global Meltdown
It’s a mistake to interpret the unfolding disaster in Europe as primarily a “sovereign debt crisis.” The underlying problem is not periphery profligacy, but rather the very setup of the European Monetary Union (EMU)—a setup that even now prevents a satisfactory resolution to this crisis. The central weakness of the EMU is that it separates […] -
One-Pager No. 24
Τα σημερινά μέτρα απλά καθυστερούν την επόμενη παγκόσμια κατάρρευση
Είναι λανθασμένη η ερμηνεία της εξελισσόμενης καταστροφής στην Ευρώπη ως μια κρίση κρατικού χρέους. Το βασικό πρόβλημα δεν είναι η ασωτία των περιφερειακών λαών, αλλά η ίδια η αρχιτεκτονική της ευρωπαϊκής νομισματικής ένωσης — μια αρχιτεκτονική κατασκευή που ακόμη και τώρα αποτελεί εμπόδιο σε μια ικανοποιητική επίλυση αυτής της κρίσης. Η κεντρική αδυναμία της ευρωπαϊκής […] -
Blog
State Taxes Are Wildly Regressive
Some indigestible food for thought: there is not a single state in the Union—not one—in which the top 1% of income earners pay a higher rate of state taxes than the bottom 20%. For the majority of states, it’s not even close: the poorest 20% pay somewhere between double and six times the tax rate [...] -
Working Paper No. 705
What Do Poor Women Want? Public Employment or Cash Transfers?
The literature on public employment policies such as the job guarantee (JG) and the employer of last resort (ELR) often emphasizes their macroeconomic stabilization effects. But carefully designed and implemented policies like these can also have profound social transformative effects. In particular, they can help address enduring economic problems such as poverty and gender disparity. […] -
Blog
Auerback on the Latest Eurodrama
Marshall Auerback appeared on the Business News Network to give his take on the latest developments in the eurozone crisis; specifically with respect to the ongoing negotiations over the proposed (now 70 percent) haircut on Greek debt. Auerback also addressed the LTRO (noting the rather dramatic increase in the ECB’s balance sheet) and the credit [...] -
Blog
Hudson: The Neo-Rentier Economy
Michael Hudson is giving a talk titled “The Road to Debt Deflation, Debt Peonage, and Neofeudalism” at the Levy Institute on Friday, February 10 at 2:00 p.m. Hudson is a research associate at the Levy Institute and a financial analyst and president of the Institute for the Study of Long Term Economic Trends. He is [...] -
Working Paper No. 704
Imbalances? What Imbalances?
It is commonplace to link neoclassical economics to 18th- or 19th-century physics and its notion of equilibrium, of a pendulum once disturbed eventually coming to rest. Likewise, an economy subjected to an exogenous shock seeks equilibrium through the stabilizing market forces unleashed by the invisible hand. The metaphor can be applied to virtually every sphere […] -
Working Paper No. 704
Ανισορροπίες; Ποιές ανισορροπίες;
Είναι κοινός τόπος να συνδέει κανείς τα νεοκλασικά οικονομικά με τη φυσική του 18ου ή του 19ου και την έννοια της ισορροπίας, με την ιδέα της συμπεριφοράς του εκκρεμούς, που αν το μετακινήσουμε από το σημείο ηρεμίας, αυτό τελικά θα επιστρέψει πάλι σε αυτό. Ομοίως, ο στόχος μιας οικονομίας που υποβάλλεται σε εξωγενή σοκ είναι […] -
Blog
The Fetish for Liquidity (and Reform of the Financial System)
In his General Theory, J.M. Keynes argued that substandard growth, financial instability, and unemployment are caused by the fetish for liquidity. The desire for a liquid position is anti-social because there is no such thing as liquidity in the aggregate. The stock market makes ownership liquid for the individual “investor” but since all the equities [...]