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Conference Proceedings
Is Financial Reregulation Holding Back Finance for the Global Recovery?
A conference organized by the Levy Economics Institute of Bard College with support from the Ford Foundation The 2015 Minsky Conference addressed, among other issues, the design, flaws, and current status of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform Act, including implementation of the operating procedures necessary to curtail systemic risk and prevent future crises; the insistence […] -
Blog
25th Annual Minsky Conference Returns to Blithewood
The 2016 Minsky conference will be held here at Blithewood mansion, home of the Levy Institute. Barney Frank will be among the keynote speakers: Will the Global Economic Environment Constrain US Growth and Employment? Organized by the Levy Economics Institute of Bard College with support from the Ford Foundation Levy Economics Institute of Bard College Blithewood Annandale-on-Hudson, [...] -
Working Paper No. 853
Finance, Foreign Direct Investment, and Dutch Disease
In recent years, Colombia has grown relatively rapidly, but it has been a biased growth. The energy sector (the “locomotora minero-energetica,” to use the rhetorical expression of President Juan Manuel Santos) grew much faster than the rest of the economy, while the manufacturing sector registered a negative rate of growth. These are classic symptoms of […] -
Book Series
Financial Regulation in the European Union
Have past and more recent regulatory changes contributed to increased financial stability in the European Union (EU), or have they improved the efficiency of individual banks and national financial systems within the EU? Edited by Rainer Kattel, Tallinn University of Technology, Director of Research Jan Kregel, and Mario Tonveronachi, University of Siena, this volume offers […] -
Book Series
Why Minsky Matters: An Introduction to the Work of a Maverick Economist
Perhaps no economist was more vindicated by the global financial crisis than Hyman P. Minsky (1919–1996). Although a handful of economists raised alarms as early as 2000, Minsky’s warnings began a half century earlier, with writings that set out a compelling theory of financial instability. Yet even today he remains largely outside mainstream economics; few […] -
Policy Notes No. 7
Losing Ground
US labor force participation has continued to fall in the wake of the Great Recession. Improvements in the US unemployment rate reflect the fact that more people are falling out of the labor force, not a stronger labor market. Controlling for changes in the demographic makeup of the workforce (i.e., gender, age, education, and race), […] -
Blog
“Why Minsky Matters” Now Available
“Hyman Minsky is the most important economist since Keynes, yet it’s virtually impossible to find any books about him.” That’s from Michael Pettis’s blurb for Randy Wray’s new book Why Minsky Matters, which is now shipping: Hyman Minsky’s name has appeared in the popular press a lot more since the financial crisis, but often without much more elaboration [...] -
Blog
Is a “Bad Bank” Model the Solution to Greece’s Credit Crunch?
Dimitri Papadimitriou and new Levy Institute Research Associate Emilios Avgouleas write about one of the obstacles to recovery of the Greek economy: the absence of credit expansion in connection with still-troubled Greek banks. Beyond deposit flight and the ongoing recession, Papadimitriou and Avgouleas argue that the botched recapitalization of Greek banks can also be blamed for the failure to alleviate [...] -
Working Paper No. 852
The Malady of Low Global Interest Rates
Long-term interest rates in advanced economies have been low since the global financial crisis. However, in the United States the Federal Reserve could begin to hike its policy rate, the federal funds target rate, before the end of the year. In the United Kingdom, the Bank of England could follow suit. What is the outlook […] -
Policy Notes No. 6
What Should Be Done with Greek Banks to Help the Country Return to a Path of Growth?
The recapitalization of Greek banks is perhaps the most critical problem for the Greek state today. Despite direct cash infusions to Greek banks that have so far exceeded €45 billion, with corresponding guarantees of around €130 billion, credit expansion has failed to pick up. There are two obvious reasons for this failure: first, the massive […] -
Working Paper No. 851
Money Creation under Full-reserve Banking
This paper presents a stock-flow consistent model+ of full-reserve banking. It is found that in a steady state, full-reserve banking can accommodate a zero-growth economy and provide both full employment and zero inflation. Furthermore, a money creation experiment is conducted with the model. An increase in central bank reserves translates into a two-thirds increase in […] -
Working Paper No. 850
The Macroeconomics of a Financial Dutch Disease
We describe the medium-run macroeconomic effects and long-run development consequences of a financial Dutch disease that may take place in a small developing country with abundant natural resources. The first move is in financial markets. An initial surge in foreign direct investment targeting natural resources sets in motion a perverse cycle between exchange rate appreciation […]