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A Flock of Panics and Crises
September 18, 2012 For those who haven’t seen it already, US News and World Report did a brief piece a short while ago on Minsky’s approach to financial instability. After running through a list of recent financial panics and crises, Chris Gay notes that from a certain theoretical perspective, this wasn’t supposed to happen. “This sort of blood-curdling [...] Blog -
Working Paper No. 731
The Common Error of Common Sense
September 18, 2012 This paper takes the explanatory superiority of the integrated monetary approach for granted. It will be demonstrated that the accounting approach could do even better, provided it frees itself from...more Publication -
Working Paper No. 731
Το κοινό λάθος της κοινής λογικής
September 18, 2012 Η εργασία αυτή θεωρεί δεδομένη την επεξηγηματική ανωτερότητα της ενοποιημένης νομισματικής προσέγγισης. Θα αποδείξει ότι η λογιστική προσέγγιση θα μπορούσε να προσφέρει ακόμα περισσότερα, με την προϋπόθεση ότι απελευθερώνεται από...more Publication -
Blog
Do the Personal Characteristics of the Prime Minister Affect Economic Growth?
September 17, 2012 by Lekha Chakraborty India has recently turned to a debate over the effect of the Prime Minister’s personal characteristics on the country’s growth and development outcomes. Do political leaders’ personal characteristics affect economic growth? It is an elusive empirical question. One of the most robust findings of a recent treatment of this topic is that [...] Blog -
Blog
Eccles on How to End the Crisis
September 14, 2012 Marriner Eccles was Chairman of the Federal Reserve under President Franklin D. Roosevelt. This note consists of excerpts from an address he gave to the US Senate Committee on Finance in 1933, before he was called to Washington for public service by FDR. The original address contained in the Congressional Records has been reduced from [...] Blog -
Blog
Again, Unconventional Wins Out
September 13, 2012 Who would have expected extreme thinking from central bankers? That is the theme of some coverage in the financial press over the past few weeks. For example, the Financial Times takes note that “a growing chorus of economists is saying central banks should take more radical steps, including buying assets other than government bonds.” Some, [...] Blog -
Blog
Fourth Annual Minsky Summer Seminar
September 12, 2012 The Levy Economics Institute of Bard College will hold its fourth annual Hyman P. Minsky Summer Seminar in June 2013. The Summer Seminar provides a rigorous discussion of both the theoretical and the applied aspects of Minsky’s economics, with an examination of meaningful prescriptive policies relevant to the current economic and financial crisis. It is [...] Blog -
Blog
Money and the Public Purpose at Columbia
September 10, 2012 Columbia University is hosting a seminar series on “Money and the Public Purpose.” The seminar, open to the public, begins this week and features a number of Levy Institute scholars. From the overview: Modern Money and Public Purpose is an eight-part, interdisciplinary seminar series held at Columbia Law School over the 2012-2013 academic year. The series [...] Blog -
Blog
Keynes on low interest rates
August 30, 2012 Whatever the outcome of efforts to resolve severe economic difficulties in Europe and elsewhere, it is becoming increasingly clear that the next big economic crisis may not hinge on interest rates at all. One reason is that the world’s central banks, many of them following something like a Robinsonian “cheap money policy,” have managed to [...] Blog -
Working Paper No. 730
Διαφορετικότητα και ομοιομορφία στην οικονομική θεωρία ως ερμηνευτικοί παράγοντες της πρόσφατης οικονομικής κρίσης
August 29, 2012 Οι οικονομίες της αγοράς και οι κεντρικά κατευθυνόμενες οικονομίες έχουν διαφοροποιηθεί εδώ και πολύ καιρό από την παρουσία της εναλλακτικής επιλογής μέσα σε ένα πλαίσιο πολυμορφίας. Ωστόσο, το μεγαλύτερο μέρος...more Publication -
Working Paper No. 730
Diversity and Uniformity in Economic Theory as an Explanation of the Recent Economic Crisis
August 29, 2012 Market economies and command economies have long been differentiated by the presence of alternative choice in the form of diversity. Yet most mainstream economic theory is premised on the existence...more Publication -
Blog
Minsky and Narrow Banking
August 24, 2012 The idea of breaking up the big banks, while seemingly growing in popularity, leaves a lot of unanswered questions. And one of the biggest questions is probably this: what will be the structure of the smaller institutions that remain after such a break up? If these smaller institutions are allowed to entangle themselves in the [...] Blog -
Public Policy Brief No. 125
Ο Minsky και η πρόταση για το «στενό τραπεζικό» σύστημα
August 23, 2012 Πριν ακόμη εφαρμοστεί πλήρως ο νόμος, οι ατέλειες της ρυθμιστικής προσέγγισης που εμπεριέχονται στο Νόμο Dobb-Frank γίνονται όλο και πιο φανερές. Το ένα χρηματοοικονομικό σκάνδαλο ξεσπάει μετά το άλλο, και...more Publication -
Public Policy Brief No. 125
Minsky and the Narrow Banking Proposal
August 23, 2012 Before the law has even been fully implemented, the inadequacies of the regulatory approach underlying the Dodd-Frank Act are becoming more and more apparent. Financial scandal by financial scandal, the...more Publication -
Blog
Endgame for the Eurozone Bank Runs
August 23, 2012 Over at The Nation, Dimitri Papadimitriou writes about the accelerating eurozone bank runs, in which euros have been flowing out of Spanish and Greek banks and into Germany at an eye-popping rate, and lays out scenarios for how this whole things ends: The migration of money into Germany is quickening. And under TARGET 2, the [...] Blog -
Blog
The Paradox of Euro Survival and Other Lessons from the Crisis
August 21, 2012 Since eurozone governments don’t issue the currency in which their debts are denominated and can’t borrow euros directly from the European Central Bank, member-states essentially have to run budget surpluses—generating euros by taxing the private sector—if they’re going to reliably meet their debt servicing costs, according to Jan Kregel, and they have to run even [...] Blog -
Blog
Why Time Poverty Matters
August 20, 2012 (Updated) by Rania Antonopoulos and Michael Stephens Poverty is often measured by the ability to gain access to some level of minimum income, based on the premise that such access ensures the fulfillment of basic material needs. But this approach neglects to take into account the necessary (unpaid) household production requirements without which basic needs [...] Blog -
Research Project Report
Why Time Deficits Matter
August 16, 2012 Customarily, income poverty incidence is judged by the ability of individuals and households to gain access to some level of minimum income based on the premise that such access ensures...more Publication -
Blog
A Cautionary Note about Stagflation in the 1970s
August 15, 2012 For those who worry that elevated federal deficits and quantitative easing (QE) by the Fed will lead to high inflation, a word about the macroeconomics of the 1970s. The topic came up in the news recently with the passing of economist and former presidential adviser Paul McCracken. In keeping with many orthodox accounts of the [...] Blog -
Blog
Wray on Monetary Policy and Financialization
August 14, 2012 Randall Wray joined Suzi Weissman for radio KPFK’s Beneath the Surface to discuss monetary policy, financial fraud, and a number of other issues. The interview kicked off with Wray explaining his skepticism of the effectiveness of monetary policy, and in particular of quantitative easing, under current conditions, touching also on the question of why this [...] Blog -
Policy Note No. 10
Έξι μαθήματα από την ευρω-κρίση
August 14, 2012 Κάθε κρίση αποκαλύπτει απροσδόκητες συνέπειες των οικονομικών πολιτικών. Η τρέχουσα κρίση του ευρώ δεν θα μπορούσε να αποτελεί εξαίρεση. Καθώς οι κυβερνήσεις της Ευρωπαϊκής Ένωσης αναζητούν μια λύση, υπάρχουν ήδη...more Publication -
Policy Note No. 10
Six Lessons from the Euro Crisis
August 14, 2012 Every crisis reveals unexpected consequences of economic policies. The current euro crisis should be no exception. As European Union governments search for a solution, there are already a number of...more Publication -
Working Paper No. 729
Η θεσμική προσέγγιση του Veblen προς τη θεωρία της γαιοπροσόδου
August 08, 2012 Ως κληρονόμοι της κλασικής πολιτικής οικονομίας και της γερμανικής ιστορικής σχολής, οι αμερικανοί θεσμιστές διατήρησαν τη θεωρία της γαιοπροσόδου και την ιδέα του μη δεδουλευμένου εισοδήματος. Ο Thorstain Veblen, περισσότερο...more Publication -
Working Paper No. 729
Veblen’s Institutionalist Elaboration of Rent Theory
August 08, 2012 As the heirs to classical political economy and the German historical school, the American institutionalists retained rent theory and its corollary idea of unearned income. More than any other institutionalist,...more Publication