Articles
Articles and analyses from the INET community on the key economic questions of our time.

How Gender Roles, Implicit Bias and Stereotypes Affect Women and Girls
Young women of all races and gender identities are powering movements from Black Lives Matter to immigration reform to reproductive justice to minimum wage and beyond. Researchers need to support their progress with metrics that capture the spirit they are building
Sex Uncensored
Why Can’t Economics See Race?

Unemployment Insurance Extension During Great Recession Did Not Destroy Jobs
Social safety nets don’t always need to come with a dark side

James Boyce Wins 2016 Leontief Award for Work on Environmental Inequality
Institute grantee Boyce cited for integrating ‘ecological, developmental and justice-oriented approaches’ into economics

VP Biden Cites Lazonick in Critique of Stock Buybacks
Vice President warns that corporate stock buybacks restrict America’s long-term prosperity, citing the research of Institute grantee William Lazonick who has long argued the same

The Nobel Prize in Economics: Time for a Return to Social Democracy
An award created as a concession to market-minded bankers needs to recognize the centrality of social-democratic policies to the wellbeing of industrialized economies
Who Has Space for Renewables?

Do U.S. Economists Ignore Inequality?
Painting economics as blind to inequality may be overstating matters, but for too long efforts to explain it have been self limiting. Now, new economic thinkers are willing to pose uncomfortable questions.

Monetary Policy in a Post-Crisis World: Beyond the Taylor Rule
We know about emergency lending, but what we are missing is the macroeconomic framework to guide a new rule for stabilization policy
Demystifying Monetary Finance
The (Impossible) Repo Trinity

There Isn’t Really a ‘Mainstream’ at All
There is a mix of common-sense opinions, political prejudices, conventional business practice, and pragmatic rules of thumb, supported in an ad hoc, opportunistic way by bits and pieces of economic theory.

The strange fate of economists' interest in collective decision-making
How economists turned to the study of collective decision-making after World War II, faced many impossibilities, and lost interest after solving them
Carbon Decoupling?

German Worries: Fear Fosters Crisis
Inflation, the euro crisis – for years there has been one worry hype after another. Yet fear frequently turns out to be wrong. We need a committee of wise men in charge of dealing with the real risks.