Archive
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Person
Tamar Katz
Tamar Katz is a third-year student at Columbia Law School and is interested in the intersection of private equity and antitrust in the healthcare sector. At Columbia, Tamar is an Articles Editor of the Columbia Business Law Review. She has also worked in antitrust enforcement at both the New York Attorney General’s Office and the Federal Trade Commission. Prior to law school, she worked in the Real Estate Investment Banking Division of Citi. Tamar holds a B.B.A. summa cum laude in Finance and a B.A. summa cum laude in Middle Eastern Studies from UMass Amherst. -
Person
Jan H. Höffler
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Person
Jamie Martin
Assistant Professor of History and of Social Studies, Harvard University -
Person
Anastasia Nesvetailova
Director, Macroeconomic and Development Policies, UNCTAD GDS -
Person
Dean Baker
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Person
Jeffrey L. Spear
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Person
Yin Li
Assistant Professor, School of International Relations and Public Affairs, Fudan University Senior Fellow, Academic-Industry Research Network -
Person
Ariel Ezrachi
Slaughter and May Professor of Competition Law and Fellow, Pembroke College, University of Oxford Director, University of Oxford Centre for Competition Law and Policy -
Course
The Economics of Money & Banking
Learn to read, understand, and evaluate professional discourse about the current operation of money markets at the level of the Financial Times.
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Course
Markets, Speculation and the State
William Janeway’s Far-Ranging Seminar on Fundamental Debates in Innovation and Finance
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Course
The I Theory of Money
This lecture series is based on Brunnermeier and Sannikov’s research papers “The I Theory of Money” and “Redistributive Monetary Policy”
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Course
Capitalism: Competition, Conflict and Crises
The aim of the two-semester sequence is to explore a coherent alternative to neoclassical and post-Keynesian theory that does not rely in any way on concepts of utility maximization, rational choice, rational expectations, or perfect/imperfect competition.
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Course
Monetary Macroeconomics
Some years ago, in the aftermath of the “great financial crisis” (GFC) of the first decade of the twentieth century, Paul Krugman famously remarked that “most macroeconomics of the last thirty years was spectacularly useless at best and positively harmful at worst”. It is the premise of this set of lectures that it is possible to do better, much better.
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Course
After the Crisis
Many thought the financial crash was a final blow to capitalsim. Why does it still reign supreme? Anatole Kaletsky outlines the shape of things to come.
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Working Paper
What’s The Difference Between Growth And Prosperity? (Sample)