Archive
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Article
These Things Take Time
May 3, 2011
Last week, I spent a few days in the Dalton-Brand Research Room, at Duke University, skimming through the Samuelson papers.
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Article
Regulating the Shadow Banking System, Part Two
Apr 30, 2011
Learning How to Swap
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Article
Desperately seeking collateral
Apr 27, 2011
The Term Securities Lending Facility (TSLF) was one of the bigger (in dollar terms) emergency programs implemented by the Fed during the crisis of 2008.
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Video
Perry Mehrling: The New Lombard Street
Apr 26, 2011
An Interview with the Author of “The New Lombard Street: How the Fed Became the Dealer of Last Resort”
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Article
In the Archives
Apr 26, 2011
Taking a quick break from my work in the Samuelson archives – so fascinating, believe me! – I can’t resist sharing the following, which I found in his correspondence files.
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Article
Exit Strategy, or New Normal
Apr 23, 2011
War Reparations, or Prosperity
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Article
Pop Archives
Apr 20, 2011
I was just amused with two projects by Shaun Usher: to “gather and sort fascinating letters, postcards, telegrams, faxes, and memos” in his blog Letters of Note, and to present interesting letterheads in his Letterheadyblog.
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Article
Inside Economics
Apr 18, 2011
Charles Ferguson’s Inside Job forces us to fundamentally rethink the connections between economics and policy making.
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Article
After QE2, what then?
Apr 17, 2011
And what was QE about anyway?
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News
Tom Ferguson and Rob Johnson on Debt, Growth, and Austerity
Apr 17, 2011
Deficit Fantasies in the Great Recession
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Article
INET and reforming economic education: can history help?
Apr 13, 2011
One INET project is to “reconnect the teaching of economics with the working of the actual economy,” which is to begin with a reform of the undergraduate curriculum.
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Article
TSLF and the price of good collateral
Apr 13, 2011
In my last post I argued that if we want a Fed that is ready for the next crisis, we had better understand what happened to it during the last one.
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Article
Upon leaving Mount Washington
Apr 13, 2011
The place invites poetry. By the way, all sessions can be viewed from the website – check out in particular the last session featuring Gillian Tett of the Financial Times moderating a discussion between Paul Volcker and George Soros
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Article
A new K-hero
Apr 12, 2011
I was not in Bretton Woods this week. I followed the event through the videos posted on the INET website and the exhilarating and exhausting experience of Benjamin, Floris and Tiago.
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Article
When my heart skipped a beat
Apr 10, 2011
I am writing a paper about an economist that was at the Treasury in the second half of the 1950s and 1960s.
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Article
Who’s the INETiest of them all?
Apr 10, 2011
There are a lot of universities represented here, but who are the most likely candidates for participation and who might one expect INET to be interested in?
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Working Paper
Conference paperA Tale of Two Trilemmas
Apr 2011
In a classic book and subsequent articles, Obstfeld and Taylor (2004) have shown how the broad contours of international financial history over the past century and a half can be well understood by appealing to the famous economictrilemma which emerges from the standard Mundell-Fleming model many of us still teach our undergraduates.
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Working Paper
Conference paperA Comprehensive Approach to the Euro-Area Debt Crisis
Apr 2011
The euro area’s sovereign debt crisis continues though significant steps have been taken to resolve it.
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Conference Session
Optimal Currency Areas and Governance: The Challenge of Europe
Apr 9, 2011 | 09:30—11:30
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Conference Session
Rising to the Challenge: Equity, Adjustment and Balance in the World Economy
Apr 9, 2011 | 01:50—03:20
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Conference Session
A Conversation with Paul Volcker and George Soros
Apr 9, 2011 | 04:00—06:00
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Working Paper
Conference paperOptimal Currency Areas and Governance: The Challenge of Europe
Apr 2011
In preparing this paper I have decided not to embark upon the decades-old issue of optimal-currency areas and governance as such. I assume that one of my colleagues on the panel will do that. Instead I will present an historical case of over-indebtedness of parts of a common-currency area somewhat similar to the present challenge of Europe, or rather of the Euro area with its common currency.
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Working Paper
Conference paperThe Innovative Enterprise and the Developmental State: Toward an Economics of “Organizational Success”
Apr 2011
Investment in productive capabilities provides the foundation for economic growth.
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Working Paper
Conference paperGreen, Fair and Productive: How the 2012 Rio Conference can move the world towards a sustainable economy
Apr 2011
Our shared concern – 20 years after Rio, yet poor progress towards wellbeing
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Working Paper
Conference paperGlobalization and Scarcity: Multilateralism for a world with limits
Apr 2011
Globalization has improved the living standards of hundreds of millions of people – but growing resource scarcity means it risks becoming a victim of its own success.
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Working Paper
Conference paperRethinking Growth and the State
Apr 2011
Government intervention is often perceived as a constraint on market forces and thereby on economic growth.
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Working Paper
Conference paperToward a Sustainable World Economy
Apr 2011
All cultural narratives, worldviews, religious doctrines, political ideologies, and academic paradigms are ‘social constructs.’
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Conference Session
The Market or the State? Can Market Forces Deliver Innovation, Education, and Infrastructure
Apr 9, 2011 | 05:25—07:00
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Conference Session
Sustainable Economics with Introductory Remarks from Jim Balsillie
Apr 9, 2011 | 07:00—09:10
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Working Paper
Conference paperHigh Wealth Concentration, Porous Exchange Control, and Shocks to Relative Return: the Fragile State of China’s Foreign Exchange Reserve
Apr 2011
At a time when China is the favored investment destination in the global market, it seems unlikely that it would ever face capital flight.
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Working Paper
Conference paperLegislators Never Bowl Alone: Big Money, Mass Media, and the Polarization of Congress
Apr 2011
This is a small paper on a big subject: the polarization of American politics since the mid-1970s. In its early stages this process bore more than a passing resemblance to the opening scenes of a Grade B disaster movie: With almost everyone’s attention focused elsewhere, a series of tiny, seemingly insignificant departures from long standing routines took place.
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Working Paper
Conference paperToo Big to Fail, Too Big to Jail
Apr 2011
The theme of this session is very timely and controversial, on the ability of sovereign governments to supervise Large Complex Financial Institutions (LCFIs), now officially described as G-SIFIs, global systemically important financial institutions.
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Working Paper
Conference paperGlobal Imbalances: Past, Present and Future
Apr 2011
After the inception and, hopefully, the passing of the most dangerous phase of the international financial crisis, economists have returned to the long favoured subject of global imbalances.
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Conference Session
The Political Economy of Structural Adjustment: Understanding the Obstacles to Cooperation
Apr 9, 2011 | 03:15—05:10
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Conference Session
Exploring Complexity in Economic Theory
Apr 9, 2011 | 02:00—03:00
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Article
Of history repeating…
Apr 9, 2011
The Bretton Woods conference has a protean character.Talk in the corridors asks “what is it?” Some in the press (lots of press here) believe that deals are being made, the attendance of heavy hitters leads some to believe that consultations and strategies are being outlined for world government (Summers, Stiglitz, Brown, and yesterday Volcker arrived to close the event).
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Article
Interview with Barry Eichengreen, any requests?
Apr 9, 2011
We have been talking and video interviewing people at the conference, and we’ve narrowed down a small list of questions which we try to build on and have so far talked to Kenneth Rogoff, Brad DeLong, Ha-Joon Chang, Stephen Ziliak, Philippe Aghion, Jean-Paul Fitoussi, Barry Eichengreen and tomorrow we start with James Galbraith.
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News
Dissident vs Mainstream Tension at New Economic Thinking Conference
Apr 9, 2011
What is the right way to achieve change?
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Article
Anglo-Saxons versus the Germans
Apr 9, 2011
For one and a half days we had Anglo-Saxons talking finance and financial crisis: Keynesian stimuli, surplus countries bashing, drawing China in, and bullying of the Euro area and in particular Germany’s role in it.
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Working Paper
Conference paperEvolving Economic and Financial Systems in India
Apr 2011
The presentation explains that Indian Economy is basically a market-oriented economy with constant rebalancing between state andmarket.
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Conference Session
The Architecture of Asia: Financial Structure and an Emerging Economic System
Apr 9, 2011 | 11:45—01:35
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Working Paper
Conference paperCorporate Citizenship in a Civil Economy
Apr 2011
Many companies around the world have discovered they can benefit financially from integrating environmental, social and governance (ESG) targets in their daily operations and strategy.
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Conference Session
Report of the Economics Curriculum Committee Task Force
Apr 8, 2011 | 01:15—02:00
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Video
The Challenge of Large, Complex Financial Institutions
Apr 8, 2011
Simon Johnson at the Institute’s 2011 Annual Conference.
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Conference Session
Can Sovereignty and Effective International Supervision Be Reconciled? The Challenge of Large Complex Financial Institutions
Apr 8, 2011 | 11:05—01:05
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Conference Session
Sovereignty and Institutional Design in the Global Age: The Global Market and the Nation States
Apr 8, 2011 | 09:00—10:50
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Conference Session
Bretton Woods: What Can We Learn From The Past In Designing The Future
Apr 8, 2011 | 03:00—04:30
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Conference Session
Getting Back on Track : Macroeconomic Management After A Financial Crisis
Apr 8, 2011 | 04:50—06:55
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Conference Session
Gordon Brown: Keynote Address
Apr 8, 2011 | 07:00—09:00
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Conference Session
Adair Turner: Keynote Address
Apr 8, 2011 | 03:30—05:30
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News
Students in Bretton Woods: The Next Generation of Economic Thinking
Apr 8, 2011
It’s day two of INET’s Conference in Bretton Woods and a new energy has filled the halls and sessions with the arrival of nearly thirty student attendees.
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Webinars and Events
Crisis & Renewal
PlenaryNew Economic Thinking 2011
Apr 8–11, 2011
The Institute for New Economic Thinking held its second annual plenary conference in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire.
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Working Paper
Conference paperCambridge Talk on Hayek
Apr 2011
Tonight I will talk briefly about the Keynes-Hayek relationship, then will focus on some of Hayek’s insights that may be of relevance today.
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Working Paper
Conference paperCombining International Monetary Reform with Commodity Buffer Stocks : Keynes, Graham and Kaldor
Apr 2011
Central to John Maynard Keynes (1941) original Bretton Woods proposal was an international clearing union that would issue a new international currency by fiat called bancor. Among other functions, this international central bank would finance the stabilization of individual commodity prices through commodity buffer stocks.
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Working Paper
Conference paperThe Keynes Plan, The Marshall Plan And The IMCU Plan; Designing the Future International Payments System using the Past Principles of Keynes's Liquidity Theory and Soros's Reflexivity
Apr 2011
For more than three decades, orthodox economists, policy makers in government and central bankers and their economic advisors, using some variant of old classical economic theory [OCET], have insisted that (1) government regulations of markets and large government spending policies are the cause of all our economic problems and (2) ending big government and freeing markets, especially financial markets, from government regulatory controls is the solutionto our economic problems, domestically and internationally.
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Working Paper
Conference paperIt May be Our Currency, but It’s Your Problem
Apr 2011
It’s a singular honor to have been asked to deliver the Butlin Lecture. I first met Noel Butlin when I had the pleasure of visiting Australian National University for two months in what was, from my perspective, the summer of 1985.
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Working Paper
Conference paperCapitalism, Socialism and Democracy, Once Again
Apr 2011
Some questions can only be answered by educated guess. The question at the centre of this round table pertains to this category. We should not be ashamed of this kind of limitation of our capacity to predict the future.
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Conference Session
The Emerging Economic And Political Order: What Lies Ahead?
Apr 7, 2011 | 11:15—01:00
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Conference Session
Bretton Woods Conference: Historical Review
Apr 7, 2011 | 02:30—04:30
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Conference Session
Welcome and Opening Remarks
Apr 7, 2011 | 11:00—11:15
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Article
The Future of the Fed
Apr 6, 2011
The Fed changed over the course of the global financial crisis.
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Video
Curriculum Committee Report
Apr 6, 2011
Robert Skidelsky and Perry Mehrling report on the project at the Institute’s 2011 Bretton Woods conference.
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Article
Regulating the Shadow Banking System
Apr 3, 2011
(Way) Beyond Diamond-Dybvig
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Article
Greenspan Calls for New Economic Thinking
Mar 30, 2011
But not by him
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Article
In Gold They Trust
Mar 26, 2011
The illusion of black swan-proofing
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Article
Global Crisis, Global Reform
Mar 20, 2011
Capital Flows, Cross-border Banking, Shadow Banking, and the Dollar
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Article
Navigating the Turning Point
Mar 16, 2011
From MIT to IMF
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Article
IMF Calls for New Economic Thinking
Mar 13, 2011
Or Does It?
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Article
Shadow Banks and Narrow Banks
Mar 9, 2011
A Money View
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Article
The Illusion of Control
Mar 6, 2011
Exit Strategies and the New Normal
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Article
The Inherent Instability of Credit
Mar 3, 2011
What kind of “Minsky Moment”?
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Article
Brave New World
Feb 27, 2011
Financial Globalization and the Nation State
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Video
How the West is Repeating Japan's Mistakes
Feb 24, 2011
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Article
Paper Profits
Feb 23, 2011
The concept of bank capital
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Article
A Money View of Global Imbalances
Feb 19, 2011
Who’s afraid of finance?
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Article
AIG on the Potomac
Feb 11, 2011
The future of government mortgage support
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Article
Saving the (international) dollar
Feb 9, 2011
A money view of the commodity bubble
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Article
CDS Deja Vu
Feb 6, 2011
Speculation, stabilizing or destabilizing?
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Article
A Money View of the FCIC Report: Part Two
Feb 1, 2011
Saving the (International) Dollar
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Article
A Money View of the FCIC Report: Part One
Jan 30, 2011
When the survival constraint bites
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Article
Inside Job II
Jan 28, 2011
And the nomination for best Perp Walk goes to…
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Article
Inside Job
Jan 23, 2011
And the nominees for Best Documentary are…
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Article
G2 Trade Balance Explained
Jan 21, 2011
It is all about promises to pay in the future.
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Article
China and the International Dollar
Jan 15, 2011
Before the dollar there was the pound, and after the dollar there will be something else.
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Article
Can CDS be exchange traded?
Jan 13, 2011
Today’s Financial Times article: Report to highlight alleged conflicts of interest in Goldman’s dealings (Jan 12, 2011), Goldman’s pieties insult our intelligence (Jan 13, 2011)
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Article
Big Money, Mass Media, and the Polarization of Congress
Jan 11, 2011
Paper presented at Bretton Woods Conference
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News
New Book from INET Advisory Board Member Barry Eichengreen
Jan 9, 2011
There’s a good column at voxeu.org by INET Advisory Board Member Barry Eichengreen, where he introduces his new book, titled Exorbitant Privilege: The Rise and Fall of the Dollar and the Future of the International Monetary System.
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Article
The New Federal Reserve
Jan 9, 2011
GFC finance as war finance
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Grant
Years granted: 2012, 2013, 2014, 2011The Resurgence of Keynesian Macroeconomics
This research project elaborates an original model of Keynesian demand-led growth and communicates Keynesian macroeconomic insights to a broad and diverse audience.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011Financial Fragility and Systematic Risk
The project provides new ideas and policy proposals to contain the spread of systemic risk in the financial system through appropriate regulation of financial markets and intermediaries, as well as the design of monetary policy.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011The Evolution of the Wealth and Income Distributions Across Generations: a Data Collection Project
This research project enhances our understanding of how endowments and subsequent opportunities and shocks explain the evolution of individual and family well-being across generations.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011The Mathematics of Capital, Inventory, Financial Capital, and Utility
This research project develops a monograph on divergent stochastic time series that permits the modeling of capital, inventory, and financial capital in economies.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011Developing a Market-Based Concept of System Risk
This research project develops an operational measure of systemic risk, as an input into the policy process by capturing the interaction of private and governmental sources of systemic risk during and in advance of the crisis.
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Grant
Years granted: 2011Paul Samuelson and the Keynesian Golden Age
This research project develops a much better understanding of Paul Samuelson’s life, work, and broader political-economic vision through archival research at Duke University’s Paul Samuelson archives.
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Article
Non-US banks gain from Fed crisis fund
Dec 28, 2010
Why is this a surprise?
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Article
Connecting the dots in Euroland
Dec 25, 2010
Today’s Financial Times article: ECB: trick or Trichet (Dec 2)
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News
Avoiding a Bleak Future for the Euro
Dec 14, 2010
In a recent piece in the Financial Times, George Soros makes the case that, to avoid a bleak future for the euro and the European Union in general, Europe should take steps to recapitalize banks before bailing out member states. In the piece, Soros discusses issues that INET is very interested in exploring further, such as the idea that flaws in macroeconomic theory helped lead to the financial crisis of 2008.
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Article
(Shadow) Bank Capital
Dec 5, 2010
Is raising required bank capital the answer?
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Article
Understanding Ireland
Nov 30, 2010
What’s really going on with Europe’s bailout of the Irish Economy
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News
How would Joe Stiglitz Would Fix the Economy
Nov 16, 2010
Can the Economy be Saved? The Los Angeles Times recently asked a number of economic experts about whether they thought the post-financial crisis economy can be saved, and if so, how.