Content
2023, Volume 39, Issue 4
- 667-679 Climate change, complexity, and policy design
by Pontus Braunerhjelm & Cameron Hepburn - 680-693 Five myths about carbon pricing
by Gilbert E Metcalf - 694-710 Sensitive intervention points: a strategic approach to climate action
by Penny Mealy & Pete Barbrook-Johnson & Matthew C Ives & Sugandha Srivastav & Cameron Hepburn - 711-730 Policy complementarity and the paradox of carbon pricing
by Michael Grubb & Alexandra Poncia & Paul Drummond & Karsten Neuhoff & Jean-Charles Hourcade - 731-751 Greening the G7 economies
by Edward B Barbier - 752-764 Green bonds and carbon emissions
by Caroline Flammer - 765-778 Job creation and deep decarbonization
by Kelly Sims & Soyoung Oh - 779-795 Net zero electricity: the UK 2035 target
by Dieter Helm - 796-809 Double dividend? Transnational initiatives and governance innovation for climate change and biodiversity
by Harriet Bulkeley & Michele Betsill & Anouk Fransen & Stacy Van - 810-827 How will climate change affect ambient air pollution and what can policy-makers do now? Lessons from India
by Avraham Ebenstein & Sangeeta Bansal & Sagnik Dey & Tanya Gupta & Kshitij Abhay & Avi Simhon - 828-841 How may solar geoengineering impact global prospects for climate change mitigation?
by Katharine Ricke & Anthony Harding
2023, Volume 39, Issue 3
- 399-405 Taxing the rich (more)
by İrem Güçeri & Joel Slemrod - 406-437 How much tax do the rich really pay? Evidence from the UK
by Arun Advani & Helen Hughson & Andy Summers - 438-450 What is the average federal individual income tax rate on the wealthiest Americans?
by Danny Yagan - 451-459 The messy boundary between pass-through and corporate taxation
by Wojciech Kopczuk - 460-477 The role of trusts in taxing the rich
by James R Hines - 478-497 Taxing cryptocurrencies
by Katherine Baer & Ruud De Mooij & Shafik Hebous & Michael Keen - 498-512 Trickle-down revisited
by Max Risch - 513-529 Does a progressive wealth tax reduce top wealth inequality? Evidence from Switzerland
by Samira Marti & Isabel Z Martínez & Florian Scheuer - 530-549 Tax progressivity and taxing the rich in developing countries: lessons from Latin America
by Marcelo Bergolo & Juliana Londoño-Vélez & Darío Tortarolo - 550-564 Has FATCA succeeded in reducing tax evasion through foreign accounts?
by Lisa De Simone & Bridget Stomberg - 565-574 The end of bank secrecy: implications for redistribution and optimal taxation
by Niels Johannesen - 575-591 Rethinking capital and wealth taxation
by Thomas Piketty & Emmanuel Saez & Gabriel Zucman - 592-603 Are capital gains the Achilles’ heel of taxing the rich?
by Joel Slemrod & Xinyu Chen - 604-616 Taxing the wealthy: the choice between wealth and capital income taxation
by Spencer Bastani & Daniel Waldenström - 617-629 What drives major tax reform? Implications for taxing the rich
by Martina Beretta & İrem Güçeri & Katrine Jakobsen - 630-642 Would an unapportioned US federal wealth tax be constitutional, and what does that mean?
by Daniel Shaviro - 643-665 The wealthy as a barrier to tax reform
by Benjamin I & Jason Seawright
2023, Volume 39, Issue 2
- 164-182 Fifty years on: what the Bretton Woods System can teach us about global macroeconomic policy-making
by Paola Subacchi & David Vines - 183-194 Lessons from the 1970s for international monetary reform
by Barry Eichengreen - 195-209 From the Bretton Woods system to the global non-system: the trials and tribulations of slow learning
by David Vines & Paola Subacchi - 210-218 European monetary regimes after the fall of Bretton Woods: a political economy approach
by Giovanni Farese & Paolo Guerrieri & Pier Carlo - 219-230 The Euro on the global stage
by Klaus Regling - 231-244 The role of China in the international financial system
by Haihong Gao - 245-266 Longer-term structural transitions and short-term macroeconomic adjustment: quantitative implications for the global financial system
by Warwick Mc & David Vines - 267-282 Promoting sustainable investment through financial architecture reform
by Adam Triggs - 283-299 Exorbitant privilege and fiscal autonomy
by Paola Subacchi & Paul van den - 300-324 The International Monetary Fund and capital flows
by Stephen Grenville - 325-332 The IMF’s journey on capital controls: what is the destination?
by Jonathan D Ostry - 333-340 Overcoming ‘original sin’ to secure policy space
by Hyun Song - 341-355 The impossibility of the impossible trinity? The case of Indonesia
by M Chatib & Luqman Sumartono - 356-359 Avoiding a lost decade—an interim update
by Lee C & Mitu Gulati - 360-366 Avoiding a lost decade—sovereign debt workouts in the post-Covid era
by Lee C Buchheit & Mitu Gulati - 367-378 Creating a new sovereign debt reconstruction mechanism: why incentives, risk sharing, and CACs will all matter
by Gordon Menzies & David Vines - 379-388 Development finance cooperation amidst great power competition: what role for the World Bank?
by Scott Morris - 389-397 How will digital technologies influence the international monetary system?
by Eswar Prasad
2023, Volume 39, Issue 1
- 1-11 New frontiers of trade and trade policy: digitalization and climate change
by Emily Jones & Christopher Adam - 12-33 International pro-competition regulation of digital platforms: healthy experimentation or dangerous fragmentation?
by Amelia Fletcher - 34-46 Market power of digital platforms
by Jens-Uwe Franck & Martin Peitz - 47-69 Regulating Big Tech: the role of enhanced disclosures
by Mariana Mazzucato & Ilan Strauss & Tim O’Reilly & Josh Ryan-Collins - 70-84 Digital disruption: artificial intelligence and international trade policy
by Emily Jones - 85-97 Cross-border data flows and privacy in global trade law: has trade trumped data protection?
by Mira Burri - 98-109 Building trust in digital trade will require a rethink of trade policy-making
by Susan Ariel - 110-122 Trading in the era of carbon standards: how can trade, standard setting, and climate regimes cooperate?
by Aik Hoe Lim & Kateryna Holzer - 123-133 From theory to practice: determining emissions in traded goods under a border carbon adjustment
by Michael A Mehling & Robert A Ritz - 134-146 The political economy of carbon border adjustment in the EU
by Michael Jakob - 147-161 Competition, trade, and sustainability in agriculture and food markets in Africa
by Simon Roberts
2022, Volume 38, Issue 4
- 719-741 Vaccines and the Covid-19 pandemic: lessons from failure and success
[‘Many Say They’re Confused About Whether, When to Get Second Booster’]
by Scott Duke Kominers & Alex Tabarrok - 742-770 Expanding capacity for vaccines against Covid-19 and future pandemics: a review of economic issues
[‘Seven Finance & Trade Lessons from COVID-19 for Future Pandemics’]
by Susan Athey & Juan Camilo Castillo & Esha Chaudhuri & Michael Kremer & Alexandre Simoes Gomes & Christopher M Snyder - 771-796 Covid-19 vaccine supply chains and the Defense Production Act
[‘A Proposal to End the COVID-19 Pandemic’]
by Chad P Bown - 797-817 Clinical trials for accelerating pandemic vaccines
[‘A Systematic Review of Human Challenge Trials, Designs, and Safety’]
by Witold Więcek - 818-832 The race that stopped a nation: lessons from Australia’s Covid vaccine failures
[Preparing for a Pandemic: Accelerating Vaccine Availability]
by Richard Holden & Andrew Leigh - 833-850 Financing vaccine equity: funding for day-zero of the next pandemic
[‘What Drives Innovation? Lessons from COVID-19 R&D’]
by Ruchir Agarwal & Tristan Reed - 851-875 Is it possible to prepare for a pandemic?
[‘Preparing for a Pandemic: Accelerating Vaccine Availability’]
by Robert Tucker Omberg & Alex Tabarrok - 876-886 Seven finance and trade lessons from Covid-19 for future pandemics
[‘What Drives Innovation? Lessons from COVID-19 R&D’]
by Ruchir Agarwal & Gita Gopinath - 887-911 Covid in the nursing homes: the US experience
[‘The US Bought Rapid Covid-19 Tests to Help Control the Virus. Now Many Are Unused’]
by Markus B Bjoerkheim & Alex Tabarrok - 912-923 Optimal allocation of vaccines in a pandemic
[‘An Economic Framework for Vaccine Prioritization’]
by Joshua S Gans - 924-940 Reserve system design for allocation of scarce medical resources in a pandemic: some perspectives from the field
[‘Explicit vs Statistical Targeting in Affirmative Action: Theory and Evidence from Chicago’s Exam Schools’]
by Parag Pathak & Govind Persad & Tayfun Sönmez & M Utku Ünver - 941-974 Distributing a billion vaccines: COVAX successes, challenges, and opportunities
[‘Financing Vaccine Equity’]
by Eric Budish & Hannah Kettler & Scott Duke Kominers & Erik Osland & Canice Prendergast & Andrew A Torkelson
2022, Volume 38, Issue 3
- 403-413 Forced migration: evidence and policy challenges
[‘Do Refugees Impact Voting Behavior in the Host Country? Evidence from Syrian Refugee Inflows to Turkey’]
by Simon Quinn & Isabel Ruiz - 414-433 Transforming forced displacement response through innovation
[‘The Unfinished Work of the Global Compact on Refugees’]
by Grant Gordon & Ravi Gurumurthy - 434-448 Improving refugee resettlement: insights from market design
[‘School Choice: A Mechanism Design Approach’]
by Justin Hadad & Alexander Teytelboym - 449-486 The economic and fiscal effects on the United States from reduced numbers of refugees and asylum seekers
[Refugees without Assistance: English-language Attainment and Economic Outcomes in the Early Twentieth Century’]
by Michael A Clemens - 487-513 Refugees, trade, and FDI
[‘Refugees’ and Irregular Migrants’ Self-selection into Europe’]
by Dany Bahar & Christopher Parsons & Pierre-Louis Vézina - 514-530 Why do states give refugees the right to work?
[‘Fractionalization’]
by Alexander Betts & Olivier Sterck - 531-556 Refugee migration and the labour market: lessons from 40 years of post-arrival policies in Denmark
[‘The Dynamics of Return Migration, Human Capital Accumulation, and Wage Assimilation’]
by Jacob Nielsen Arendt & Christian Dustmann & Hyejin Ku - 557-577 Who opposes refugees? Swedish demographics and attitudes towards forcibly displaced populations
[‘Ethnic Diversity and Economic Performance’]
by Sandra V Rozo & Maria J Urbina - 578-594 Labour market and redistributive consequences of the Syrian refugees in Turkey
[‘Blessing or Burden? Impacts of Refugees on Businesses and the Informal Economy’]
by Norman Loayza & Gabriel Ulyssea & Tomoko Utsumi - 595-624 Promoting recovery and resilience for internally displaced persons: lessons from Colombia
[‘Rural Windfall or a New Resource Curse? Coca, Income, and Civil Conflict in Colombia’]
by Ana María Ibáñez & Andrés Moya & Andrea Velásquez - 625-653 The Syrian refugee life study: first glance
[‘Economic Life in Refugee Camps’]
by Sarah Stillman & Sandra V Rozo & Abdulrazzak Tamim & I Bailey Palmer & Emma Smith & Edward Miguel - 654-677 How do policy approaches affect refugee economic outcomes? Insights from studies of Syrian refugees in Jordan and Lebanon
[‘Migration Shocks and Housing: Short-Run Impact of the Syrian Refugee Crisis in Jordan’]
by Caroline Krafft & Bilal Malaeb & Saja Al Zoubi - 678-698 Refugee return and social cohesion
[‘War’s Enduring Effects on the Development of Egalitarian Motivations and In-Group Biases’]
by Isabel Ruiz & Carlos Vargas-Silva - 699-716 Understanding forced internal displacement in Ukraine: insights and lessons for today’s crises
[‘A Theoretical Foundation for the Gravity Equation’]
by Vlad Mykhnenko & Elliot Delahaye & Nigel Mehdi
2022, Volume 38, Issue 2
- 1-1 Comment
[‘Capitalism: What Has Gone Wrong, What Needs to Change, and How It Can Be Fixed’]
by Jonathan Portes - 217-223 Old challenges, new solutions: getting major projects right in the twenty-first century
[‘How Can South Africa Advance a New Energy Paradigm? A Mission-oriented Approach to Megaprojects’]
by Atif Ansar - 224-236 Shaping successful mega-project investments
[‘Public Infrastructure And Growth: New Channels and Policy Implications’]
by Diane Coyle - 237-259 How can South Africa advance a new energy paradigm? A mission-oriented approach to megaprojects
[‘The Political Economy of Industrial Policy’]
by Antonio Andreoni & Kenneth Creamer & Mariana Mazzucato & Grové Steyn - 260-277 Railways as patient capital
[‘Top Wealth Shares in the UK Over More than a Century’]
by Oliver Lewis & Avner Offer - 278-301 The obsolescing bargain crosses the Belt and Road Initiative: renegotiations on BRI projects
[‘How China Got Sri Lanka to Cough Up a Port’]
by Michael Bennon & Francis Fukuyama - 302-321 How do megaprojects influence institutional change?
[‘Public–Private Partnerships: Perspectives on Purposes, Publicness, and Good Governance’]
by Rehema Msulwa - 322-337 Designing long-term incentives that promote innovation instead of value capture
[‘Ecosystem as Structure: An Actionable Construct for Strategy’]
by David Souder & Dhvani Badwaik - 338-368 How to solve big problems: bespoke versus platform strategies
[‘Location Decisions of Large Firms: Analyzing the Procurement of Infrastructure Services’]
by Atif Ansar & Bent Flyvbjerg - 369-384 Transforming project delivery: integrated project delivery
[‘A Case Study Performance Analysis of Design–Build and Integrated Project Delivery Methods’]
by Howard Ashcraft - 385-401 Investigating the performance of PPP in major healthcare infrastructure projects: the role of policy, institutions, and contracts
[‘Il project finance in sanità: un’analisi delle caratteristiche economico e finanziarie’]
by Veronica Vecchi & Niccolò Cusumano & Francesca Casalini
2022, Volume 38, Issue 1
- 1-10 The emerging contours of a post-Brexit Britain
by Christopher Adam - 11-26 Taking back control? Rule by law(s) and the executive in the post-Brexit world
by Catherine Barnard - 27-49 The consequences of the Trade and Cooperation Agreement for the UK’s international trade
by Ilaria Fusacchia & Luca Salvatici & L Alan Winters - 50-67 Brexit and labour market inequalities: potential spatial and occupational impacts
by Alexander Davenport & Peter Levell - 68-81 The EU–UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement: lessons learnt
by Adam Bennett & David Vines - 82-96 Immigration and the UK economy after Brexit
by Jonathan Portes - 97-111 Shortages, high-demand occupations, and the post-Brexit UK immigration system
by Madeleine Sumption - 112-126 Agriculture after Brexit
by Dieter Helm - 127-139 Regional aid policies after Brexit: 2nd edition
by David Bell - 140-153 UK infrastructure after Brexit
by Bridget Rosewell & John Hargreaves - 154-164 Brexit and control of subsidies
by Nicholas Crafts - 165-178 The further economic consequences of Brexit: energy
by Michael G Pollitt - 179-187 Brexit and UK higher education
by Ken Mayhew - 188-204 Tax policy in the UK post-Brexit
by Judith Freedman & Glen Loutzenhiser - 205-216 Reshaping UK/Ireland relations: Brexit’s cross-border and bilateral impact
by Mary C Murphy
2021, Volume 37, Issue 4
- 637-649 Capitalism: what has gone wrong, what needs to change, and how it can be fixed
[‘Capitalism, Laws, and the Need for Trustworthy Institutions’]
by Paul Collier & Diane Coyle & Colin Mayer & Martin Wolf - 650-663 Capitalism: worries of the 1930s for the 2020s
[‘The Mother of All Sudden Stops: Capital Flows and Reversals in Europe, 1919–32’]
by Kevin Hjortshøj O’Rourke - 664-677 ‘Capitalism: what has gone wrong?’: Who went wrong? Capitalism? The market economy? Governments? ‘Neoliberal’ economics?
[‘It Takes a Village to Maintain a Dangerous Financial System’, ch. 13]
by Martin Hellwig - 678-689 Capitalism, laws, and the need for trustworthy institutions
[‘Why Not a Political Coase Theorem? Social Conflict, Commitment, and Politics’]
by Anat R Admati - 690-706 The global capital market reconsidered
[‘The Missed Opportunity and Challenge of Capital Regulation’]
by Maurice Obstfeld - 707-719 The case for free markets
[‘The Colonial Origins of Comparative Development: An Empirical Investigation’]
by Thomas Philippon - 720-733 Is cohesive capitalism under threat?
[‘The European Trust Crisis and the Rise of Populism’]
by Timothy Besley - 734-742 Capitalism’s future is Africa’s future
[‘Corruption in Bank Lending to Firms: Cross-country Micro Evidence on the Beneficial Role of Competition and Information Sharing’]
by Vera Songwe - 743-757 Capitalism: obituary and resurrection
[‘Stability, Security, and Development: An Introduction’]
by Célestin Monga - 758-772 Capitalism needs a new social contract
[‘Does the US Tax Code Favor Automation?’]
by Minouche Shafik - 773-782 Capitalism: what has gone wrong? how can it be fixed?
[‘What is the Point of Equality?’]
by Margaret Levi - 783-793 The ground beneath our feet
[‘Using the Law to Change the Custom’]
by Kaushik Basu - 794-810 Shrinking capitalism: components of a new political economy paradigm
[‘Environmental Preferences and Technological Choices: Is Market Competition Clean or Dirty?’]
by Samuel Bowles & Wendy Carlin - 811-823 Communities, the state, and markets: the case for inclusive localism
[‘When Work Disappears: Manufacturing Decline and the Falling Marriage-market Value of Young Men’]
by Raghuram Rajan - 824-837 Fixing capitalism’s good jobs problem
[‘Artificial Intelligence, Automation and Work’]
by Dani Rodrik & Stefanie Stantcheva - 838-850 Changing the purpose of the corporation to rebalance capitalism
[‘Towards Collaborative Community’]
by Rebecca M Henderson - 851-863 Capitalism recoupled
[‘The Fall of the Labor Share and the Rise of Superstar Firms’]
by Colm Kelly & Dennis J Snower
2021, Volume 37, Issue 3
- 417-434 The assessment: artificial intelligence and financial services
by David Bholat & Daniel Susskind - 435-458 Artificial intelligence and productivity: an intangible assets approach
by Carol Corrado & Jonathan Haskel & Cecilia Jona-Lasinio - 459-478 Autonomous algorithmic collusion: economic research and policy implications
by Stephanie Assad & Emilio Calvano & Giacomo Calzolari & Robert Clark & Vincenzo Denicolò & Daniel Ershov & Justin Johnson & Sergio Pastorello & Andrew Rhodes & Lei Xu & Matthijs Wildenbeest - 479-508 Comparing minds and machines: implications for financial stability
by Marcus Buckmann & Andy Haldane & Anne-Caroline Hüser - 509-520 The history and future of AI
by Stuart Russell - 521-536 Artificial intelligence as a general-purpose technology: an historical perspective
by Nicholas Crafts - 537-563 The impact of machine learning on UK financial services
by Bonnie G Buchanan & Danika Wright - 564-584 Artificial intelligence research in finance: discussion and examples
by Manuela Veloso & Tucker Balch & Daniel Borrajo & Prashant Reddy & Sameena Shah - 585-617 Algorithmic fairness in credit scoring
by Teresa Bono & Karen Croxson & Adam Giles - 618-635 AI, ML, and competition dynamics in financial markets
by Paul A Grout
2021, Volume 37, Issue 2
- 221-230 Management practices and public policy: an overview
by Simon Quinn & Daniela Scur - 231-258 The World Management Survey at 18: lessons and the way forward
by Daniela Scur & Raffaella Sadun & John Van Reenen & Renata Lemos & Nicholas Bloom - 259-275 The origin and development of firm management
by Michela Giorcelli - 276-301 Small business training to improve management practices in developing countries: re-assessing the evidence for ‘training doesn’t work’
by David McKenzie - 302-322 Education and management practices
by Anna Valero - 323-334 Family firms and management practices
by Margarita Tsoutsoura - 335-366 Four lenses on people management in the public sector: an evidence review and synthesis
by Aisha J Ali & Javier Fuenzalida & Margarita Gómez & Martin J Williams - 367-391 Management in education systems
by Yue-Yi Hwa & Clare Leaver - 392-415 The interdependence imperative: business strategy, complementarities, and economic policy
by Mu-Jeung Yang
2021, Volume 37, Issue 1
- 1-16 Regional inequalities: causes and cures
by Frank Cörvers & Ken Mayhew - 17-48 Regional growth and inequality in the long-run: Europe, 1900–2015
by Joan R Rosés & Nikolaus Wolf - 49-69 Long-run analysis of regional inequalities in the US
by Trevon Logan & Bradley Hardy & John Parman - 70-96 Regional inequalities and contributions to aggregate growth in the 2000s: an EU vs US comparison based on functional regions
by Enrique Garcilazo & Ana I Moreno-Monroy & Joaquim Oliveira Martins - 97-112 Narratives as a coordinating device for reversing regional disequilibrium
by Paul Collier & David Tuckett - 113-131 Demographic change and regional labour markets
by Michael J Böhm & Terry Gregory & Pamela Qendrai & Christian Siegel - 132-151 The persistent consequences of adverse shocks: how the 1970s shaped UK regional inequality
by Patricia G Rice & Anthony J Venables - 152-171 The structure and relations of banking systems: the UK experience and the challenges of ‘levelling-up’
by Colin Mayer & Philip McCann & Jacob Schumacher - 172-200 Regional integration and income inequality: a synthetic counterfactual analysis of the European Monetary Union
by Florence Bouvet - 201-220 The changing nature of regional policy in Europe
by Ties Vanthillo & Joris Beckers & Ann Verhetsel
2020, Volume 36, Issue Supplement_1
- 1-13 The economics of the COVID-19 pandemic: an assessment
by Daniel Susskind & David Vines - 14-37 A workable strategy for COVID-19 testing: stratified periodic testing rather than universal random testing
by Matthew Cleevely & Daniel Susskind & David Vines & Louis Vines & Samuel Wills - 38-55 A cost–benefit analysis of the COVID-19 disease
by Robert Rowthorn & Jan Maciejowski - 56-63 What is the meaning of (statistical) life? Benefit–cost analysis in the time of COVID-19
by Jonathan Colmer - 64-76 International cooperation during the COVID-19 pandemic
by Gordon Brown & Daniel Susskind - 77-93 Adaptive targeted infectious disease testing
by Maximilian Kasy & Alexander Teytelboym - 94-137 Supply and demand shocks in the COVID-19 pandemic: an industry and occupation perspective
by R Maria del Rio-Chanona & Penny Mealy & Anton Pichler & François Lafond & J Doyne Farmer - 138-168 COVID-19 and the future of microfinance: evidence and insights from Pakistan
by Kashif Malik & Muhammad Meki & Jonathan Morduch & Timothy Ogden & Simon Quinn & Farah Said - 169-186 Baby steps: the gender division of childcare during the COVID-19 pandemic
by Almudena Sevilla & Sarah Smith - 187-199 The initial impact of COVID-19 and policy responses on household incomes
by Mike Brewer & Laura Gardiner - 200-214 COVID-19 and the financial system: a tale of two crises
by Julia Giese & Andy Haldane - 215-224 COVID-19 and the UK labour market
by Ken Mayhew & Paul Anand - 225-241 Discretionary fiscal responses to the COVID-19 pandemic
by Michael P Devereux & İrem Güçeri & Martin Simmler & Eddy H F Tam - 242-255 Business in times of crisis
by Mary Johnstone-Louis & Bridget Kustin & Colin Mayer & Judith Stroehle & Boya Wang - 256-269 COVID-19 and public-sector capacity
by Mariana Mazzucato & Rainer Kattel - 270-280 Reforming the UK financial system to promote regional development in post-COVID Britain
by Paul Collier & Colin Mayer - 281-296 Social protection response to the COVID-19 crisis: options for developing countries
by François Gerard & Clément Imbert & Kate Orkin - 297-337 Global macroeconomic cooperation in response to the COVID-19 pandemic: a roadmap for the G20 and the IMF
by Warwick McKibbin & David Vines - 338-358 After the lockdown: macroeconomic adjustment to the COVID-19 pandemic in sub-Saharan Africa
by Christopher Adam & Mark Henstridge & Stevan Lee - 359-381 Will COVID-19 fiscal recovery packages accelerate or retard progress on climate change?
by Cameron Hepburn & Brian O’Callaghan & Nicholas Stern & Joseph Stiglitz & Dimitri Zenghelis - 382-396 From low-skilled to key workers: the implications of emergencies for immigration policy
by Mariña Fernández-Reino & Madeleine Sumption & Carlos Vargas-Silva - 397-408 Trade finance matters: evidence from the COVID-19 crisis
by Banu Demir & Beata Javorcik
2020, Volume 36, Issue 3
- 427-497 The rebuilding macroeconomic theory project part II: multiple equilibria, toy models, and policy models in a new macroeconomic paradigm
by David Vines & Samuel Wills - 498-509 Mapping types of macromodel to types of macro user
by Simon Wren-Lewis - 510-555 Implications of household-level evidence for policy models: the case of macro-financial linkages
by John Muellbauer - 556-578 Some important macro points
by Ray C Fair - 579-603 Climate change and monetary policy: issues for policy design and modelling
by Warwick J McKibbin & Adele C Morris & Peter J Wilcoxen & Augustus J Panton - 604-620 Why some places are left behind: urban adjustment to trade and policy shocks
by Anthony J Venables - 621-674 Towards a dynamic disequilibrium theory with randomness
by Martin Guzman & Joseph E Stiglitz - 675-711 The importance of beliefs in shaping macroeconomic outcomes
by Roger E A Farmer - 712-723 Clinical macroeconomics and differential diagnosis
by Jeffrey D Sachs
2020, Volume 36, Issue 1
- 1-23 Rethinking the economics of water: an assessment
by Dustin E Garrick & Michael Hanemann & Cameron Hepburn - 24-44 The economics of water scarcity and variability
by Richard Damania - 45-68 The economics of dams
by Marc Jeuland - 69-85 Thirty years after water privatization—is the English model the envy of the world?
by Dieter Helm - 86-107 The paradox of water pricing: dichotomies, dilemmas, and decisions
by R Quentin Grafton & Long Chu & Paul Wyrwoll - 108-131 Water rights reform and water marketing: Australia vs the US West
by Michael Hanemann & Michael Young - 132-153 A tale of two water markets in Australia: lessons for understanding participation in formal water markets
by Sarah Ann Wheeler & Dustin E Garrick - 154-170 Beneath the surface: complexities and groundwater policy-making
by William Blomquist - 171-190 Rethinking the economics of rural water in Africa
by Rob Hope & Patrick Thomson & Johanna Koehler & Tim Foster - 191-221 Evidence-based policy analysis? The strange case of the randomized controlled trials of community-led total sanitation
by Dale Whittington & Mark Radin & Marc Jeuland
2019, Volume 35, Issue 4
- 565-585 Networks and economic policy
by Matthew L Elliott & Sanjeev Goyal & Alexander Teytelboym - 586-613 Networks and systemic risk in the financial system
by Prasanna Gai & Sujit Kapadia - 614-637 The role of networks in antitrust investigations
by Matthew Elliott & Andrea Galeotti