Content
September 2017, Volume 14, Issue 2
- 125-130 Editorial: Towards pluralism in macroeconomics? 20th anniversary conference of the FMM research network
by Sebastian Gechert & Torsten Niechoj & Engelbert Stockhammer & Achim Truger & Andrew Watt - 131-172 Post-Keynesian macroeconomics since the mid 1990s: main developments
by Eckhard Hein - 173-185 Post-Keynesian dynamic stochastic general equilibrium theory
by Roger E.A. Farmer - 186-199 Behavioral and complexity macroeconomics
by Michael Roos - 200-221 The origins and evolution of the debate on wage-led and profit-led regimes
by Marc Lavoie - 222-237 Three decades of modelling Minsky: what we have learned and the way forward
by Maria Nikolaidi - 238-249 How to promote alternative macroeconomic ideas: are there limits to running with the (mainstream) pack?
by Sebastian Dullien - 250-266 Making the incommensurable comparable: a comparative approach to pluralist economics education
by Andreas Dimmelmeier & Frederick Heussner & Andrea Pürckhauer & Janina Urban - 267-281 Beyond stimulus versus austerity: pluralist capacity building in macroeconomics
by Irene van Staveren
April 2017, Volume 14, Issue 1
- 1-1 Editorial
by The Editors - 2-12 Interview with Heinz D. Kurz
by Eckhard Hein - 13-22 A third era of credit theory? Endogenous money from Wolfgang Stützel's balance mechanics perspective
by Christoph Ellermann & Fabian Lindner & Severin Reissl & Ruben Tarne - 23-31 The arithmetic relations between total expenditure and the resulting current and financial account balances as determinants of the revenue-related need for means of payment in an economy
by Wolfgang Stützel - 32-47 Review of exchange-rate theories in four leading economics textbooks
by Jan Priewe - 48-69 A simple approach to overcome the problems arising from the Keynesian stability condition
by Reiner Franke - 70-91 The Sraffian supermultiplier as an alternative closure for heterodox growth theory
by Franklin Serrano & Fabio Freitas - 92-116 A proposal for a federalized unemployment insurance mechanism for Europe
by Leila E. Davis & Charalampos Konstantinidis & Yorghos Tripodis - 117-120 Book Review: Stiglitz, Joseph E. (2016): The Euro: How a Common Currency Threatens the Future of Europe, New York, NY, USA and London, UK (416 pages, W.W. Norton, hardcover, ISBN 978-0-393-25402-0)
by Jan Priewe - 121-124 Book Review: Mitchell, William (2015): Eurozone Dystopia: Groupthink and Denial on a Grand Scale, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA (512 pages, Edward Elgar, hardcover, ISBN 978-1-78471-665-3, £99; softcover, ISBN 978-1-78471-667-7, £32)
by Torsten Niechoj
December 2016, Volume 13, Issue 3
- 255-264 Interview with Thomas I. Palley: ‘We need to confront more forcefully the neoclassical position and show the absolute impossibility of the world it describes!’
by Eckhard Hein & Marc Lavoie - 265-274 Obituary: Kazimierz Laski (1921–2015)
by Martin Riese - 275-290 The debate over ‘Thirlwall's law’: balance-of-payments-constrained growth reconsidered
by Robert A. Blecker - 291-291 Editorial to the special issue
by Eckhard Hein - 292-322 Financialisation and financial crisis in Iceland
by Björn Rúnar Guðmundsson - 323-338 Could the Icelandic banking collapse of 2008 have been prevented? The role of economists prior to the crisis
by John S.L. McCombie & Marta R.M. Spreafico - 339-353 Firms’ excess savings and the Dutch current-account surplus: a stock-flow consistent approach
by Huub Meijers & Joan Muysken & Olaf Sleijpen - 354-374 Changes in the profile of inequality across Europe since 2005: austerity and redistribution
by Markus P.A. Schneider & Stephen Kinsella & Antoine Godin - 375-377 Book review: Toporowski, Jan and Lukasz Mamica (eds) (2015): Michal Kalecki in the 21st Century, Basingstoke, UK (267 pages, hardcover, Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 978-1-137-42827-1)
by Eckhard Hein - 378-380 Book review: Dimand, Robert W. (2014): James Tobin, Basingstoke, UK (197 pages, hardcover, Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 978-14039-8555-2)
by Thomas Palley
September 2016, Volume 13, Issue 2
- 145-146 Editorial: The spectre of stagnation? Europe in the world economy
by Sebastian Gechert & Torsten Niechoj & Jan Priewe & Andrew Watt - 147-159 Theories of stagnation in historical perspective
by Roger E. Backhouse & Mauro Boianovsky - 172-188 Aggregate demand, functional finance, and secular stagnation
by Peter Skott - 189-202 Did Japan's high-growth success foster persistent stagnation?
by W.R. Garside - 203-214 The US economy since the crisis: slow recovery and secular stagnation
by Robert A. Blecker - 215-228 Policies to overcome stagnation: the crisis, and the possible futures, of all things euro
by Mark Blyth - 229-240 Secular stagnation and progressive economic policy alternatives
by Özlem Onaran - 241-254 Monetary financing of public investment: a viable way forward for the euro area?
by Andrew Watt - v:13:y:2016:i:2:p160-171 Secular stagnation or stagnation policy? A post-Steindlian view
by Eckhard Hein
April 2016, Volume 13, Issue 1
- 1-9 Interview with Edward J. Nell: ‘A great deal of neoclassical theory is set in cloud-cuckoo-land’
by Louis-Philippe Rochon - 10-25 International monetary policy with commodity buffer stocks
by Leanne Ussher - 26-27 Editorial to the special forum: Making the euro area work: proposals for monetary and fiscal reform
by Stefan Ederer & Torsten Niechoj - 28-38 Can the Report of the ‘Five Presidents’ save the euro?
by Philip Arestis - 39-56 A T-shirt model of savings, debt, and private spending: lessons for the euro area
by Andrea Terzi - 57-71 Reviving fiscal policy in Europe: towards an implementation of the golden rule of public investment
by Achim Truger - 72-86 Making the euro viable: the Euro Treasury Plan
by Jörg Bibow - 87-102 The blind spots of trade impact assessment: macroeconomic adjustment costs and the social costs of regulatory change
by Werner Raza & Bernhard Tröster & Rudi von Arnim - 103-113 On the long-run equilibrium value of Tobin’s average Q
by Reiner Franke & Boyan Yanovski - 114-136 Drivers of wealth inequality in euro area countries: the effect of inheritance and gifts on household gross and net wealth distribution analysed by applying the Shapley value approach to decomposition
by Sebastian Leitner - 137-139 Book Review: Atkinson, Anthony B. (2015): Inequality: What Can Be Done? Cambridge, MA, USA and London, UK (384 pages, hardcover, Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-674-50476-9)
by Michael Nagel & Achim Truger - 140-143 Koo, R.C. (2015): The Escape from Balance Sheet Recession and the QE Trap: A Hazardous Road for the World Economy, Singapore (320 pages, hardcover, Wiley, ISBN 978-1-119-02812-3)
by Marc Lavoie
December 2015, Volume 12, Issue 3
- 249—249-249—249 Editorial
by The Managing Editors - 250—254-250—254 Interview with Lance Taylor: ‘Wage repression and secular stagnation are rather close in kind’
by Marc Lavoie - 255-276 Currency regime crises, real wages, functional income distribution and production
by Emiliano Brancaccio & Nadia Garbellini - 277—299-277—299 Quantity-of-money fluctuations and economic instability: empirical evidence for the USA (1958–2006)
by Panayotis G. Michaelides & John G. Milios & Konstantinos N. Konstantakis & Panayiotis Tarnaras - 300—317-300—317 Will ‘structural reforms’ of labour markets reduce productivity growth? A firm-level investigation
by Robert Vergeer & Steven Dhondt & Alfred Kleinknecht & Karolus Kraan - 318—352-318—352 Macroeconomic policy regimes in emerging markets: the case of Latvia
by Milka Kazandziska - 353—356-353—356 Book review: Y. Varoufakis, The Global Minotaur: America, the True Origins of the Financial Crisis and the Future of the World Economy, 1st Edition (, London, UK and New York, USA 2011) 196 pages
by Laura Carvalho - 357—360-357—360 Book review: J.E. King, Advanced Introduction to Post Keynesian Economics (, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2015) 139 pages R.G. Holcombe, Advanced Introduction to the Austrian School of Economics (, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2014) 126 pages
by Torsten Niechoj
September 2015, Volume 12, Issue 2
- 143-146 Editorial
by Sebastian Gechert & Achim Truger & Till van Treeck & Andrew Watt - 147-157 Inequality and the duration of growth
by Jonathan D. Ostry - 158-169 Inequality, the crisis, and stagnation
by Till van Treeck - 170-182 Rising inequality and stagnation in the US economy
by Barry Z. Cynamon & Steven M. Fazzari - 183-189 Bringing inequality back in
by Heather Boushey - 190-203 Individual earnings and household incomes: mutually reinforcing inequalities?
by Wiemer Salverda - 204-219 Property and power: lessons from Piketty and new insights from the HFCS
by Miriam Rehm & Matthias Schnetzer - 220-228 Teaching monetary theory and monetary policy implementation after the crisis
by Marc Lavoie - 229-235 Why economics textbooks should, but don't, and won't, change
by David Colander - 236-242 New macroeconomics teaching for a new era: instability, inequality, and environment
by Jonathan M. Harris - 243-248 Book review: M. Lavoie, Post-Keynesian Economics: New Foundations (, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2014) 680 pages
by John McCombie
April 2015, Volume 12, Issue 1
- 1-6 Interview with John McCombie: ‘I think there's absolutely no way out for them: an aggregate production function does not make any sense at all!’
by Eckhard Hein & Marc Lavoie - 7-19 An examination of Professor Shaikh's proposal to tame Harrodian instability
by Reiner Franke - 20-28 The ‘other half’ of the public debt–economic growth relationship: a note on Reinhart and Rogoff
by Yannis Dafermos - 29-31 Special issue: Post-Keynesian stock-flow consistent modelling: Editorial to the special issue
by Antoine Godin - 32-50 The deposit financing gap: another Dutch disease
by Huub Meijers & Joan Muysken & Olaf Sleijpen - 51-72 Bad banks choking good banks: simulating balance sheet contagion
by Saed Khalil - 73-92 Financialisation and the sub-prime crisis: a stock-flow consistent model
by Eugenio Caverzasi & Antoine Godin - 93-112 A multi-speed Europe: is it viable? A stock-flow consistent approach
by Jacques Mazier & Sebastian Valdecantos - 113-134 Comparative numerical analysis of two stock-flow consistent post-Keynesian growth models
by Biagio Ciuffo & Eckehard Rosenbaum - 135-142 Book review: Wendy Carlin and David Soskice, Macroeconomics: Institutions, Instability, and the Financial System (, Oxford, UK 2015) 638 pages
by Marc Lavoie
December 2014, Volume 11, Issue 3
- 221-226 Interview with Robert Skidelsky: ‘Economics is not useless. It can either be very harmful, which it often is, or very beneficial’
by Eckhard Hein & Achim Truger - 227-249 ‘The Chicago Plan revisited’: a friendly critique
by Brett Fiebiger - 250-268 Global imbalances: benign by-product of global development or toxic consequence of corporate globalization?
by Thomas I. Palley - 269-299 Foreign debt, distribution, inflation, and growth in an SFC model
by Pablo Gabriel Bortz - 300-314 Why ‘state of the art’ monetary theory was unable to anticipate the global financial crisis: a child's guide
by Colin Rogers - 315-332 Inside shadow banking: understanding the doomsday machine
by Wesley C. Marshall - 333-348 Happiness surveys: exclusive guides for policy?
by Gunther Tichy - 349-351 Book review: Philip Mirowski, Never Let a Serious Crisis Go to Waste: How Neoliberalism Survived the Financial Meltdown (, London, UK 2013) 384 pages
by Marc Lavoie - 352-355 Book review: Robert Skidelsky and Edward Skidelsky, How Much is Enough? Money and the Good Life (, New York, NY, USA 2012) 272 pages
by Achim Truger
September 2014, Volume 11, Issue 2
- 133-135 Editorial: The jobs crisis: causes, cures, constraints
by Özlem Onaran & Miriam Rehm & Till van Treeck & Andrew Watt - 136-148 Unemployment: natural rate epicycles or hysteresis?
by Rod Cross - 149-160 Long-term damage from the Great Recession in OECD countries
by Laurence Ball - 161-170 Restructuring finance to promote productive employment
by Gerald Epstein - 171-181 Ecological macroeconomics: reflections on labour markets
by Sigrid Stagl - 182-194 Unemployment, capital accumulation and labour market institutions in the Great Recession
by Engelbert Stockhammer & Alexander Guschanski & Karsten Köhler - 195-204 The enduring effects of the Great Recession on wage growth in the United States
by Dean Baker - 205-220 In the aftermath of the German labor market reforms, is there a qualitative/quantitative trade-off?
by Joachim Möller
April 2014, Volume 11, Issue 1
- 1-9 ‘The real problem is that when most economists wring their hands about the financial system melting down, what they really mean is the top 1 percent losing the amazing amount of wealth they've doubled since 1979’
by Achim Truger & Till van Treeck - 10-30 Pro-shareholder income distribution, debt accumulation, and cyclical fluctuations in a post-Keynesian model with labor supply constraints
by Hiroaki Sasaki & Shinya Fujita - 31-49 A theory of aggregate consumption
by Yun K. Kim & Mark Setterfield & Yuan Mei - 50-52 Special Issue: Micro-foundations of macroeconomics: how important are they?
by Philip Arestis & Jesus Ferreiro - 53-66 On economic paradigms, rhetoric and the micro-foundations of macroeconomics
by John S.L. McCombie & Ioana Negru - 67-79 The irresistible charm of the micro-foundations dogma or the overwhelming force of the discipline's hard core?
by Thanos Skouras & Yiannis Kitromilides - 80-98 Financial frictions and macroeconomic models: a tour d'horizon
by Jagjit S. Chadha - 99-112 Rethinking the micro-foundations of macroeconomics: insights from behavioural economics
by Michelle Baddeley - 113-126 Post-Keynesian stock-flow models after the subprime crisis: the need for micro-foundations
by Photis Lysandrou - 127-128 Book review: Wolfram Elsner, Microeconomics of Interactive Economies (Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2012) 240 pages
by Johannes Weskott - 129-131 Book review: Peter Flaschel and Sigrid Luchtenberg, Roads to Social Capitalism: Theory, Evidence, and Policy (Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2012) 384 pages
by Fritz Helmedag
December 2013, Volume 10, Issue 3
- 269—269-269—269 Editorial
by The Managing Editors - 270—273-270—273 ‘It is a classic Keynesian depression, I would not refrain from the term’
by Fernando Cardim de Carvalho - 274—281-274—281 Principles of capitalistic commodity production reconsidered
by Jens Reich - 282—285-282—285 Principles of capitalistic commodity production: a rejoinder
by Fritz Helmedag - 286—298-286—298 State and future of the ‘citadel’ and of the heterodoxies in economics: challenges and dangers, convergences and cooperation
by Wolfram Elsner - 299—312-299—312 The sources of aggregate profitability: Marx's theory of surplus value revisited
by Peter Flaschel & Nils Fröhlich & Roberto Veneziani - 313—326-313—326 Neoclassical economics: science or neoliberal ideology?
by David Slattery & Joseph Nellis & Kosta Josifidis & Alpar Losonc - 327—341-327—341 Institutions as context-sensitive control superstructures for firms
by Prateek Goorha - 342-358 Government bond yield spreads determination: a matter of fundamentals or market overreaction? Evidence from over-borrowed European countries
by Dimitris Vas. Seremetis & Anastasios P. Pappas
2013, Volume 10, Issue 3
- 359-382 The implications of TARGET2 in the European balance of payments crisis and beyond
by Sergio Cesaratto - 383-384 Book review - Peter Flaschel and Alfred Greiner, Flexicurity Capitalism: Foundations, Problems, and Perspectives (, New York 2012) 240 pages
by Yun K. Kim - 385-388 Book review - Davidson Paul, Post Keynesian Macroeconomic Theory: A Foundation for Successful Economic Policies for the Twenty-First Century, 2nd Edition (, Cheltenham, UK 2011) 360 pages
by Achim Truger
2013, Volume 10, Issue 2
- 133-135 Editorial: The state of economics after the crisis
by Sebastian Dullien & Eckhard Hein & Till van Treeck - 136-157 Balance sheet recession as the ‘other half’ of macroeconomics
by Richard C. Koo - 158-174 Austerity in the euro area: the sad state of economic policy in Germany and the EU
by Achim Truger - 175-192 Can the new French economic policy be successful?
by Catherine Mathieu & Henri Sterdyniak - 193-206 Gattopardo economics: the crisis and the mainstream response of change that keeps things the same
by Thomas I. Palley - 207-220 Does economics add up? An introduction to meta-regression analysis
by T.D. Stanley - 221-230 Capital gains, total returns and saving rates
by Michael Hudson - 231-242 Should post-Keynesians make a behavioural turn?
by John E. King - 243-255 Economic theory and policy: a coherent post-Keynesian approach
by Philip Arestis - 256-267 Post-Keynesian and Kaleckian thoughts on ecological macroeconomics
by Giuseppe Fontana & Malcolm Sawyer
2013, Volume 10, Issue 1
- 2-7 ‘You have to regulate capitalism, otherwise the criminals will dominate it’ Interview with Peter Flaschel
by Eckhard Hein & Torsten Niechoj - 8-11 Special Issue: Post-Keynesian and Institutional political economy. Editorial to the Special Issue
by Marc Lavoie & Mario Seccareccia - 12-27 Post-Keynesian Institutionalism after the Great Recession
by Charles J. Whalen - 28-43 Veblenian and Minskian financial markets
by Giorgos Argitis - 44-60 Do Institutionalists and post-Keynesians share a common approach to Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)?
by Reynold F. Nesiba - 61-75 Connecting social provisioning and functional finance in a post-Keynesian–Institutional analysis of the public sector
by Zdravka Todorova - 76-92 Convention, interest rates and monetary policy: a post-Keynesian–French-conventions-school approach
by André de Melo Modenesi & Rui Lyrio Modenesi & José Luis Oreiro & Norberto Montani Martins - 93-105 Understanding financial innovation systems: Veblen and Minsky at the periphery
by Solange Gomes Leonel & Sylvia Ferreira Marques & Ester Carneiro do Couto Santos & Marco Flávio da Cunha Resende - 106-121 The economic–environment relation: can post-Keynesians, Régulationists and Polanyians offer insights?
by Lynne Chester & Joy Paton
2012, Volume 9, Issue 2
- 159-165 "The reform of capitalism is a) possible and b) very desirable". Interview with John E. King
by John E. King - 166-187 Staatsverschuldung aus kreislauftheoretischer Sicht
by Wolfgang Scherf - 188-194 Rejuvenating the Renewal of Political Economy: The․International Initiative for Promoting Political Economy (IIPPE)
by Dimitris Milonakis - 195-196 Editorial to the Special Issue
by Stefan Ederer & Eckhard Hein & Torsten Niechoj - 197-214 Aggregate savings, finance and investment
by Fernando J. Cardim de Carvalho - 215-232 Modeling financial instability
by Toichiro Asada - 233-254 New instruments for banking regulation and monetary policy after the crisis
by Daniel Detzer - 255-276 Modelling accumulation: A theoretical and empirical application of the accelerator principle under uncertainty
by Philip Arestis & Ana Rosa González & Óscar Dejuán - 277-307 An empirical evaluation of three post-Keynesian models
by Peter Skott & Ben Zipperer - 309-320 Endogenous income distribution in the Bhaduri-Marglin model
by Bernhard Schütz
2012, Volume 9, Issue 1
- 5-12 "I often find myself now basing my analysis very much on what Kalecki himself wrote sixty or seventy years ago". Interview with Malcolm Sawyer
by Prof. Dr. Malcom Sawyer - 13-22 The euro crisis and the responses to it: Missing the point?
by Stefan Ederer - 23-34 Principles of capitalistic commodity production
by Fritz Helmedag - 39-56 What are banks and bank regulation for? A consideration of the foundations for reform
by Sheila C. Dow - 57-90 The case for capital account management in emerging market economies: The experiences of the BRICs
by Joerg Bibow - 91-108 The simple macroeconomics of fiscal austerity: Public debt,deficits and deficit caps
by Thomas I. Palley - 109-128 Composition of public expenditures and macroeconomic performance in the European Union
by Jesus Ferreiro & Maribel GarcÃa del Valle & Carmen Gómez - 129-144 Fiscal spending multiplier calculations based on input-output tables – an application to EU member states
by Toralf Pusch
2011, Volume 8, Issue 2
- 237-245 "We have to wake up and smell the flowers." Interview with Stephen Marglin
by Stephen Marglin - 245-266 Policy responses to the Euro debt crisis: Can they overcome the imbalances that caused the crisis?
by Torsten Niechoj & Till van Treeck - 267-275 How not to do it
by Karl Betz - 281-297 Path dependency and the interdependences of demand and supply in macroeconomics
by Malcolm Sawyer - 299-316 Post-Keynesian macrodynamics and path-dependent growth
by Mark Setterfield - 317-340 The NAIRU: Still 'Not An Interesting Rate of Unemployment'
by Rod Cross & Dany Lang - 341-360 Output, stock markets and macro-policy measures in a Keynesian portfolio model
by Toichiro Asada & Matthieu Charpe & Peter Flaschel & Christopher Malikane & Tarik Mouakil & Christian R. Proaño - 361-387 Confidence and financial crisis in a post-Keynesian stock flow consistent model
by Edwin Le Heron - 389-404 Equilibrium interest rate and financial transactions in post-Keynesian models. Pointing out some overlooked features
by Angel Asensio
2011, Volume 8, Issue 1
- 7-12 "The General Theory is not a book that you should read in bed!" Interview with G.C. Harcourt
by G.C. Harcourt - 12-21 Kurt W. Rothschild (1914 - 2010). A modest and upright character with an outstanding publication record
by Wilfried Altzinger - 21-29 Common monetary policy with uncommon wage policies: Centrifugal forces tearing the euro area apart
by Kazimierz Laski & Leon Podkaminer - 29-41 Evolutionary Institutionalism. Sources, history and contemporary relevance of The Association for Evolutionary Economics - AFEE
by Wolfram Elsner - 43-67 Flattening of the Phillips Curve: Estimations and consequences for economic policy
by Jürgen Kromphardt & Camille Logeay - 69-89 The macroeconomics of pension reform: The case of severance pay reform in Italy
by Sergio Cesaratto - 91-112 A view on post-Keynesian interest rate policy
by Giorgos Argitis - 117-128 Post-Keynesian theory, direct action and political involvement
by G.C. Harcourt - 129-145 The economic policies of the political economy of the Australian patriot and Cambridge economist
by Philip Arestis & Malcolm Sawyer - 147-163 Incomes policies: Two approaches
by Claudio Sardoni - 165-182 'Cantabrigian Economics' and the aggregate production function
by John S.L. McCombie - 183-200 On Sraffa, post-Keynesian theories of pricing and capitalist competition: Some observations
by Stephanie Blankenburg - 201-217 International capital movements, speculation, and the 'conservation of saving' principle. A 'Harcourtian' interpretation of global imbalances and the global crisis
by Lilia Costabile
2010, Volume 7, Issue 2
- 231-236 "Unless we have some kind of United States of Europe, I do not think we can hope for proper economic policies." Interview with Philip Arestis
by Philip Arestis - 236-241 Obituary for Jörg Huffschmid
by John Grahl - 241-247 Different sources of capitalism's instability: Finance in Minsky and money in The General Theory
by Elisabetta De Antoni - 248-255 The spread of Keynesianism in Brazil: The origins and experience of the Brazilian Keynesian Association
by Luiz Fernando de Paula & Fernando Ferrari Filho - 255-255 The New Consensus in macroeconomics and non-mainstream approaches
by Claudio Sardoni - 266-271 Macroeconomic Theory and Macroeconomic Pedagogy – A review of the book edited by Giuseppe Fontana and Mark Setterfield
by Sebastian Dullien - 271-277 Macroeconomic Theory and Macroeconomic Pedagogy: A response to some criticisms
by Giuseppe Fontana & Mark Setterfield - 283-302 Crises and paradigms in macroeconomics
by Malcolm Sawyer - 303-323 Global imbalances, monetary disorder, and shrinking policy space: Keynes's legacy for our troubled world
by Anna M. Carabelli & Mario A. Cedrini - 325-359 Global imbalances, the US dollar, and how the crisis at the core of global finance spread to "self-insuring" emerging market economies
by Jörg Bibow - 361-375 Kaldorian boom-bust cycles in the housing market
by Ingo Barens & Peter Flaschel & Florian Hartmann & Andreas Röthig - 377-400 The global financial crisis and the shift to shadow banking
by Yeva Nersisyan & L. Randall Wray - 401-413 The economies of deleveraging: The aftermath of financialization
by Thomas I. Palley
2010, Volume 7, Issue 1
- 7-11 "We are all Horizontalists now!" Interview with Basil Moore
by Basil Moore - 11-24 Schwerer Rückfall in alte Obsessionen – Zur aktuellen deutschen Finanzpolitik
by Achim Truger - 24-31 Die Kontroverse Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung contra Handelsblatt. Einige Bemerkungen zu einem methodologischen Schlagabtausch anno 2009
by Kurt Rothschild - 31-41 Assessing economic research and the future of heterodox economics. Failures and alternatives of journals, departments, and scholars rankings
by Wolfram Elsner & Fred Lee - 42-50 Protektionismus: Die Grenzen der Staatsintervention in den 1930er Jahren
by Jürgen Nordmann - 50-58 Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? – Who supervises the supervisors?
by Kurt Bayer - 58-70 Eigenkapital im Finanzsystem: Die Lehren der letzten, der aktuellen und der nächsten Krise
by Peter Mooslechner