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Content
October 2021, Volume 9, Issue 4
- 435-460 Rent-seeking and asset-price inflation: a total-returns profile of economic polarization in America
by Michael Hudson
- 461–492-461–492 Financialization revisited: the economics and political economy of the vampire squid economy
by Thomas Palley
- 493–511-493–511 Financialization, premature deindustrialization, and instability in Latin America
by Esteban Pérez Caldentey & MatÃas Vernengo
- 512–520-512–520 Globalization of capital, erosion of economic policy sovereignty, and the lessons from John Maynard Keynes
by Biagio Bossone
- 521–551-521–551 Effectiveness of capital controls in dampening international shocks
by Chokri Zehri
- 552–574-552–574 China: capital flight or renminbi internationalization?
by Paulo van Noije & Bruno De Conti & Marina Zucker-Marques
- 575–578-575–578 Book review: Geoff Mann, In the Long Run, We are All Dead: Keynesianism, Political Economy, and Revolution (Verso Books, London, UK 2017) 432 pp
by Nina Eichacker
- 579–581-579–581 Book review: Zachary D. Carter, The Price of Peace: Money, Democracy, and the Life of John Maynard Keynes (Random House, New York, NY, USA 2020) 656 pp
by MatÃas Vernengo
July 2021, Volume 9, Issue 3
- 1-14 Distribution, wealth and demand regimes in historical perspective: the USA, the UK, France and Germany, 1855–2010 Online Appendices
by Engelbert Stockhammer & Joel Rabinovich & Niall Reddy
- 297-318 Household indebtedness, distribution, and bargaining power under distribution-induced technological change: a macroeconomic analysis
by Eric Kemp-Benedict & Y.K. Kim
- 319-336 Human capital accumulation, income distribution, and economic growth: a demand-led analytical framework
by Gilberto Tadeu Lima & Laura Carvalho & Gustavo Pereira Serra
- 337-367 Distribution, wealth and demand regimes in historical perspective: the USA, the UK, France and Germany, 1855–2010
by Engelbert Stockhammer & Joel Rabinovich & Niall Reddy
- 368-393 Omitted-variable bias in demand-regime estimations: the role of household credit and wage inequality in Brazil
by Julia Burle & Laura Carvalho
- 394-412 Wage- and profit-led growth regimes: a panel-data approach
by Guilherme de Oliveira & Eduardo Prado Souza
- 413-424 A note on ‘Wage-led versus profit-led demand regimes: the long and the short of it’
by Lilian N. Rolim
- 425-428 Life among the Econ: 50 years on
by Thomas Palley
- 429-431 Book review: Ajit Sinha, A Revolution in Economic Theory: The Economics of Piero Sraffa (Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, UK, New York, NY, USA and Melbourne, Australia 2016) 264 pp
by Enes Işık
- 432-434 Book review: Book review: Sergio Cesaratto, Heterodox Challenges in Economics: Theoretical Issues and the Crisis of the Eurozone (Springer, Cham, Switzerland 2020) 296 pp
by Karsten Kohler
April 2021, Volume 9, Issue 2
- 165-174 The macroeconomics of COVID-19: a two-sector interpretation
by Halvor Mehlum & Ragnar Torvik
- 175-203 Thirlwall's law is not a tautology, but some empirical tests of it nearly are
by Robert A. Blecker
- 204-231 A macroeconomic critique of integrated assessment environmental models: the case of Brazil
by Rafael Cattan & Florent McIsaac
- 232-252 External balance sheets of emerging economies: low-yielding assets, high-yielding liabilities
by Yılmaz Akyüz
- 253-269 Questioning the effect of the real exchange rate on growth: new evidence from Mexico
by Florencia Médici & AgustÃn Mario & Alejandro Fiorito
- 270-288 Expectations and exchange rates in a Keynes–Harvey model: an analysis of the Brazilian case from 2002 to 2017
by Leandro Vieira Araújo Lima & Fábio Henrique Bittes Terra
- 289-291 Book review: Adem Yavuz Elveren, The Economics of Military Spending: A Marxist Perspective (Routledge, London, UK and New York, NY, USA 2019) 224 pp
by David M. Fields
- 292-295 Book review: Naomi Lamoreaux and Ian Shapiro (eds), The Bretton Woods Agreements: Together with Scholarly Commentaries and Essential Historical Documents (Yale University Press, New Haven, CT, USA 2019) 504 pp
by Adrien Faudot
January 2021, Volume 9, Issue 1
October 2020, Volume 8, Issue 4
- 469-471 In memoriam: Julio López Gallardo (22 September 1941 – 3 May 2020)
by Gerardo Fujii-Gambero & Juan Carlos Moreno-Brid & Carlo Panico & MartÃn Puchet Anyul
- 472–493-472–493 What's wrong with Modern Money Theory: macro and political economic restraints on deficit-financed fiscal policy
by Thomas Palley
- 494–511-494–511 Beyond Modern Money Theory: a Post-Keynesian approach to the currency hierarchy, monetary sovereignty, and policy space
by Daniela Prates
- 512–535-512–535 Can tax competition boost demand? Causes and consequences of the global race to the bottom in corporate tax rates
by Ryan Woodgate
- 536–559-536–559 Employment hysteresis: an argument for avoiding front-loaded fiscal consolidations in the eurozone
by Paulo R. Mota & Abel L.C. Fernandes & Paulo B. Vasconcelos
- 560–588-560–588 Peripheral Europe beyond the Troika: assessing the ‘success’ of structural reforms in driving the Spanish recovery
by Luis Cárdenas & Paloma Villanueva & Ignacio Alvarez & Jorge Uxó
- 589–615-589–615 Macroeconomic performance under evolutionary dynamics of employee profit-sharing
by Gilberto Tadeu Lima & Jaylson Jair da Silveira
- 616–621-616–621 Fiscal policy in a depressed economy: a note
by Robert Rowthorn
- 622–623-622–623 Book review: Aleksandr V. Gevorkyan, Transition Economies: Transformation, Development, and Society in Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union (Routledge, New York, NY, USA 2018) 272 pp
by Gonzalo Luis Fernández
- 624–628-624–628 Book review: Esteban Pérez Caldentey, Roy Harrod (Great Thinkers in Economics, Palgrave Macmillan, London, UK 2019) 455 pp
by VÃctor Manuel Isidro Luna & Francisco Antonio MartÃnez Hernández
July 2020, Volume 8, Issue 3
April 2020, Volume 8, Issue 2
- 147-167 A Structuralist and Institutionalist developmental assessment of and reaction to New Developmentalism
by Carlos Aguiar de Medeiros
- 168-177 New and Classical Developmentalism compared: a response to Medeiros
by Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira
- 178-194 Modeling the real exchange rate: looking for evidence of wage-share effect
by Verónica De Jesús Romo & Julio López Gallardo
- 195-219 Making sense of Piketty's 'fundamental laws' in a Post-Keynesian framework: the transitional dynamics of wealth inequality
by Stefan Ederer & Miriam Rehm
- 220-239 Autonomous expenditures and induced investment: a panel test of the Sraffian supermultiplier model in European countries
by José A. Pérez-Montiel & Carles Manera Erbina
- 240-267 Distribution and capacity utilization in the United States: evidence from state-level data
by Luke Petach
- 268-286 Using non-linear estimation strategies to test an extended version of the Goodwin model on the US economy
by Julio Fernando Costa Santos & Ricardo Azevedo Araujo
- 287-302 Understanding the Brazilian demand regime: a Kaleckian approach
by Bruno Thiago Tomio
- 303-303 Corrigendum
by Thomas I. Palley
- 304-306 Book review: Jane D'Arista, All Fall Down: Debt, Deregulation and Financial Crises (Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2018) 240 pp
by Gökçer Özgür
- 307-309 Book review: John Smithin, Rethinking the Theory of Money, Credit, and Macroeconomics (Lexington Books, Lanham, MD, USA 2018) 239 pp
by Gregory A. Krohn
January 2020, Volume 8, Issue 1
- 1-20 The Godley-Tobin lecture
by Robert Rowthorn
- 21-22 Do current times vindicate Keynes and is New Keynesian macroeconomics Keynesian?
by Thomas I. Palley & Esteban Pérez Caldentey & MatÃas Vernengo
- 23-35 Keynesian economics: can it return if it never died?
by Barry Eichengreen
- 36-45 THe much-exaggerated death of Keynesian economics
by Robert W. Dimand
- 46-60 Was Keynesian economics ever dead? If so, has it been resurrected?
by Steven M. Fazzari
- 61-83 Reviving Keynesianism: the modelling of the financial system makes the difference
by Peter Bofinger
- 84-101 The return of Keynes and the Phillips curve in Latin America: evidence from four countries
by Esteban Pérez Caldentey & Nathan Perry & MatÃas Vernengo
- 102-118 Tobin (1975) meets rational expectations
by Emiliano Libman
- 119-137 Why does the history of economic thought neglect Post-Keynesian economics?
by Danielle Guizzo
- 138-141 Book review: Ann E. Davis, Money as a Social Institution: The Institutional Development of Capitalism (Routledge, New York, NY, USA 2017) 208 pp
by Victor Manuel Isidro Luna
- 142-145 Book review: Darrell M. West, The Future of Work: Robots, AI, and Automation (Brookings Institution Press, Washington, DC, USA 2018) 205 pp
by Kevin Cashman
October 2019, Volume 7, Issue 4
- 427–428-427–428 Thirlwall's law at 40
by Esteban Pérez Caldentey & MatÃas Vernengo
- 429-443 Why Thirlwall's law is not a tautology: more on the debate over the law
by J.S.L. McCombie
- 444-462 Thirlwall's law and the terms of trade: a parsimonious extension of the balanceof-payments-constrained growth model
by Ignacio Perrotini-Hernández & Juan Alberto Vázquez-Muñoz
- 463-485 Thirlwall's law and the terms of trade: a parsimonious extension of the balanceof-payments-constrained growth model
by Esteban Pérez Caldentey & Juan Carlos Moreno-Brid
- 486-497 Thirlwall's law, external debt sustainability, and the balance-of-payments-constrained level and growth rates of output
by Gustavo Bhering & Franklin Serrano & Fabio Freitas
- 498-516 Growth transitions and the balance-of-payments constraint
by Excellent Mhlongo & Kevin S. Nell
- 517-536 New Structuralism and the balance-ofpayments constraint
by Gabriel Porcile & Giuliano Toshiro Yajima
- 537-553 Is Indonesia's growth rate balance-ofpayments-constrained? A time-varying estimation approach
by Jesus Felipe & Matteo Lanzafame & Gemma Estrada
- 554-567 Thoughts on balance-of-paymentsconstrained growth after 40 years
by A.P. Thirlwall
- 568-569 James Crotty, Capitalism, Macroeconomics and Reality: Understanding Globalization, Financialization, Competition and Crisis (Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2017) 448 pp
by Juan MatÃas De Lucchi
July 2019, Volume 7, Issue 3
- 275-291 Convergence in a neo-Kaleckian model with endogenous technical progress and autonomous demand growth
by Won Jun Nah & Marc Lavoie
- 292-307 A Neo-Kaleckian model of skill-biased technological change and income distribution
by Antonio Soares Martins Neto & Rafael Saulo Marques Ribeiro
- 308-320 Some obstacles to wage-led growth
by J.E. King
- 321-340 Who should bear the pain of price competition? A Kaleckian approach
by Shinya Fujita
- 341-360 Differences in wage-determination systems between regular and non-regular employment in a Kaleckian model
by Ryunosuke Sonoda & Hiroaki Sasaki
- 361-368 Risk-sharing by financial markets in federal systems: a critique of existing empirical assessments
by Sebastian Dullien
- 369-387 The process of endogenous liquidity in developing economies: the case of Mexico
by Luis Alfredo Castillo Polanco & Ted P. Schmidt
- 388-401 Interest-rate causality between the federal funds rate and long-run market interest rates
by Hongkil Kim
- 402-418 The Post-Keynesian endogenous-money supply: evidence from Poland
by Gracjan Robert Bachurewicz
- 419-422 Book review: Barry Eichengreen, Arnaud Mehl and Livia Chiţu, How Global Currencies Work: Past, Present, and Future (Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, USA 2017) 272 pp
by Aleksandr V. Gevorkyan
- 423-426 Book review: Ilene Grabel, When Things Don't Fall Apart: Global Financial Governance and Developmental Finance in an Age of Productive Incoherence (MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, USA 2018) 400 pp
by Guillaume Vallet
April 2019, Volume 7, Issue 2
January 2019, Volume 7, Issue 1
October 2018, Volume 6, Issue 4
July 2018, Volume 6, Issue 3
- 289–306-289–306 Is planet Earth as a whole likely to be wage-led?
by Arslan Razmi
- 307–332-307–332 The impact of economic policy and structural change on gender employment inequality in Latin America, 1990–2010
by Elissa Braunstein & Stephanie Seguino
- 333-351 Growth dilemmas in open middle-income economies: a reflection on Mexico's recent experience
by Julio López G.
- 352-368 Income distribution and the balance of payments: a formal reconstruction of some Argentinian structuralist contributions- Part I: Technical dependency
by Ariel Dvoskin & Germán David Feldman
- 369-386 Income distribution and the balance of payments: a formal reconstruction of some Argentinian structuralist contributions - Part II: Financial dependency
by Ariel Dvoskin & Germán David Feldman
- 387-410 The financial instability hypothesis and the paradox of debt: a microeconometric approach for Latin America
by Alejandro González & Esteban Pérez-Caldentey
- 411-412 Book Review: Piero Ferri, Aggregate Demand, Inequality and Instability (Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2016) 192 pp
by Jesper Jespersen
- 413-417 Book Review: Edith T. Penrose, The Large International Firm in Developing Countries: The International Petroleum Industry, First Edition (Routledge, Abingdon, UK and New York, NY, USA 1968 [2013]) 311 pp
by Alberto D'Ansi Mendoza España
April 2018, Volume 6, Issue 2
- 159-179 A predator–prey model to explain cycles in credit-led economies
by Óscar Dejuán & Daniel Dejuán-Bitriá
- 180-201 Inflation targeting when devaluations are contractionary
by Emiliano Libman
- 202-220 A Minskyan critique of the financial constraint approach to financialization
by Ilhan Dögüs
- 221-239 The financial crisis in the eurozone: a balance-of-payments crisis with a single currency?
by Eladio Febrero & Jorge Uxó & Fernando Bermejo
- 240-251 The nature of the eurocrisis: a reply to Febrero, Uxó and Bermejo
by Sergio Cesaratto
- 252-254 A rejoinder to Sergio Cesaratto
by Eladio Febrero & Jorge Uxó & Fernando Bermejo
- 255-263 Rebalancing Keynes's contribution
by Bradley Bordiss & Vishnu Padayachee
- 264-265 Comment on 'Rebalancing Keynes's contribution' by Bordiss and Padayachee
by Peter Temin & David Vines
- 266-281 John Maynard Keynes: the economist as investor
by Carlo Cristiano & Maria Cristina Marcuzzo
- 282-284 Book review: Pasquale Tridico, Inequality in Financial Capitalism (Routledge, London, UK and New York, NY, USA 2017) 236 pp
by Riccardo Pariboni
- 285-288 Book review: Jack Reardon (ed.), The Handbook of Pluralist Economics Education (Routledge, Abingdon, UK and New York, NY, USA 2009) 304 pp
by J.W. Mason
January 2018, Volume 6, Issue 1
- 1-21 Rethinking macroeconomic theory before the next crisis
by Marc Lavoie
- 22-33 The new macroeconomics has no clothes
by Colin Rogers
- 34-61 Have we been here before? Phases of financialization within the twentieth century in the US
by Apostolos Fasianos & Diego Guevara & Christos Pierros
- 62-82 The endogenous finance of global-dollar-based financial fragility in the 2000s: a Minskyan approach
by Junji Tokunaga & Gerald Epstein
- 83-95 The US dollar and its payments system: architecture and political implications
by Adrien Faudot
- 96-113 Financialisation and corporate investments: the Indian case
by Sunanda Sen & Zico Dasgupta
- 114-147 The static Sraffian multiplier for the Greek economy: evidence from the Supply and Use Table for the year 2010
by Theodore Mariolis & George Soklis
- 148-151 Book review: Valeria Mosini, Reassessing the Paradigm of Economics: Bringing Positive Economics into the Normative Framework (Routledge, London, UK 2012) 164 pp
by João Felippe Cury Marinho Mathias
- 152-156 Book review: Louis-Philippe Rochon and Sergio Rossi (eds), An Introduction to Macroeconomics: A Heterodox Approach to Economic Analysis (Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2014) 432 pp
by Daniele Tori
- 157-158 Book review: Rickard P.F. Holt (ed.), The Selected Letters of John Kenneth Galbraith (Cambridge University Press, New York, NY, USA 2017) 744 pp
by Paul Davidson
October 2017, Volume 5, Issue 4
- 493–502-493–502 Critical thinking within a multi-paradigmatic approach: introduction to the symposium on innovations in heterodox economics education
by Geoffrey E. Schneider & Daniel A. Underwood
- 503–518-503–518 Teaching the Greek crisis (and more) from the perspectives of competing models
by John T. Harvey
- 519–532-519–532 The use of dichotomies in introductory economics
by Mathieu Dufour & Ian J. Seda-Irizarry
- 533–550-533–550 Enriching undergraduate economics: curricular and pedagogical integration of heterodox approaches from within
by Tara Natarajan
- 551–562-551–562 Blasphemy in the classroom: in search of microeconomics textbooks for heterodox instructors
by Erik Dean & Mitchell R. Green
- 563–575-563–575 The road they share: the social conflict element in Marx, Keynes and Kalecki
by Pablo Gabriel Bortz
- 576–585-576–585 From Marx to the Keynesian revolution: the key role of finance
by Jan Toporowski
- 586–630-586–630 Estimating Keynesian models of business fluctuations using Bayesian Maximum Likelihood
by Christian Schoder
- 631–647-631–647 Debt and investment in the Keen model: a reappraisal of modelling Minsky
by Antonin Pottier & Adrien Nguyen-Huu
- 648–651-648–651 Book review: Joseph E. Stiglitz, The Euro: How a Common Currency Threatens the Future of Europe (W.W. Norton, New York, NY, USA 2016)416 pp.; and Markus K. Brunnermeier, Harold James and Jean-Pierre Landau, The Euro and the Battle of Ideas (Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, USA 2016) 440 pp
by Steven Pressman
- 652–655-652–655 Book review: Michael Jacobs and Mariana Mazzucato (eds), Rethinking Capitalism: Economics and Policy for Sustainable and Inclusive Growth (Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, UK 2016) 224 pp
by Melanie G. Long
July 2017, Volume 5, Issue 3
- 303-306 Wage- versus profit-led growth after 25 years: an introduction to the fourth special issue
by Mark Setterfield
- 307-335 Wage-led, debt-led growth in an open economy
by Esteban Pérez Caldentey & MatÃas Vernengo
- 336-359 Weaknesses of 'wage-led growth'
by Peter Skott
- 360-425 Wages, prices, and employment in a Keynesian long run
by Stephen A. Marglin
- 426-438 Wage- and profit-led regimes under modern finance: an exploration
by Amit Bhaduri & Srinivas Raghavendra
- 439-458 Did fiscal consolidation cause the double-dip recession in the euro area?
by Philipp Heimberger
- 459-480 Macroeconomic imbalances and the eurozone crisis: the impact of credit expansion on asset prices
by Gökçer Özgür & Emel Memis¸
- 481-488 Book review: Carl Chiarella, Peter Flaschel and Willi Semmler, Reconstructing Keynesian Macroeconomics (Volume 1: Partial Perspectives, 2012, 400 pp.; Volume 2: Integrated Approaches, 2013, 512 pp.; Volume 3: Macroeconomic Activity, Banking and Financial Markets, 2015, 390 pp.; Routledge, Abingdon, UK and New York, NY, USA)
by Matheus R. Grasselli
- 489-492 Book review: Tarron Khemraj, Money, Banking and the Foreign Exchange Market in Emerging Economies (Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2014) 162 pp
by Francisco Martinez-Hernandez
April 2017, Volume 5, Issue 2
- 143-145 Wage- versus profit-led growth after 25 years: an introduction to the third special issue
by Mark Setterfield
- 146-169 Inequality and growth in neo-Kaleckian and Cambridge growth theory
by Thomas I. Palley
- 170-195 Income inequality, the wage share, and economic growth
by Amitava Krishna Dutt
- 196-217 Longer-run distributive cycles: wavelet decompositions for the US, 1948–2011
by José Barrales & Rudiger von Arnim
- 218-238 The Bhaduri–Marglin post-Kaleckian model in the history of distribution and growth theories: an assessment by means of model closures
by Eckhard Hein
- 239-258 Government spending composition, aggregate demand, growth, and distribution
by Daniele Tavani & Luca Zamparelli
- 259-275 Wage increases, transfers, and the socially determined income distribution in the USA
by Lance Taylor & Armon Rezai & Rishabh Kumar & Nelson Barbosa & Laura Carvalho
- 276-299 Real-wage versus wage-share targets in an open-economy model of the wage and price dynamics
by Søren Harck
- 300-301 Book review: Jean-Luc Bailly, Alvaro Cencini and Sergio Rossi (eds), Quantum Macroeconomics: The Legacy of Bernard Schmitt (Routledge, London, UK and New York, NY, USA 2017) 202 pp
by Andrea Carrera
January 2017, Volume 5, Issue 1