I have a ridiculously large number of public talks coming up this month. It all starts on Wednesday September 10th, and doesn’t let up until Sunday September 21st—the day before Induction Week begins at Kingston University, where I am now Head of Economics, Politics and History, and committed to making Kingston the world’s leading centre for pluralist education and research in economics. Check the links below if you’re able to make any of these talks in, in order: Sheffield; New York; Glasgow; Kingston; and Tubingen, Germany. I’ll cover talks in October in a subsequent post.
Wednesday 10th September: Sheffield
The University of Sheffield Law and Monetary Theory 1st Annual Conference: Regulation after the Financial Crisis
This is an invitation only conference, but it will be followed by a public lecture by Randy Wray on Thursday September 11th from 18:00 to 19:30 (BST):
Public Lecture: L Randall Wray — Modern Money Theory & the Job Guarantee
The location is Sheffield Institute for Corporate and Commercial Law (SICCL). Click on the link above to register. I can’t make it because I have to leave in time to fly to the next event (see below), but I do recommend attending. Europe needs sensible anti-austerity arguments.
Friday to Sunday September 12th to 14th: New York
The 2014 Rethinking Economics NYC conference
I’m one of a ridiculously impressive list of speakers, including Paul Krugman, Jamie Galbraith, Philip Mirowski, Deirdre McCloskey, Neva Goodwin, Julie Nelson, Dean Baker, Richard Wolff, and many others. This is an entirely student-run conference. Click on the link above to register
Tuesday September 16th: Glasgow
I’m speaking to Freshers and members of the Glasgow University Real World Economics Society at 6pm in Lecture Theatre A of the Boyd Orr building. To find out more, click on the link above or email gurealworldeconomicssociety@gmail.com. Click here for the GURWES newsletter. The event is open to anyone, not just University of Glasgow students.
The GLasgow RWES, with the unreal backdrop of Glasgow University
Thursday 18 September 2014
Inequality, debt and demand workshop at Kingston University. Room JG3003, John Galsworthy building, Penrhyn Road campus, Penrhyn Road, Kingston upon Thames, Surrey KT1 2EE from 9.30am to 5.40pm.
This will be my first talk at my new University, where we are developing what we intend to be the best pluralist economics program on the planet, for both undergraduates and postgraduates. I’m presenting a paper focusing on one aspect of my Minsky model of a debt-induced breakdown: that workers’ share of output declines as the private debt to GDP ratio rises and a crisis approaches, even though (in my model) firms were the ones taking on debt.
Professor Engelbert Stockhammer, also of Kingston, is chairing the seminar and presenting too, along with Dirk Bezemer of “No One Saw It Coming” fame and several others. The seminar is open to all, and free.
Download the programme for the day (PDF).
Friday September 19th to Sunday September 21st
First international conference of the International Student Initiative for Pluralism in Economics at the Global Ethic Institute in Tubingen, Germany. I will give a two hour lecture on economics after the crisis entitled “The overdue Copernican Revolution in Economics”, at 6:00 PM on Saturday 20th in the Weltethos-Institut (Institute for World Ethics) in Tuebingen and there will be numerous discussions about how to promote the pluralist cause there. If you can make it, do register and come along.
After that, I get a breather for a whole two weeks before I give a talk in Bristol at West England University on Thursday October 2nd.
Thursday October 2nd
I’m giving a talk on “Incorporating banks, debt and money into macroeconomics” at the Economics staff seminar there. Click on the link to find out more.
There are more talks coming up in October—including book launches in France and Mexico—but I’ll cover those in a later post.