Macroeconomics on a “Platypus Moment”

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Luci Ellis of the RBA recent­ly pre­sent­ed a paper on finan­cial reg­u­la­tion:

The Platypus Moment: Rents, Risks and the Right Responses

I haven’t had a chance to read it yet; that said, I like the cri­tique writ­ten by “Deep T” on the Mac­robusi­ness blog:

The Platypus blues

Renegade Economist Interview

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I was inter­viewed by the Rene­gade Econ­o­mist when I was in Eng­land recent­ly.

I can’t bet­ter the Rene­gade Econ­o­mist’s own expla­na­tion of their role and mem­ber­ship:

A Rene­gade Econ­o­mist is an indi­vid­ual who — through their actions — pos­i­tive­ly dis­rupts how we live, inter­act and do busi­ness.

Impos­si­ble to iden­ti­fy by demo­graph­ics, gen­der or back­ground the Rene­gade Econ­o­mist can­not be pigeon­holed by social sta­tus or mate­r­i­al trap­pings. These are peo­ple in every indus­try who have an over­rid­ing desire: to elim­i­nate the glar­ing dis­con­nect between who they are and what they do.

The Poolroom week ending 14th October 2011

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World Econ­o­my

Rep­re­sen­ta­tive in Chi­na, RBA, 30th Sept

The Reserve Bank of Aus­tralia is estab­lish­ing rep­re­sen­ta­tion in Chi­na. An office, locat­ed with­in the Aus­tralian Embassy in Bei­jing, will begin oper­a­tions in mid Octo­ber and will assist in the Bank’s ongo­ing mon­i­tor­ing of eco­nom­ic and finan­cial con­di­tions in Chi­na. It will also help build rela­tion­ships with var­i­ous gov­ern­ment agen­cies and pri­vate enti­ties.’

Be Afraid, The Econ­o­mist, 1st Oct

Unless politi­cians act more bold­ly, the world econ­o­my will keep head­ing towards a black hole.

Here we go again, The Econ­o­mist, 8th Oct

Behavioral Finance Lecture 08: Modeling Endogenous Money

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Lecture 8: Introduction to dynamic modeling. (Slides: CfESI Subscribers  Part 1Part 2; Debtwatch Subscribers Part 1 Part 2)

Explain­ing the “Mon­e­tary Cir­cuit The­o­ry” of cap­i­tal­ism. I show that the dilem­mas that hob­bled Cir­cuit The­o­ry for so long were sim­ple mis­takes in dynam­ic mod­el­ling, which reflect poor­ly not so much on Cir­cuit the­o­rists them­selves, but econ­o­mists in gen­er­al, since even non-ortho­dox econ­o­mists are locked into the sta­t­ic ways of think­ing they were taught by neo­clas­si­cal lec­tur­ers. This lec­ture gives a very brief intro­duc­tion to the basic ele­ments of dynam­ic modeling–differential equa­tions and sys­tems engineering–and begins explain­ing QED, the pro­to­type mon­e­tary dynam­ic mod­el­ing tool devel­oped by blog mem­ber Sir­ius.

Buying Debunking Economics II in the UK

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I’ve just been informed by Zed Books that there is an incor­rect link, either in my blog or the excel­lent George Mon­biot Guardian arti­cle which links to it:

It’s in all our inter­ests to under­stand how to stop anoth­er Great Depres­sion

for sales in the UK.

Zed’s sales rep­re­sen­ta­tive is Ruben Mootoosamy, and the best email for sales con­tacts is sales@zedbooks.net.

Debunking Economics II Launch Video

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I’ve final­ly had a fast enough inter­net link to upload the video to Youtube. I’ll add more detail lat­er when I get back to Syd­ney, but for now this will do.

There’s one tech­ni­cal glitch: the Gus­tav Tuck The­atre had a plas­ma screen rather than a data pro­jec­tor, and the refresh rate of the screen result­ed in a very bad flick­er on the video record­ing. How­ev­er the talks–by myself and Ann Pettifor–are easy enough to fol­low.

Signed copies of Debunking Economics II

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This is to every­one who has signed on to the blog at a lev­el that includ­ed receiv­ing a copy of Debunk­ing Eco­nom­ics II–whether eBook, paper­back or hard­cov­er:

In lieu of not get­ting the mechan­ics of this orga­nized in time to send copies out with the launch, I am going to send every­one a signed phys­i­cal copy of the book. eBooks are too new for send­ing of those to be fea­si­ble except in the USA–and the eBook isn’t avail­able yet any­way. The sig­na­ture is by way of rec­om­pense for not get­ting deliv­ery togeth­er in time.

Live Vidcasting Launch of Debunking Economics II

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If you can’t be at the launch of Debunk­ing Eco­nom­ics II tonight, but you’d like to be, hope­ful­ly you’ll be able to watch it by click­ing on the link below. I have nev­er tried this before, so it might not work, but I am going to attempt a live pod­cast.

Click on the link  below from 6pm tonight GMT time. It won’t show any­thing before­hand (apart from an occa­sion­al test broadcast–and since I’m no oil paint­ing, I would­n’t rec­om­mend watch­ing it!)–and if the usu­al tech­ni­cal grem­lins strike, it might not show any­thing at 6pm Lon­don time either–but it’s worth a go.

The Poolroom week ending 30th September 2011

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A wild fort­night of tur­bu­lence in the exot­ic world of finan­cial…

AUSTRLIAN/GLOBAL RELATED NEWS LINKS:

Sharp drop for econ­o­my, IMF warns (http://www.theage.com.au/business/sharp-drop-for-economy-imf-warns-20110920–1kjn6.html)

, The Age, 20 Sept

First and fore­most, the IMF has down­grad­ed GDP fore­casts, ‘warn­ing of a new glob­al reces­sion that would hit com­mod­i­ty prices and dri­ve mil­lions world­wide into unem­ploy­ment.’ Now sug­gest­ing growth to be “anaemic” in advance economies (1.6%). ‘How­ev­er, this assumes Euro­pean pol­i­cy­mak­ers con­tain the cri­sis in the euro area periph­ery, that US pol­i­cy­mak­ers strike a judi­cious bal­ance between sup­port for the econ­o­my and medi­um-term fis­cal con­sol­i­da­tion, and that volatil­i­ty in glob­al finan­cial mar­kets does not esca­late’ the fund said.