Forthcoming Talks

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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.

How To Un-Marry a Millionaire

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I’m read­ing and enjoy­ing some “chick-lit” at the moment–or as a review­er on Ama­zon called it, “the per­fect blend of chick-lit and bitch-lit”–entitled “How To Un-Mar­ry a Mil­lion­aire”.

HTMAMcover

Per­son­al dis­clo­sure time: the book is the first nov­el by my good friend, script-writer and film pro­duc­er Bil­lie Mor­ton. I’ve been mean­ing to read it for a while now, and it’s cur­rent­ly sup­ply­ing wel­come relief from the tedi­um of read­ing ECB min­utes as I draft my next Busi­ness Spec­ta­tor col­umn.

Short term lecturer position at Kingston University

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Please cir­cu­late wide­ly – the dead­line for appli­ca­tions is 22 Sep­tem­ber! A short term lec­tur­ing posi­tion has just been adver­tised at Kingston Uni­ver­si­ty, where I am now Head of Eco­nom­ics, Pol­i­tics and His­to­ry. This is a fixed-term post to 30 June 2015. Though the peri­od is brief, it is an oppor­tu­ni­ty to work in our very het­ero­dox-friend­ly depart­ment.

The adver­tise­ment is here:

http://www.jobs.ac.uk/job/AJN000/lec­tur­er-in-eco­nom­ic­s/

To apply, click here: https://ig24.i‑grasp.com/fe/tpl_kingstonuniversity01.asp?newms=jj&id=86495&aid=14193

Details on Kingston’s Polit­i­cal Econ­o­my Research group can be found here: http://fass.kingston.ac.uk/research/perg/

For more details, please get in touch with me via  steve.keen AT kingston.ac.uk.

 

Time for a Copernican revolution in economics

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The glob­al finan­cial cri­sis took the vast major­i­ty of the eco­nom­ics pro­fes­sion by sur­prise. Though there were indi­vid­ual main­stream econ­o­mists — such as Robert Shiller and Joseph Stiglitz — who claim to have warned of the cri­sis, no main­stream eco­nom­ic mod­el fore­saw any­thing like what even­tu­at­ed in 2007. In fact, main­stream mod­el pre­dic­tions led to politi­cians being advised to expect tran­quil eco­nom­ic con­di­tions ahead. The OECD’s advice in its June 2007 Eco­nom­ic Out­look was typ­i­cal:

Considering Economics? Consider Kingston

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If you know any UK sec­ondary school stu­dent who is con­sid­er­ing doing eco­nom­ics at Uni­ver­si­ty, please refer them to this blog post.

This Thurs­day, you’ll find out your A‑Level results. What­ev­er they are, if you are con­sid­er­ing doing an eco­nom­ics degree, then I want you to con­sid­er doing it at Kingston Uni­ver­si­ty.

At first glance, that’s some­thing you would­n’t do if you had a choice, because Kingston rates well down the list in the Guardian League Table. Why choose Kingston—which is at the bot­tom of the Guardian’s list—if, for exam­ple, your A‑level results would get you into Oxford, which is at the top?

The truth about Australia’s unemployment rate ‘shocker’

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Hey, great news! Australia’s unem­ploy­ment rate fell by 0.4 per cent last month! Did you hear?

You didn’t? That’s fun­ny. I was sure Joe would tell you.

What do you mean, it rose by 0.4 per cent? Oh, you’re talk­ing about the ABS fig­ure! Yeah, that’s bad, but if you look at what hap­pened to the Roy Mor­gan unem­ploy­ment rate, the news is real­ly good: it’s fall­en from 10.6 per cent to 10.2 per cent! If this keeps up, pret­ty soon unem­ploy­ment in Aus­tralia will be below 10 per cent!

Help create a graphic novel version of Debunking Economics

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Genevieve Tran, who blogs at Mon­ey Big and Small, is team­ing up with graph­ic artist Miguel Guer­ra and Suzy Dias, who do the car­toons on IDEAe­co­nom­ics and pro­duce the indi-com­ic Super Cor­po­rate Heroes, are team­ing up to pro­duce a graph­ic nov­el ver­sion of Debunk­ing Eco­nom­ics.

Genevieve is putting togeth­er a video and has sent out the fol­low­ing call:

A request to world-wide friends: if you don’t remem­ber ever learn­ing about impor­tant things like how banks, debt or mon­ey work (=Eco­nom­ics, Finance!), in high school, could I ask you to sub­mit a video of your­self shrug­ging and shak­ing your head? It’s for a kick­starter video to learn about Eco­nom­ics in a non-hor­ri­ble way: thru com­ic books! Yes, I’ll give you a first copy!  Any video qual­i­ty. H.264, MPEG‑2, MPEG‑4, DV, and AIC for­mat.

The revolt of (part of) the top 1% of the top 1%

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What are your pre­con­cep­tions about the author of a book with the title The Next Eco­nom­ic Dis­as­ter: Why It’s Com­ing and How to Avoid It? Aca­d­e­m­ic? Left­ist? Anti-cap­i­tal­ist? Anti-banker cer­tain­ly?

Pre­pare to drop them all, because the author is none of the above. Tak­ing the last first, the major­i­ty of his career has been in bank­ing — and as a founder and CEO.

Click here to read the rest of this post.

Graph for Why the super rich are running scared of inequality

 

Are the students revolting, or is it economics?

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Main­stream econ­o­mists have long ignored the dynam­ics of pri­vate debt, mon­ey and banks to their detri­ment. Now more than ever, a real­is­tic and non-ortho­dox approach to eco­nom­ics is need­ed.

Last week I made my first over­seas trip on which I ticked the box ‘Aus­tralian res­i­dent depart­ing per­ma­nent­ly’. It’s giv­en me cause to reflect on my career as an aca­d­e­m­ic econ­o­mist (and part-time jour­nal­ist) in Aus­tralia.

The good, the bad and the ugly of the Murray inquiry

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The Murray inquiry's observations on financial advice, household debt and super are commendable, but its boneheaded proposal for the government to underwrite RMBS is a concern.

A gov­ern­ment report is always a Parson’s Egg, and I’ll start with the parts of this one that were excel­lent. These were its wari­ness about and obser­va­tions on super­an­nu­a­tion, finan­cial advice and house­hold debt.