By Geoff Davies
[This article is based on extracts from The Nature of the Beast: how economists mistook wild horses for a rocking chair eBook]
By Geoff Davies
[This article is based on extracts from The Nature of the Beast: how economists mistook wild horses for a rocking chair eBook]
Click here for data in Excel: Debtwatch; CfESI
Click here for more data in Excel: Debtwatch; CfESI
Click here for this post in PDF: Debtwatch; CfESI
Who says Twitter is just fluff? Well, I did before Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert persuaded me to sign up. I’ve since realized that it’s rather like a modern version of the old-fashioned news wire services for the public. Choose who to follow, and they’ll keep you updated on things that interest you. If that happens to be Kylie’s waistline or Kurt’s fidelity, that’s your problem, not Twitter’s.
By Philip Soos
Source: The Conversation
In times of financial collapses, banks and governments are painted as the villains. But what about economists?
~ dgies
There is, however, a third villain that bears primary responsibility for these disasters. While politicians, government bureaucrats, financiers, bankers and the real estate lobby have come under withering assault in the eyes of enraged publics, the economics profession has largely escaped the fury. Given the importance of this profession in structuring economic and financial policy, the lack of attention and accountability poses an interesting question as to why this is.
Kim Hill interviewed me about Debunking Economics on her Radio New Zealand National program “Saturday Morning” today. It was probably the most in-depth interview I’ve yet done on the topics covered by the book. This was my first experience of Kim as an interviewer, and I can recommend her program unreservedly after it.
Steve Keen’s Debtwatch Podcast
You can also download the podcast from here:
Here is great short video interview with the Wall Street Journal explaining why 10 year US Fed bond yields are so low…
Krugman would definitely subtitle a post like this “Wonkish”!
Click here for this post in PDF: Debtwatch; CfESI
This is a paper I’ve recently submitted by invitation to an Australian economics journal. I have been very quiet on the blog while finishing this in the last 2 weeks. I’m likely to remain quiet for the next fortnight, since I leave for the Fields Institute in Toronto on June 1st, where I’ll be working for a month with the mathematicians there to analyze and refine my various models of financial instability. Grasselli and Costa Lima have already done a brilliant job analyzing my 1995 model in this paper.
For those who are unfamiliar with this quote, it is taken from The Fountainhead, by Ayn Rand, and I recommend it as a highly amusing fictional read. I do find it rather ironic that this quote is easily applicable to Professor Steve Keen’s constructively creative approach to economic theory. Sadly, neoclassical economics— today’s conventional economic current–is the second hander of this defunct “free market” economic postulate that Ayn Rand helped cultivate through her far right-wing philosophy of Objectivism. If neoclassical economics is a religion, then Objectivism is more of a cult! Even more amusing than her fictional novels themselves, was that Ayn Rand refused to drink her own Kool-Aid when she used the very welfare system that she spent her life campaigning against.
Mish Shedlock has just let us know that his wife Joanne, who has been suffering from the degenerative Lou Gehrig’s Disease, has just passed away.
Mish has kept this problem to himself until the final months, when he launched an appeal to raise funds for research into this disease. He is continuing that campaign now, so please consider making a donation to assist (or buying a lottery ticket).
David Burchell provides his interpretation of the Keen vs. Krugman debate on RadioNational Counterpoint with Michael Duff and Paul Comrie-Thomson.
By Michael Edesess
Source: Advisor Perspectives
A foundational principle of modern economics is that the creation of credit leads to economic growth. That precept underlies need for quantitative easing, and it is central to the question of what role monetary policy can and should play in stimulating a faster recovery from the Great Recession. It is also the subject of a debate between one of the world’s most prominent economic scholars, Paul Krugman, and a feisty Australian economist, Steve Keen.