Thanks again to Benny Sutton for producing a brief interview debunking the “population growth causes house price rises” argument:
I decided to add my recent Powerpoint Presentation to the mix:
Thanks again to Benny Sutton for producing a brief interview debunking the “population growth causes house price rises” argument:
I decided to add my recent Powerpoint Presentation to the mix:
My presentation at today’s debate is available below (the PPT slides are here). ABC Lateline Business ran a report on the debate which is now available on their website: Click for the transcript+video or just the video. In the next few days I’ll post an entry on asset prices (in both the USA and Australia) and the Credit Impulse, which will go into the arguments presented here in much more detail.
Steve Keen’s Debtwatch PodcastI did an interview with Phil Dobbie from BT Australia on the Australian economy this morning. You can hear it on Phil’s program on BT, or on iTunes, or click below:
And one with Peter Schiff on the US economy and whether it will face inflation or deflation:
Steve Keen’s Debtwatch Podcast
Ordinarily I’d back these up with some data graphs, but I’m in even more of a hurry than usual this week, so I’ll just leave you with the audios.
I’ve just posted a new video to the ProfKeen YouTube Channel; watch it there or click below. Thanks again to Benny Sutton for the superb production!
I’m taking part in the “Property Bubble Crash Debate” next Tuesday at the Wesley Centre, 220 Pitt Street, Sydney, 12pm-2pm.
There are 4 speakers for the “No Bubble/No Crash” case”
And 3 for the “Bubble and Crash” case:
Recession Sessions is an album of economics-themed songs dedicated to the Great Recession. It’s pioneering the genre of “financial folk”, and raising money for the Somerville Homeless Coalition, a homelessness activism group in Massachusetts.
After all the seriousness on this blog, I’m glad to have some artistic commentary on the Great Recession. Often our tribal memories of events like this are stored in music rather than analysis–remember “Hey Buddy, Can You Spare a Dime?”:
They used to tell me I was building a dream
And so I followed the mob
When there was earth to plow or guns to bear
I was always there right on the job
Some time back a YouTube Channel “ProfSteveKeen” was established to collate my video interviews. It’s been inactive since then, but recently Sydney writer/director and multimedia reporter Benny Sutton–who has more than a decade’s experience in filmmaking and Australian broadcast journalism–volunteered to produce professionally recorded, regular “Vidcasts” on a range of topics.
The first two, on whether the US economy will experience a “Double Dip”, have now been posted to YouTube; you can watch them below, or via subscribing to the YouTube Channel.
We, the 141 economists from the 40 countries listed below, invite you to join the World Economics Association which we are launching today.
Two commitments listed in our Manifesto sum up the project.
1. To plurality. The Association will encourage the free exploration of economic reality from any perspective that adds to the sum of our understanding. To this end, it advocates plurality of thought, method and philosophy.
2. To global democracy. The Association will be democratically structured so as not to allow its domination by one country or one continent.
I will be speaking at the International Scientific Symposium for Development devoted to the 110th anniversary of Simon Kuznets in Kyev, The Ukraine, next week. Simon Kuznets, one of the few recipients of the faux Nobel Prize in Economics whose work I respect, was one of the pioneers of empirical research in economics, a student of business cycles, and a critic of static economic methodology.
My paper for this conference is reproduced below. It definitely deserves the label “wonkish”–in fact it’s certainly the most wonkish thing I’ve ever posted here.
A dynamic monetary multi-sectoral model of production
Surprise surprise–now that house prices are falling, whether they are going to continue falling has become the topic du jour. I have been asked to take part in two debates on this–one an online Webinar organized by Business Spectator, the other a live lunchtime talk in Sydney organised by The Money Institute.
I’d enjoy having some Debtwatch readers involved in them both, so if you can make the webinar, or attend the debate, please do. Details are below (excerpted from the promotional materials).