IS-LM (with endogenous money)”

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Paul Krug­man post­ed on a famil­iar top­ic yesterday—the fail­ure of most infla­tion hawks to admit that they were wrong—and includ­ed praise for one such hawk who has indeed changed his mind and said so:

There’s an inter­est­ing con­trast with one of the real intel­lec­tu­al heroes here, Narayana Kocher­lako­ta of the Min­neapo­lis Fed, who has actu­al­ly recon­sid­ered his views in the light of over­whelm­ing evi­dence. In our polit­i­cal cul­ture, this kind of switch is all too often made into an occa­sion for gotchas: you used to say that, now you say this. But learn­ing from expe­ri­ence is a good thing, not a sign of weak­ness. (“A Tale of Two Fed Pres­i­dents”)

The housing bubble Whodunnit

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This arti­cle is the third in a series on Australia’s hous­ing mar­ket. Read the first arti­cle here and sec­ond arti­cle here.

In the last two arti­cles in this series, I argued that Australia’s house prices “walk like a duck” – using BIS data, Aus­tralia is one of only four coun­tries where prices are twice as high in real terms as they were in 1985. And they “quack like a duck” – accel­er­at­ing house­hold debt is a major dri­ver of ris­ing house prices, as in the oth­er present and past house price bub­ble economies (the US, Spain, Japan, Nor­way, the UK and Den­mark). So hav­ing con­clud­ed they’re a duck, what species of duck are they?

Advance Notice

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I’m speak­ing at a Unit­ed Nations Envi­ron­ment Pro­gram con­fer­ence in Bangkok next week, and giv­ing some pub­lic talks there as well, so I’ve writ­ten my posts for the next two weeks for Busi­ness Spec­ta­tor already–on the top­ic of Aus­tralian house prices.

The ABS will also release its House Price Index data next week (on Mon­day Novem­ber 4th) and I’ll try to update a key graph in next week’s post–the cor­re­la­tion of the accel­er­a­tion of mort­gage debt to change in house prices–with that data before Busi­ness Spec­ta­tor posts my arti­cle. Pri­or to the ABS data being pub­lished, this indi­ca­tor is con­sis­tent with house prices ris­ing sub­stan­tial­ly in real terms (see Fig­ure 1).

An outbreak of communication

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Any­one who has been moti­vat­ed to read eco­nom­ics for the very first time by the eco­nom­ic cri­sis that began in 2007 should have real­ized at least one thing: that com­mu­ni­ca­tion between econ­o­mists resem­bles the Tow­er of Babel after the con­found­ing of tongues. Econ­o­mists who speak in one tongue hear what those in anoth­er say, but com­plete­ly fail to under­stand it—and then shout back some­thing that is just as incom­pre­hen­si­ble to the oth­ers’ ears.

Economics’ odd couple highlights a Nobel folly

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I would love to be in the audi­ence watch­ing the body lan­guage at this year’s “Nobel” cer­e­mo­ny for eco­nom­ics. Robert Shiller, who is far too polite a per­son to make it obvi­ous, will nonethe­less at least fid­get as he lis­tens to Eugene Fama’s speech, since Fama con­tin­ues to dis­pute that bub­bles in asset prices can even be defined. Shiller, in con­trast, first came to pub­lic promi­nence with his warn­ings in the ear­ly 2000s that the stock and hous­ing mar­kets in the States were dis­play­ing signs of “irra­tional exu­ber­ance”.

How to spot a housing bubble before it bursts

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After a bub­ble has burst, no one denies that it exist­ed. But before it does, the pop­u­lar refrain is that though bub­bles exist­ed else­where in the world, “there’s no bub­ble here”. So hous­ing bub­bles are admit­ted to have exist­ed in Japan, the USA, Spain and Ire­land – because they’ve already burst.

But the rest of the world – and espe­cial­ly Aus­tralia – is dif­fer­ent. House prices in Aus­tralia, the UK, and every­where in between where they are still ris­ing, are jus­ti­fied by … (fill in your favourite fun­da­men­tal rea­sons here) and are not in any way man­i­fes­ta­tions of bub­bles.

Crash Course in Disequilibrium Economics

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This is a set of 5 lec­tures that I deliv­ered last week in Quito, Ecuador, at FLACSO–the Latin Amer­i­can Fac­ul­ty of Social Sci­ences. In future years I hope to expand this into two com­plete courses–one on the his­to­ry and devel­op­ment of eco­nom­ics from a dis­e­qui­lib­ri­um per­spec­tive, and the oth­er on dynam­ic mon­e­tary mod­el­ing in eco­nom­ics using Min­sky, the Open Source sys­tem dynam­ics pro­gram that I have devel­oped with the help of a grant from INET.

Low-grade journal rankings are failing economics

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The Aus­tralian Busi­ness Deans Coun­cil has just released its new rank­ing of the qual­i­ty of aca­d­e­m­ic jour­nals in eco­nom­ics. This list­ing in turn is used to rank the qual­i­ty of aca­d­e­m­ic research.

A pub­li­ca­tion in a top-ranked A* jour­nal earns seri­ous rev­enue for the uni­ver­si­ty where an aca­d­e­m­ic is employed, and seri­ous brown­ie points for the aca­d­e­m­ic in terms of career and pro­mo­tion prospects. A pub­li­ca­tion in a B‑graded jour­nal is worth much less; a C‑graded is effec­tive­ly “thanks for try­ing”. The many ungrad­ed jour­nals are ignored com­plete­ly. So the rank­ings are a big deal for aca­d­e­mics, and they strong­ly affect the direc­tion of research by econ­o­mists.

Why this is a bad time to win an election

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Kevin Rudd came to pow­er for the first time on Decem­ber 3rd 2007, just a few months after the glob­al finan­cial cri­sis com­menced, and some time before its sever­i­ty was tru­ly appre­ci­at­ed by the polit­i­cal class­es of any nation. On Sep­tem­ber 7, he lost office for the last time.

The first elec­tion he won was a bad one to win, not because he was blamed for the calami­ty of the GFC itself of course, but because his entire term was dom­i­nat­ed by react­ing to it.