Saturday , January 13 2024
Home / Real-World Economics Review (page 9)

Real-World Economics Review

Annual league table of top hedge fund managers’ earnings

from http://www.paecon.net/PAEReview/issue104/Fichtner_Morgan104.pdf The Institutional Investor publishes an annual league table of top hedge fund managers earnings. The latest data at time of interview was from March 2022 and reported that “Altogether, the 25 highest-earning hedge fund managers earned a combined $26.64 billion last year, the second-highest amount in the history of the Rich List… Over the past two years, the members of the Rich List’s First Team have made more than $58...

Read More »

The myth of the “Free Market”

from Dean Baker The media are really going overboard in telling us the days of the free market are over with Biden’s new economic policies. President Biden has quite explicitly implemented policies intended to reshape the direction of the economy, pushing clean energy and more domestic production of advanced semiconductors and other products. He also has reinvigorated anti-trust policy, which was largely shelved by his predecessors. But the idea that the policies of the last four decades...

Read More »

RWER issue no. 104

Please click here to support this journal and the WEA RWER Issue no. 104download whole issue The Dead Parrot of Mainstream EconomicsSteve Keen 2 Why Hedge Funds Matter: An interview with Jan FichtnerJan Fichtner and Jamie Morgan 17 ETF shares as shadow moneyAlexandru-Stefan Goghie 49 The Dollar Centric Financial System and the Conflict in UkraineMarcello Spanò 67 A Note on Teaching Economic InequalityJunaid B. Jahangir 75 Book Review: Muhammad Ali Nasir, Off the Target: The Stagnating...

Read More »

long read – The social consequences of inflation in developing countries

from Jayati Ghosh Abstract The title of this article is a riff off a publication of G. C. Harcourt’s 1974 piece, ‘The social consequences of inflation’. He wrote this in a period of the global economy that bears some strong similarities to our own contemporary phase when inflation is suddenly back in the global headlines. There is at least one significant difference: at that time, Harcourt highlighted inflation as the outcome of an excess of total demand in real terms over available...

Read More »

The façade of precision in mainstream economics

from Lars Syll [Jevons] is a man of some ability, but he seems to me to have a mania for encumbering questions with useless complications, and with a notation implying the existence of greater precision in the data than the questions admit of.  John Stuart Mill Fixation on constructing models — “implying the existence of greater precision in the data than the questions admit of” — showing the certainty of logical entailment — realiter simply collapsing the necessary ontological gap...

Read More »

Are western democracies and pluralism in economics in danger?

from Maria Alejandra Madi Regarding Western democracies, Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt, two Harvard scholars, think that the answer is yes. They base their answer on decades of study and a wide range of historical and modern cases, from 1930s Europe to modern Hungary, Turkey, Venezuela, North and South America. Instead of a revolution or a military takeover, the authors believe that there will be a steady and slow breakdown of long-standing democratic rules and institutions. For...

Read More »

New York Times headlines article “Public Tired of ‘Neo-Liberal’ Policies Designed to Make Rich Richer”

from Dean Baker Of course, the New York Times did not headline a piece this way, but that would have been a more accurate headline of an article it ran last weekend discussing a turn away from “neo-liberal” policies. As I pointed out in a quick Twitter thread, that piece misrepresented a set of policies that have the effect of redistributing income upward as “free market” policies. This is wrong in a way that is very convenient for the proponents of these policies. The massive upward...

Read More »

Scholarly podcasting

from Maria Alejandra Madi and WEA Pedeaogy Blog Podcasts, which can now be easily accessed online, have had a recent surge in popularity, which may be attributed to their convenience. These podcasts discuss a wide range of topics that are related to the professional and academic spheres. The issue that naturally emerges is what exactly makes it qualified to be regarded as a scholarship approach. To put this another way, what exactly is it about this method that qualifies it to be used as...

Read More »

Will Biden’s industrial policy create a lot more Moderna billionaires?

from Dean Baker People routinely tout Biden’s efforts to bring back manufacturing jobs as a way to rebuild the middle class and reduce inequality. Whatever the motives, there is not much reason to believe that it will have this effect. When the United States opened up its market to freer trade in manufactured goods, through trade deals like NAFTA and admitting China to the WTO, manufacturing workers had a substantial pay premium over workers in the rest of the private sector. This was...

Read More »

What is this thing called probability?

from Lars Syll Fitting a model that has a parameter called ‘probability’ to data does not mean that the estimated value of that parameter estimates the probability of anything in the real world. Just as the map is not the territory, the model is not the phenomenon, and calling something ‘probability’ does not make it a probability, any more than drawing a mountain on a map creates a real mountain … In summary, the word ‘probability’ is often used with little thought about why, if at all,...

Read More »