[embedded content]My talk at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro yesterday, on the rise, fall, and perhaps rise again of the regulatory state in the US, and its relation to ideas, particularly institutionalist, and Chicago School views, as expressed by John R. Commons and George Stigler. In Portuguese, of course.
Read More »Nathan Tankus — What if The Federal Reserve Just … Spent Money?
Nathan Tankus is a go-to guy on the institutional side of MMT. Following Scott Fullwiler, I also highly recommended subscribing to his new blog if you are into the nitty gritty and don't want to miss anything since I will only be linking it selectively. Nathan offers a free and a premium service. Like MMT legal scholar Rohan Grey, Nathan is an up-and-comer and is already becoming a star. The MMT bench is broadening and deepening. Please support Nathan if you are interested and able. Here is...
Read More »Rohan Grey — Administering Money: Coinage, Debt Crises, and the Future of Fiscal Policy
Abstract The power to coin money is a fundamental constitutional power and central element of fiscal policymaking, along with spending, taxing, and borrowing. However, it remains neglected in constitutional and administrative law, despite the fact that money creation has been central to the United States’ fiscal capacities and constraints since at least1973, when it abandoned convertibility of the dollar into gold. This neglect is particularly prevalent in the context of debt...
Read More »James K. Galbraith’s Veblen-Commons award
Ritual and prestige among the Institutionalists Jamie got the Veblen-Commons award, something his father received back in 1976. I introduced him, and as expected discussed a bit his contributions to economics, and the understanding of institutions. His most important contributions are on the field of inequality, and the work he has done with the University of Texas Inequality Project (UTIP).There are many contributions that Jamie and UTIP have made. His use of the UNIDO payroll data,...
Read More »Lars P. Syll — Esther Duflo vs Elinor Ostrom
Agnès Labrouse quote. The most revelant sentence: While Duflo and Banerjee are in line with a technocratic democracy, the Ostroms sustain a Tocquevillean democratic self-governance. For the latter, institutions emanating from democratic processes, far from being straitjackets, are the core of economic processes. They simultaneously constraint and enable human action. Paternalism versus democracy. That's pretty much the "compassionate conservative," liberal divide. Lars P. Syll’s...
Read More »Peter Radford on corporations
Most theories of the firm within economics pick up the narrative with the existence of the corporation as a given. They then bend over backwards to retro-fit this highly centralized pseudo economy into the larger free market narrative preferred in all major textbooks. In so doing they blithely ignore Alfred Chandler’s famous explanation for the rise of modern business organization, which he argued became possible “only when the hand of management proved be more efficient than the invisible...
Read More »Bill Mitchell — The path out of the low wage trap is limited by fiscal austerity
During my postgraduate study years I read a 1954 article by American economist Clark Kerr entitled – The Balkanization of Labor Markets – which attacked the mainstream labour market views that there was mobility within labour markets such that poverty arising from low-pay was a function of workers’ preferences for low education and more leisure (that is, unemployment). As such, there was no reason for the government to intervene to improve wages or job security. Kerr’s thesis was that there...
Read More »Brian Romanchuk — MMT And Automatic Stabilizers
The recent internet debates about Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) have been interesting, but the various critics of MMT have largely missed the elephant in the room: automatic fiscal stabilisers. In my view (which may not reflect the official "MMT Party Line"), one of the keys strengths of MMT is that it is largely built around the importance of automatic stabilisers, and institutional details. The conventional view is to acknowledge the existence of automatic stabilisers, but otherwise...
Read More »Awara — Simple Tips That Will Help You Choose the Best Accounting Company in Russia
While doing business in Russia, you might have already learned the easy or the hard way that local accounting principles significantly differ from Western practices due to requirements of Russian law. Accounting is institutional and its rules are determined by institutional arrangements that are generally part of the legal structure in modern societies.This can make comparison of data difficult in different jurisdictions.AwaraSimple Tips That Will Help You Choose the Best Accounting Company...
Read More »Kicking Away the Ladder, Too: Inside Central Banks
Last January the Association for Evolutionary Economics (AFEE) sessions at the Allied Social Sciences Association (ASSA) meetings revolved around the theme of "Inside Institutions," meaning that within institutions there are many actors with different sets of interests, so one must look under the hood, so to speak, of the institution itself to understand its actions. My paper followed my previous discussion of the historical evolution of central banks, and a brief discussion within the...
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