Thursday , May 23 2024
Home / Video / Yanis Varoufakis – Iran Nuclear Deal, USA, Europe (Capitalism and right-wings) May 2018

Yanis Varoufakis – Iran Nuclear Deal, USA, Europe (Capitalism and right-wings) May 2018

Summary:
Yanis Varoufakis (Cofounder of the grassrouts movement DiEM25), Greek economist, academic and politician, served as the Greek Minister of Finance (January to July 2015). Varoufakis taught economics and econometrics at the University of Essex and the University of East Anglia, and also taught at the University of Cambridge (1982 and 1988). He did not wish ...

Topics:
Yanis Varoufakis considers the following as important:

This could be interesting, too:

New Economics Foundation writes New Economics Podcast: Do we need to fight for the right to protest?

Robert Vienneau writes Future Papers For My Research Program?

Robert Skidelsky writes Full Employment, as the Hearth of the Cultural Economics of Orban

Matias Vernengo writes Debt cycles and the long term crisis of neoliberalism











Yanis Varoufakis (Cofounder of the grassrouts movement DiEM25), Greek economist, academic and politician, served as the Greek Minister of Finance (January to July 2015).



Varoufakis taught economics and econometrics at the University of Essex and the University of East Anglia, and also taught at the University of Cambridge (1982 and 1988). He did not wish to return to Greece for fear of conscription, and so accepted an offer to lecture at the University of Sydney, where he remained until 2000. From 1989 to 2000, he taught as senior lecturer in economics at the Department of Economics of the University of Sydney, with short stints at the University of Glasgow and the Université catholique de Louvain. Varoufakis, during his time in Sydney, had his own slot on a local television show where he was critical of John Howard’s conservative government. He also acquired Australian citizenship.



In 2000, a combination of “nostalgia and abhorrence of the conservative turn of the land Down Under”, led Varoufakis to return to Greece where he was unanimously elected an associate professor of economic theory at the University of Athens. In 2002, Varoufakis established The University of Athens Doctoral Program in Economics (UADPhilEcon), which he directed until 2008. In 2005 he was promoted to full professor of economic theory.



From January 2004 to December 2006, Varoufakis served as economic advisor to George Papandreou, of whose government he was to become an ardent critic a few years later.



Beginning in March 2012, Varoufakis became economist-in-residence at Valve Corporation. He researched the virtual economy on the Steam digital delivery platform, specifically looking at exchange rates and trade deficits. In June 2012, he began a blog about his research at Valve. In February 2013 his function at Valve was to work on a game for predicting trends in gaming. From January 2013 he taught at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin as a visiting professor. In November 2013, he was appointed guest professor at Stockholm University, Department of Computer and Systems Sciences, to work within game and decision theory at the eGovLab. In 2013, he was appointed the Athens desk editor of the online magazine WDW Review, in which he contributed until January 2015. On 22 January 2015, the International University College of Turin awarded to Varoufakis an honorary professorship in comparative law economics and finance for his extraordinary theoretical contribution to the understanding of the global economic crisis.



Links:



Democracy in Europe Movement (DiEM25)


English: https://diem25.org/


German: https://diem25.org/main-de/



Missing Link to Yanis Varoufakis – KenFM-Interview von Dirk Pohlmann




Gespräch mit Yanis Varoufakis zur Eurokrise



Gespräch mit Yanis Varoufakis zur Eurokrise – Teil 1





___________________________________


YT creative commons / news 4everything


Indpendent Global News:


https://www.democracynow.org/



Yanis Varoufakis
An accidental economist Let me begin with a confession: I am a Professor of Economics who has never really trained as an economist. But let’s take things one at a time.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *