海外の関連する組織 ブログトップ

オドンネル教授講演会 (シドニー工科大学) のについての報告 [海外の関連する組織]

シドニー工科大学のオドンネル教授は
約一ヶ月の日本滞在を終え,12月末に帰国されました。
12月23日にケインズ学会後援で
大阪府立大学のサテライト教室で開催されました
講演会には東は東京,西は鹿児島の遠方より
多数の方にご出席をいただきありがとうございました。
30数名の出席者で,研究者はもちろんのこと
学部の学生さんや社会人の大学院生も参加され
盛大な研究会になりました。
オドネンル教授も熱がこもり予定時間をはるかに
越えてご報告をいただきました。
研究会の後,ライトアップされた中之島を散策し,
場所を移し,懇親会でも楽しいひとときを過ごしました。
オドンネル教授は,3月に再度,東京へ来日予定と聞いております。
今回の講演会では,ケインズ学会に後援を
いただきましたことを,改めてお礼申し上げます。
近藤真司  (大阪府立大学)

Introducing the ME Sharpe Post Keynesian Economics Forum (pke-forum.com) [海外の関連する組織]

                    keynes4.jpg 

Introducing the ME Sharpe Post Keynesian Economics Forum (pke-forum.com)
Albert Einstein is reputed to have defined insanity as doing the same thing, expecting different results. The state of our current policy debate suggests that many economists and politicians may be certifiably insane. The same policies that produced the Great Depression, and then the US recession of 1937, are again on the horizon—or rather, just over the cliff. In the UK, as the economy stagnates, 1920‘s policies that produced rising unemployment and stagnation are proposed as the means to prosperity. The European Union imposes stricter austerity policies on economies already experiencing sharp recessions in the vain hope of improving fiscal balances. The increase in consumption taxes that stifled the recovery from the 1990s collapse of stock and property markets is again being contemplated in Japan.
But there is an antidote to this insanity. Another Einstein adage notes that “we cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used to create them.” Keynes forged a new way of thinking about the economy that formed the basis for new policies that allowed the world to emerge from the Great Depression and achieve sustained global growth with low inflation in the post-war period. The revival of Keynes’s approach not only offers the chance to escape the lunacy of persisting with failed strategies, but
to avoid the return of “poverty in the midst of plenty”—of consciously produced deprivation and misery inflicted on an increasing number of the world’s population, whether they live in developed or developing countries.
To help restore sanity, ME Sharpe is proud to launch the PKE E-Forum. It seems particularly appropriate to launch such an initiative given the increased relevance of Keynesian policy in discussions to resolve the current crisis. The areas of discussion are expected to range from fiscal policy, the impact of debt on growth, and the reform of the international financial system to the impact of international imbalances on growth and development. These are all issues at the core of Keynesian policy discussions, but the direction of discourse should be determined by the policy issues as perceived by participants.
Although the ICT revolution has produced creative destruction in every aspect of information transmission and dissemination, there remains an unexplored area between the formal print journal and the instant proposal/response of the internet blog post. The E-Forum seeks to stimulate scholars who might be unwilling to commit to the formulation of proposals that would only see the light of day after some years in the print version of a journal. The E-Forum seeks an interactive forum for scholars with similar interests and backgrounds, and produce new policy proposals featuring more fully articulated presentations that may be of use by policy makers in formulating position statements and proposals.
E-forum editors will accept contributions with a maximum 1,500 words to be reviewed and edited on a real time basis and made available to subscribers with a turnaround of weeks not months. Access will be open to subscribers of ME Sharpe economic publications and any other interested persons by simple on-line registration.


フィレンツェで開催されるコンファランスの2日目は、ケインズ関連です。 [海外の関連する組織]

フィレンツェで開催されるコンファランスの2日目は、ケインズ関連です。

プログラムが次のように決定しましたので、お知らせいたします。

keynes4.jpg   P1010473.JPG

22 March 2012, Thursday - THE WORLD OF FINANCE AFTER KEYNES


III SESSION. Chair: Roger Backhouse

09.15 Luca FANTACCI, Time for Bancor: Keynes's Currency Plan as a Solution
to Global Imbalances
Discussants: Mario Cedrini and Julio Lopez Gallardo; debate

10.15 Fernando Cardim DE CARVALHO, Liquidity Preference of Banks and Crisis
Discussants: Anna Simonazzi and Luca Fantacci; debate

11.15 Coffee break

11.30 Atsushi KOMINE, Why did Keynes promote Grace I in 1921? A Cambridge
University Officer’s Attitude towards Conferring Degrees on Women
Discussants: Maria Cristina Marcuzzo and Anna Carabelli; debate

12.30 Lunch: “Trattoria San Lorenzo”, Borgo San Lorenzo 53r


IV SESSION. Chair: Maria Cristina Marcuzzo

14.00 Makoto NISHIBE, The Trend of Economic Thinking of Market and Money
and its Error: What is the Hayek’s Position on the Issues?
Discussants: Anna Carabelli and Fabio Ranchetti; debate

15.00 Anna CARABELLI and Mario CEDRINI, Some Foreseeable Disasters of the
Global Economy: The High Cost of Neglecting Keynes’s Approach
Discussants: Toshiaki Hirai and Sergio Nisticò; debate

16.00 Coffee break

16.15 Julio Lopez GALLARDO, Keynes, Kalecki and the Real World
Discussants: Fernando Cardim de Carvalho and Anna Simonazzi; debate

17.15 Toshiaki HIRAI, Keynes and the Case for Europe
Discussants: Fabio Ranchetti and Sergio Nisticò; debate

18.15 End of Workshop
 

 


イタリアの研究グループによる 「一次産品問題と投機」をめぐるプロジェクト [海外の関連する組織]

イタリアの研究グループから、「一次産品問題と投機」をめぐるプロジェクトを計画しているとの知らせがありました。イタリアの有力なケインズ・マーシャル研究グループです。
ケインズと大いに絡めてのプロジェクトのようです。このなかにはICUやユーロ危機の専門家も含まれていると思います。


Creation of the Gilles Dostaler Award [海外の関連する組織]

Dear moderator,Could you please also post this message? Kind regardsRichard van den Berg AnnouncementCreation of the Gilles Dostaler Award  Thanks to the generosity of his widow Marielle Cauchy, a new academic prize is created in the memory of our colleague and friend Gilles Dostaler. This prize — of 500 euro — will recognize scholarly achievements of young research fellows working on one of Gilles Dostaler’s many fields of interest. It will be awarded to scholars below the age of 40 in recognition of an outstanding work not necessarily already published.  As for the other ESHET academic awards, self-nominations are not allowed. The name of the laureate will be announced at the annual ESHET conference. For the 2012 prize, nominations should be sent by the end of February to Prof. Catherine Martin : Catherine.Martin@univ-paris1.fr   For the ESHET EC and Council, Gilbert Faccarello   


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Research Network Macroeconomics and Macroeconomic Policies (FMM) [海外の関連する組織]

Organisation

Research Network Macroeconomics and Macroeconomic Policies (FMM)
www.network-macroeconomics.org
Macroeconomic Policy Institute (IMK)
at the Hans Böckler Foundation
Hans-Böckler-Str. 39
40476 Düsseldorf
Germany
www.imk-boeckler.de
Organising committee
Hansjörg Herr
Berlin School of Economics and Law
***

 

Conference Programme
– Second, preliminary version –
From crisis to growth?
The challenge of imbalances, debt, and limited resources
28 – 29 October 2011
with introductory lectures on
post-Keynesian Economics on 27 October 2011
15th Conference
of the Research Network Macroeconomics and
Macroeconomic Policies (FMM)
Venue:
Best Western Hotel Steglitz International
Albrechtstr. 2
12165 Berlin
Germany
2

Torsten Niechoj
IMK
Claus Thomasberger
HTW Berlin
Achim Truger
IMK
Till van Treeck
IMK
Contact
Susanne Stoeger
Phone: +49(0)211 – 7778-121
Email: fmm@boeckler.de
Till van Treeck
Phone: +49(0)211 – 7778-334
Email: till-van-treeck@boeckler.de
CONFERENCE OVERVIEW
3
CONFERENCE OVERVIEW
THURSDAY, 27 OCTOBER 2011
Introductory lectures on post-Keynesian Economics for graduate students
09.00 – 09.30 Welcoming and information on the network and its summer school
09.30 – 11.00 Introductory lecture I
11.00 – 11.30 Coffee break
11.30 – 13.00 Introductory lecture II
13.00 – 14.30 Lunch
14.30 – 16.00 Introductory lecture III
FRIDAY, 28 OCTOBER 2011
10.30 – 12.00 Arrival and registration
12.00 – 12.15 Welcome and introduction
12.15 – 14.15 Plenary session I
14.15 – 15.00 Coffee break
15.00 – 17.00 Parallel graduate student sessions S
S1 Debt
and economic policy I
S2
The European crisis I
S3
Topics in macro-economics I
S4
International imbalances I
S5
Distribution and growth I
S6
Topics in macro-economics II
Room: Ballsaal
Room: Steglitz
Room: Lankwitz
Room: Zehlendorf
Room: Atrium
Room: Studio
17.00 – 17.30 Coffee break
17.30 – 19.30 Parallel sessions A
A1 Topics in macro-economics III
A2
The European Crisis II
A3
Financial instability I
A4
Investment and growth
A5
Limited resources and inequality
A6
Special session: Developing Quantitative Marxian Economics
Room: Ballsaal
Room: Steglitz
Room: Lankwitz
Room: Zehlendorf
Room: Atrium
Room: Studio
19.30 – 20.30 Panel discussion
20.30 Dinner
CONFERENCE OVERVIEW
4
SATURDAY, 29 OCTOBER 2011
09.00 – 11.00 Parallel sessions B
B1
Debt and economic policy II
B2
The European Crisis III
B3
Special session: Financial instability II
B4
International imbalances III
B5
Distribution and growth II
B6
Labour market and social security
Room: Ballsaal
Room: Steglitz
Room: Lankwitz
Room: Zehlendorf
Room: Atrium
Room: Studio
11.00 – 11.30 Coffee break
11.30 – 13.30 Parallel sessions C
C1
Debt and economic policy III
C2
The European Crisis IV
C3
Special session: Financial instability III
C4
International imbalances IV
C5
Inequality
C6
Topics in macro-economics IV
Room: Ballsaal
Room: Steglitz
Room: Lankwitz
Room: Zehlendorf
Room: Atrium
Room: Studio
13.30 – 15.00 Lunch
15.00 – 17.00 Parallel sessions D
D1
Debt
and economic policy IV
D2
The European crisis V
D3
Financial instability IV
D4
International imbalances II
D5
Distribution and growth III
D6
Topics in macro-economics V
Room: Ballsaal
Room: Steglitz
Room: Lankwitz
Room: Zehlendorf
Room: Atrium
Room: Studio
17.00 – 17.45 Coffee break
17.45 – 19.45 Plenary session II
20.00 Dinner
DETAILED PROGRAMME
5
THURSDAY, 27 – FRIDAY, 28 OCTOBER 2011
DETAILED PROGRAMME
THURSDAY, 27 OCTOBER 2011
Introductory workshop on post-Keynesian Economics
09.00 – 09.30
Welcoming and information on the network and its summer school Steglitz
N.N.
09.30 – 11.00
Introductory workshop I Steglitz
Post-Keynesian and New Keynesian Economics
Philip Arestis, University of Cambridge, UK, and University of the Basque Country, Spain
11.00 – 11.30 Coffee break
11.30 – 13.00
Introductory workshop II Steglitz
A post-Keynesian macroeconomic model of inflation, distribution and employment
Eckhard Hein, Berlin School of Economics and Law, Germany
13.00 – 14.30 Lunch
14.00 – 16.00
Introductory workshop III Steglitz
Modelling post-Keynesian macrodynamics: expectations, animal spirits and ‘shifting equilibrium’
Mark Setterfield, Trinity College, Hartford, CT, USA
FRIDAY, 28 OCTOBER 2011
10.30 – 12.00 Arrival and registration
12.00 – 12.15
Welcome and introduction Ballsaal
N.N.
12.15 – 14.15
Plenary session I Ballsaal
Imbalances and debt
Chair: N.N.
 European imbalances and the crisis of the European Monetary Union
Jan Priewe, HTW Berlin, Germany
 The Keynes solution for preventing global imbalances
Paul Davidson, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TS, USA
 Imbalances? What imbalances? A dissenting view
Randall Wray, University of Missouri, Kansas City, USA
14.15 – 15.00 Coffee break
15.00 – 17.00 Parallel graduate student sessions S
17.00 – 17.30 Coffee break
17.30 – 19.30 Parallel sessions A
19.30 – 20.30
Panel discussion Ballsaal
The European crisis: Causes and solutions
Chair: Sebastian Dullien, HTW Berlin, Germany
Jakob von Weizsäcker, Ministry for Economy, Labour and Infrastructure, Government of Thuringia, Germany
Randall Wray, University of Missouri, Kansas City, USA
20.30 Dinner
PARALLEL SESSIONS S
6
Friday, 28 OCTOBER 2011 15.00 – 17.00
PARALLEL SESSIONS S
S1 Ballsaal
S2 Steglitz
Debt and economic policy I
Chair: N.N.
The European crisis I
Chair: N.N.
 Explaining Automatic Stabilisers in a Cross-Section of Countries - It's the Welfare State
Dominik Bernhofer, ÖH Bundesvertretung, Austria
 The Keynesian Multiplier,Credit-Money and Time
Sebastian Gechert, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany
 Seigniorage – Where does it come from and who gets it? The quantity theory, the money multiplier, money creation and seigniorage
Jens Reich, Goethe Universität Frankfurt, Germany
 Current Account Imbalance in the Euro Area. An Empirical Analysis of Main Determinants in Germany, Spain and Greece
Jan Behringer, Eberhard-Karls-Universität, Tübingen, Germany
 New Policy perspectives from the Baltic States
Alexander Pfannkuche, Bremen University of Applied Science, University of Hamburg, Germany
 Public debt in the euro area and the European integration: can we create a positive link?
Thibault Cuénoud, ESCEM Paris, France
S3 Lankwitz
S4 Zehlendorf
Topics in macroeconomics I
Chair: N.N.
International imbalances I
Chair: N.N.
 An agent-based structuralist model of cycles and growth
Christian Schoder The New School for Social Research, New York, USA
 Industrial seigniorage, the other face of competition
Jordan Melmiès, University of Lille 1, France
 The Kaleckian model in the long run: Economies of Scale as a source for Hysteresis
Michalis Nikiforos, New School for Social Research, N.Y., USA
 Trade balances in Germany and the United States: Demand dominates price
Enno Schröder, New School for Social Research, USA
 Exchange rate misalignments and economic growth
Nabil Aflouk, Paris North University; France
 On the determinants of exchange rate misalignments
Jamel Saadaoui, University of Paris North, France
 Brazil and its recent capital controls
Bruno Thiago Tomoi, Berlin School of Economics and Law, Germany; Mohamed Amal
S5 Atrium
S6 Studio
Distribution and growth I
Chair: N.N.
Topics in macroeconomics II
Chair: N.N.
 Workers’ borrowing in a basic post-Keynesian model of growth and income distribution
Emilia Marsellou, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece
 Income inequality, over-indebtedness and financial instability. Essay on a Keynes-Goodwin-Minsky macrodynamic model
Elom K. Ezuho, Université d’Auvergne, France
 Balance of payments constrained growth and income distribution
Almut Kretschmann, Berlin School of Economics and Law, Germany
 The Impact of Sectoral Volatility and Transaction Costs on Long Term Growth: An Application for EU Countries
Fatih Sahan, Çankırı Karatekin University, Turkey, Abdullah Karasan
 The ECB and its monetary policy – Between nostalgia and anti-growth agenda
Christopher Knupp, Berlin School of Economics and Law, Germany
 New Instruments for Banking Regulation and Monetary Policy after the Crisis Daniel Detzer, Berlin School of Economics and Law, Germany
17.30 – 19.30 FRIDAY, 28 OCTOBER 2011
PARALLEL SESSIONS A
7
PARALLEL SESSIONS A
A1 Ballsaal
A2 Steglitz
Topics in macroeconomics III
Chair: N.N.
The European Crisis II
Chair: N.N.
 Aggregate demand, instability, and growth Steven M. Fazzari, Washington University, St. Louis, USA; Piero E. Ferri, Edward G. Greenberg, Anna Maria Variato
 The monetary and fiscal nexus of neo-chartalism: A friendly critical look
Marc Lavoie,University of Ottawa, Canada
 The Post Keynesian case for low interest rates
Basil Moore, Stellenbosch University, South Africa
 Peripheral Europe’s Debt and German Wages. The Role of Wage Policy in the Euro Area
Engelbert Stockhammer, Kingston University, UK
 Current account imbalances, Monetary Policy and “European Southernification Giuseppe Fontana, University of Leeds, UK; Emiliano Brancaccio
 Asymmetries and macroeconomic imbalances in the euro-zone
Catherine Sifakis-Kapetanakis, Université Pierre Mendès- France, Grenoble, France
 The tragedy of UK fiscal policy
Malcolm Sawyer, University of Leeds, UK
A3 Lankwitz
A4 Zehlendorf
Financial instability I
Chair: N.N.
Investment and growth
Chair: N.N.
 Modeling Financial Instability Toichiro Asada, Chuo University, Tokyo, Japan
 Increasing inequality and financial instability
Peter Skott, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, USA
 The two-price model revisited. A Minskian-Kaleckian reading of the process of ‘financialization’
Marco Passarella, University of Bergamo, Italy
 Financial instability and financial reform projects: The message from the General Theory
Elisabetta De Antoni, University of Trento, Italy
 Aggregate savings, financial savings, and investment Fernando J. Cardim de Carvalho, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
 Modelling Accumulation: An Empirical Application of the Acceleration Principle under Uncertainty
Ana Rosa González Martínez, University of Castilla-La Mancha, Spain; Philip Arestis, Óscar Dejuán
 Profit Trends and Investment Levels amongst Developed Economies
Jonathan Perraton, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom
A5 Atrium
A6 Studio
Limited resources and constraints on growth
Chair: N.N.
Special session: Developing Quantitative Marxian Economics
Chair: Peter Flaschel
 Decoupling Economic Growth and Natural Resource Use: Are there Socially Feasible Alternatives to Zero-Growth?
Florian Hartmann, University of Osnabrück, Germany
 Short-run and long-run post-crisis policies: Are there better options to achieve sustainable growth?
Richard Werner, University of Southampton, UK
 National innovation system and external constraint on growth: theoretical approach and some empirical evidence
Marco Flávio da Cunha Resende, UFMG, Brazil; Daniela Almeida Raposo Torres
 The Sources of Profitability
Nils Fröhlich, TU Chemnitz, Germany; Peter Flaschel
 Exploitation and Profits: A General Axiomatic Approach with Heterogeneous Agents Roberto Veneziani, Queen Mary University, London, UK; Naoki Yoshihara
 Exploitation and the Unequal Exchange of Labour: An Axiomatic Approach Naoki Yoshihara, Hitotsubashi University, Tokyo, Japan; Roberto Veneziani
DETAILED PROGRAMME
8
SATURDAY, 29 OCTOBER 2011
DETAILED PROGRAMME
SATURDAY, 29 OCTOBER 2011
09.00 – 11.00 Parallel sessions B
11.00 – 11.30 Coffee break
11.30 – 13.30 Parallel sessions C
13.30 – 15.00 Lunch
15.00 – 17.00 Parallel sessions D
17.00 – 17.45 Coffee break
17.45 – 19.45
Plenary session II Ballsaal
Growth: perspectives for theory and policy
Chair: N.N.
 Towards a social and sustainable growth model
Hansjörg Herr, Berlin School of Economics and Law, Germany
 Exploring the supply side of Kaldorian growth models
Mark Setterfield, Trinity College, Hartford, CT, USA
 Power, uncertainty and income distribution: Towards a theory of crisis
Amitava Dutt, University of Notre Dame, IN, USA
20.30 Dinner
PARALLEL SESSIONS B
9
09.00 – 11.00 SATURDAY, 29 OCTOBER 2011
PARALLEL SESSIONS B
B1 Ballsaal
B2 Steglitz
Debt and economic policy II
Chair: N.N.
The European Crisis III
Chair: N.N.
 Quantitative easing, Functional Finance, and the “neutral” interest rate
Alfonso Palacio-Vera, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain
 Policies for sustainable growth
Gennaro Zezza, University of Cassino, Italy
 Policy Implications of the 'Great Recession'
Philip Arestis,University of Cambridge, UK, and University of the Basque Country, Spain
 The Anachronism of the 90% Government Debt/GDP Ceiling: Why Post-Crisis Fiscal Consolidation in the G-7 is Premature
Photis Lysandrou, London Metropolitan University, UK
 The ESM (European Stability Mechanism): structure, shortcomings and alternatives
Helge Peukert, University of Erfurt, Germany
 Greece economic development under distress: Post-Keynesian proposals for regional and structural reform
Elisabeth Springler, Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien, Austria
 Balance of payments deficit, unemployment and public sector debt in a Monetary Union - The recipe for continuous stagnation
Jesper Jespersen, Roskilde University, Denmark
 Europe’s crisis: origins and solutions.
Domenica Tropeano, University of Macerata, Italy; Alessandro Vercelli
B3 Lankwitz
B4 Zehlendorf
Special session: Financial instability II
Chair: Yeva Nersisyan
International imbalances III
Chair: N.N.
 Minsky, PostKeynesianism and the Socialisation of Investments
Riccardo Bellofiore, University of Bergamo, Italy
 Liquity Trap, Quantitative Easing, and Asset Prices: a critical essay in monetary theory Felipe Rezende, Hobart and William Smith College, Geneva, NY, USA
 Internationalization of Money Manager Capitalism Flavia Dantas, University of Missouri, Kansas City, USA
 Keynes in Beijing: the savings-investment relation in China in light of global imbalances
Andrew M. Fischer, Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands
 The long-term "optimal" real exchange rate and the currency overvaluation trend in open emerging economies: the case of Brazil"
André Nassif, Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES), Brazil; Carmem Feijó, Eliane Araújo
 Brazil Responses to the Global Financial Crisis: a well succeed example of Keynesian policies?
Fernando Ferrari-Filho, UFRGS, Brazil; Daniela Magalhães Prates, André Moreira Cunha
 Are the current account imbalances between EMU countries sustainable? Evidence from parametric and non-parametric tests Christian Proano, New School for Social Research, USA; Christian Schoder, Willi Semmler
B5 Atrium
B6 Studio
Distribution and growth II
Chair: N.N.
Labour market and social security
Chair: N.N.
 Is demand wage-led or profit-led? a global mapping
Özlem Onaran, University of Westminster, London, UK
 How promising is wage restraint for a large economy? The example of Germany before and during the current crises
Torsten Niechoj, IMK, Germany
 Functional Income Distribution and Growth in Thailand: Single Equation Estimations Based on Bhaduri/Marglin Model
Bruno Jetin, University of Paris 13, France; Ozan E. Kurt
 The impact of income distribution on consumption and saving: a reassessment
Olivier Allain, Université Paris Descartes et Centre d’Economie de la Sorbonne (CES), Paris, France
 The Political Setting of Social Security Contributions in Europe in the Business Cycle
Toralf Pusch, Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung Halle, Germany; Ingmar Kumpmann
 The German Labour Market Miracle: Working time reduction was key
Fabian Lindner, IMK, Germany
 Minimum wages, wage structure and employment: theory and European evidence
Andrew Watt, European Trade Union Institute (ETUI), Brussels, Belgium; Hansjörg Herr
PARALLEL SESSIONS C
10
SATURDAY, 29 OCTOBER 2011 11.30 – 13.30
PARALLEL SESSIONS C
C1 Ballsaal
C2 Steglitz
Debt and economic policy III
Chair: N.N.
The European Crisis IV
Chair: N.N.
 Public debt and Full Employment
Soon Ryoo, Adelphi University, Garden City, NY, USA; Peter Skott
 On some Income Effects of Public Debt
Karl Betz, Fachhochschule Südwestfalen/Meschede, Germany
 How to make discretionary fiscal policy anti-cyclical
Pedro Leão, ISEG, Technical University of Lisbon, and WUECE, Portugal
 The roles of monetary policy for economic growth: from the view point of an endogenous market structure Takashi Ohno, Ritsumeikan University, Japan
 Objectives of EU macroeconomic policy coordination: what is to be done now? Massimo Cingolani, European Investment Bank, Luxembourg
 Towards macroeconomic rebalancing in the Euro area? Some remarks on the Stability Programmes 2011-14 Till van Treeck, IMK, Germany; Achim Truger
 Disciplining European governments by making their sovereign debt defaultable: Was it worth it? Andrea Terzi, Franklin College, Sorengo, Switzerland
C3 Lankwitz
C4 Zehlendorf
Special session: Financial instability III
Chair: L. Randall Wray
International imbalances IV
Chair: N.N.
 Financial Instability in the Eurozone Yeva Nersisyan, University of Missouri, Kansas City, USA
 Can “It” Happen again? Financial System and Economic Growth of China Jinxing Guo, University of Missouri, Kansas City, USA
 FDI in China: A Sovereign Currency Perspective Xinhua Liu, Shaanxi Normal University, China, China
 Global imbalances, capitalism and democracy
Claus Thomasberger, HTW Berlin, Germany
 Explaining Global Financial Imbalances: A Critique of the Saving Glut and Reserve Accumulation Hypotheses
Tom Palley, New America Foundation, New York,USA
 Explaining the performance of Italian exports during the crisis: does quality matter?
Piero Esposito, Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies, Pisa, Italy; Claudio Vicarelli
 Macroeconomic imbalances in a two-country post-Keynesian model
Stefan Ederer, WIFO Austrian Institute of Economic Research, Austria
C5 Atrium
C6 Studio
Inequality
Chair: N.N.
Topics in macroeconomics IV
Chair: N.N
 The role of skills in explaining the decline in the labour share of income
Matthieu Charpe, International Labour Organization, Genève, Switzerland
 De-Composition of the Labour Share of Income – The Development of Functional Income Distribution in Selected Advanced Economies Hagen Krämer, Karlsruhe University of Applied Sciences, Germany
 Connecting the functional and personal distribution of income
Kai Schmid, IAW, Tübingen, Germany
 The wealthy after the financial crisis
Martin Schürz, OeNB Österreichische Nationalbank, Wien, Austria
 Speculative capitals and demand pull inflation below full employment Angel Asensio, Univ-Paris13, France
 Monetary circuit with multi-period credit
Edouard Cottin-Euziol, Université de Limoges, France
 Arbitrage sequences and Leijonhufvud’s corridor hypothesis Dany Lang, CEPN, University of Paris13, France; Rod Cross, Victor Kozyakin, Brian O'Callaghan, Alexei Pokrovskii, AlexeyPokrovskiy
 Methodological innovations in Keynesian heterodoxy Tatyana Gaidai, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Ukraine
PARALLEL SESSIONS D
11
15.00 – 17.00 SATURDAY, 29 OCTOBER 2011
PARALLEL SESSIONS D
D1 Ballsaal
D2 Steglitz
Debt and economic policy IV
Chair: N.N.
The European crisis V
Chair: N.N.
 Do we need fiscal rules?
Catherine Mathieu, OFCE, France; Henri Sterdyniak
 Fiscal policy rules - some theoretical remarks on what they are, why they matter and where mainstream economists err.
Henner Will, IMK, Germany
 The dynamics of selected Euro countries public debt: Alternative paths for fiscal consolidation
Antonio Paradiso, University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy; Piero Esposito, Bhaskara Rao
 Debt crisis, fiscal austerity and the financial fragility and instability in the Greek economy
Maria Nikolaidi, University of Athens, Greece; Giorgios Argitis
 Fiscal sustainability and debt dynamics: the case of Greece
Yannis Monogios, Centre of Planning and Economic Research, Athens, Greece
 Portuguese economic growth at the crossroads of the euro and globalization
Luís Lopes, University of Coimbra, Portugal; Júlio Mota, Margarida Antunes
 The Spanish crisis
Jesus Ferreiro, University of the Basque Country, Spain; Felipe Serrano
D3 Lankwitz
D4 Zehlendorf
Financial instability IV
Chair: N.N.
International imbalances II
Chair: N.N.
 Securitization and financial crisis: reexamining the measures to deal with the crisis in the Shadow Banking System Masao Ishikura, Hitotsubashi University, Tokyo, Japan
 Financialization and International Trade Theory
Michael Hudson, University of Missouri, Kansas City (UMKC),USA
 The seventh stage of the evolution of the banking system and the shadow banking system
Daniela Magalhães Prates, University of Campinas, Brazil; Maryse Farhi
 Risk Uncertainty and financial concentration
Hasse Ekstedt, University Göteborg, Sweden
 Capital account management regimes in emerging market economies
Jörg Bibow, Skidmore College and Levy Economics Institute, New York, USA
 Exchange Rate Dynamics in a Peripheral Monetary Economy
Rogerio Andrade, University of Campinas, Brazil; Daniela M. Prates
 Global Imbalances in Emerging Economies
Sunanda Sen, India
 Brazil, developing economies and private international capital flows: the (new) challenges in the post-crisis scenario
A. Martins Biancareli, State University of Campinas, Brazil
D5 Atrium
D6 Studio
Distribution and growth III
Chair: N.N.
Topics in macroeconomics V Chair: N.N.
 Functional and personal income distribution in a stock-flow consistent model Yannis Dafermos, University of Athens and Labour Institute, Greece; Christos Papatheodorou
 Growth and distribution: A dynamic Kaleckain approach
Claudio Sardoni, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy; F. Patriarca
 Multisectoral Keynesian/Kaleckian Models
Marco Missaglia, University of Pavia, Italy
 Finance-dominated capitalism, re-distribution, household debt and financial fragility in a Kaleckian distribution and growth model Eckhard Hein, Berlin School of Economics and Law, Germany
 Asymmetric Information in Credit Markets, Bank Leverage Cycles and Macroeconomic Dynamics
Ansgar Rannenberg, National Bank of Belgium
 Keynesian DSGD(isequilibrium) Modeling: Fiscal and Monetary Policies and Heterogeneous Expectation Formation Peter Flaschel, Bielefeld University, Germany; Matthieu Charpe, Florian Hartmann, Roberto Veneziani
 Credit Constraints, Profitability, and Animal Spirits in a Stock-Flow Consistent Model of Investment and Growth
Daniele Tavani, Colorado State University, CO, USA
 Excess Bank Reserves and Monetary Policy with a Lower-Bound Lending Rate
Tarron Khemraj, New College of Florida, FL, USA; Chistian Proano, New School for Social Research
VENUE
12
VENUE
Best Western Hotel Steglitz International
Albrechtstr. 2
12165 Berlin
Germany
Phone: +49(0)30 - 790050


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