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Content
April 2024, Volume 21, Issue 2
April 2024, Volume 21, Issue 1
December 2023, Volume 20, Issue 3
- 399-405 ‘I see my research and my teaching as trying to understand the world in which we live, to paraphrase Keynes’ — Interview with Steven Fazzari
by Eckhard Hein & Gennaro Zezza
- 406-409 Editorial to the special issue: Frontiers in Growth Regimes Research I: Theoretical Perspectives and Conceptual Issues
by Ãœmit Akcay & Eckhard Hein & Benjamin Jungmann & Ryan Woodgate
- 410-443 Varieties of demand and growth regimes – post-Keynesian foundations
by Eckhard Hein
- 444-460 Nothing new under the sun: the so-called ‘growth model perspective’
by Bruno Amable
- 461-490 House price cycles, housing systems, and growth models
by Karsten Kohler & Benjamin Tippet & Engelbert Stockhammer
- 491-514 FDI-led growth models: Sraffian supermultiplier models of export platforms and tax havens
by Ryan Woodgate
- 515-538 Dependency revisited: commodities, commodity-related capital flows and growth models in emerging economies
by Michael Schedelik & Andreas Nölke & Christian May & Alexandre Gomes
- 539-560 Growth regimes, dominant social blocs and growth strategies: towards varieties of export-led growth regimes and strategies in Turkey and Poland
by Ãœmit Akcay & Benjamin Jungmann
- 565-567 Book review: Jin, Keyu (2023): The New China Playbook, New York (368 pages, Viking, hardcover, ISBN-13: ‎978-1984878281)
by Junaid Jahangir
November 2023, Volume 20, Issue 2
- 151-182 The impact of income inequality on household indebtedness in euro area countries
by Stefan Jestl
- 183-246 The neo-Goodwinian model reconsidered
by Michael Cauvel
- 247-249 Editorial to the special issue
by Jan Behringer & Yannis Dafermos & Eckhard Hein & Heike Joebges & Annina Kaltenbrunner & Engelbert Stockhammer & Andrew Watt
- 250-265 How important is the real exchange rate for exports and growth?
by Robert A. Blecker
- 266-281 New directions in Latin American Structuralism: a three-gap model of sustainable development
by Gabriel Porcile & José Eduardo Alatorre & MartÃn Cherkasky & Camila Gramkow & João Romero
- 282-298 Frontier-market economies as a new group of the financial periphery: patterns and transmission channels of global shocks
by Daniela Prates & Barbara Fritz & Luiz Fernando de Paula
- 299-316 Post-Keynesian growth theory and the supply side: a feminist approach
by Mark Setterfield
- 317-337 Synthesizing feminist and post-Keynesian/Kaleckian economics for a purple–green–red transition
by Özlem Onaran & Cem Oyvat
- 338-355 Fiscal policy: post- or New Keynesian?
by Sebastian Gechert
- 356-368 Fiscal and monetary policy for difficult times: MMT solutions
by Joëlle Leclaire
- 369-387 Macroeconomic policy at the end of the age of abundance
by Jo Michell
- 388-395 Book review: Saith, Ashwani (2022): Cambridge Economics in the Post-Keynesian Era: The Eclipse of Heterodox Traditions, Cham, Switzerland (1188 pages, Palgrave Macmillan, hardback in two volumes, also available as ebook, ISBN 978-3-030-93018-9)
by Marc Lavoie
- 396-397 Book review: Teipen, Christina, Dünhaupt, Petra, Herr, Hansjörg and Mehl, Fabian (2022): Economic and Social Upgrading in Global Value Chains. Comparative Analyses, Macroeconomic Effects, the Role of Institutions and Strategies for the Global South, Cham, Switzerland (600 pages, Palgrave Macmillan, hardcover 978-3-030-87319-6, softcover 978-3-030-87322-6, ebook 978-3-030-87320-2)
by Torsten Niechoj
May 2023, Volume 20, Issue 1
December 2022, Volume 19, Issue 3
September 2022, Volume 19, Issue 2
- 186-203 Crisis, austerity, and fiscal expenditure in Greece: recent experience and future prospects in the post-COVID-19 era
by Michalis Nikiforos
- 204-223 Macroeconomic implications and growth regimes under alternative interpretations of household debt
by Emilia G. Marsellou
- 224-226 Editorial to the special issue
by Ulrich Fritsche
- 227-237 A monetary Keynesian view of modern monetary theory
by Sebastian Dullien & Silke Tober
- 238-259 Currency hierarchy and underdevelopment
by Hansjörg Herr & Zeynep Nettekoven
- 260-277 Currency hierarchy and financial globalization in emerging economies: how far does Riese’s critique of growth by external debt still hold?
by Barbara Fritz & Luiz Fernando de Paula & Daniela Prates
- 278-293 The long-term effects of German unification on wages, employment and growth: a trigger for a shift to a new market constellation
by Heike Joebges & Rudolf Zwiener & Nora Albu
- 294-297 Book review: Blanchard, O. and D. Rodrik (2021): Combating Inequality: Rethinking Government’s Role, Cambridge, MA, USA (312 pages, The MIT Press, hardcover, ISBN 9780262045612)
by Junaid B. Jahangir
April 2022, Volume 19, Issue 1
- 1-1 Editorial
by N/A
- 2-8 ‘The trading behaviour in financial markets and the impacts on the real economy became the theme of my life’
by Eckhard Hein & Torsten Niechoj
- 9-15 E pur si muove: Peter Flaschel's contributions to macroeconomic theory and disequilibrium economic modeling
by Christian R. Proaño & Gangolf Groh & Willi Semmler
- 16-18 Editorial to the special issue
by Eckhard Hein & Hansjörg Herr & Valeria Jimenez & Jan Priewe
- 19-40 Growth in the ecological transition: green, zero or de-growth?
by Jan Priewe
- 41-60 The macroeconomic implications of zero growth: a post-Keynesian approach
by Eckhard Hein & Valeria Jimenez
- 61-88 Inequality, non-linear consumption behaviour, and monetary growth imperatives
by Anja Janischewski
- 89-102 Would a zero-growth economy be achievable and be sustainable?
by Giuseppe Fontana & Malcolm Sawyer
- 103-118 The role of labor in a socio-ecological transition: combining post-Keynesian and ecological economics perspectives
by Birte Strunk & Stefan Ederer & Armon Rezai
- 119-137 Buying into inequality: a macroeconomic analysis linking accelerated obsolescence, interpersonal inequality, and potential for degrowth
by Antoine Monserand
- 138-158 Economics of digital decoupling: a pluralistic analysis
by Steffen Lange
- 159-173 Transformation of capitalism to enforce ecologically sustainable GDP growth: lessons from Keynes and Schumpeter
by Hansjörg Herr
- 174-176 Book review: Krugman, P. (2020): Arguing with Zombies, New York, NY, USA (416 pages, W.W. Norton and Company, hardcover, ISBN 978-1-324-00501-8)
by Junaid B. Jahangir
- 177-182 Book review: Marglin, Stephen A. (2021): Raising Keynes: A Twenty-First Century General Theory, Cambridge, MA, USA (896 pages, Harvard University Press, hardcover, ISBN 978-0-674-97102-8)
by Junaid B. Jahangir
December 2021, Volume 18, Issue 3
- 266–274-266–274 ‘We need long-term commitments in the form of public investment'
by Marc Lavoie
- 275–285-275–285 The methodology for assessing interest-rate policy rules: some comments
by Martin Watts
- 286–292-286–292 The methodology for assessing interest-rate policy rules: a reply
by John Smithin
- 293–302-293–302 Saving and Investment in the Twenty-First Century: The Great Divergence – some comments from a post-Keynesian perspective
by Eckhard Hein
- 303–309-303–309 On capital, saving, and investment in the twenty-first century: a reply to Hein
by Carl Christian von Weizsäcker & Hagen M. Krämer
- 310–330-310–330 Central banks and inflation: where do we stand and how did we get here?
by Karl Whelan
- 331–343-331–343 The political economy of inflation
by Frances Coppola
- 344–363-344–363 Migrant inflows, capital outflows, growth and distribution: should we control capital rather than immigration?
by Emiliano Brancaccio & Andrea Califano & Fabiana De Cristofaro
- 364–378-364–378 Does a job guarantee pay off? The fiscal costs of fighting long-term unemployment in Austria
by Simon Theurl & Dennis Tamesberger
- 379–403-379–403 The Troika’s conditionalities during the Greek financial crisis of 2010–2014: the Washington Consensus is alive, well, and here to stay
by John Marangos
- 404–406-404–406 Book review: Heine, Michael and Hansjörg Herr (2021): The European Central Bank, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK (208 pages, Agenda Publishing, hardcover, ISBN 978-1-78821-294-6; softcover, ISBN 978-1-78821-295-3; ebook, ISBN 978-1-78821-296-0)
by Torsten Niechoj
- 407–410-407–410 Book review: Beker, Victor A. (2021): Preventing the Next Financial Crisis, Routledge, Abingdon, UK and New York, NY, USA (172 pages, hardcover, ISBN 978-0-367-48398-2)
by Guillermo J. Escudé
September 2021, Volume 18, Issue 2
- 111-118 ‘It is clear that this kind of deregulated capitalism will not survive in the end’ Interview with Hansjörg Herr
by Eckhard Hein
- 119–144-119–144 The twilight of neoliberalism in the USA?
by Trevor Evans
- 145–159-145–159 Searching for new fiscal rules in the euro area: a new proposal
by Jan Priewe
- 160–162-160–162 Editorial to the special issue
by Jan Behringer & Sebastian Gechert & Hansjörg Herr & Jan Priewe & Heike Joebges & Andrew Watt
- 163–176-163–176 The European Central Bank: the time is ripe for a major revision of its strategy
by Peter Bofinger
- 177–197-177–197 The COVID-19 crisis and counter-cyclical policies in Brazil
by Luiz Fernando de Paula
- 198–206-198–206 The COVID-19 crisis and counter-cyclical policies in Brazil
by Daniele Tavani
- 207–222-207–222 Can trade help with fighting the pandemic? Evidence from imports of Chinese medical products
by Laike Yang, Bo Xu
- 223–239-223–239 US employment inequality in the Great Recession and the COVID-19 pandemic
by Steven M. Fazzari, Ella Needler
- 240–258-240–258 Post-COVID-19 Asia will grow strongly in 2021 but structural problems continue to pile up
by Alicia Garcia Herrero
- 259–262-259–262 Book review: Cesaratto, Sergio (2020): Heterodox Challenges in Economics: Theoretical Issues and the Crisis of the Eurozone, Cham, Switzerland (277 pages, Springer, softcover, ISBN 978-3-030-54447-8; also available as an ebook)
by Marc Lavoie
- 263–264-263–264 Book review: Joo, Sangyong, Kangkoo Lee, Won Jun Nah, Su Min Jeon and Dong-Hee Joe (2020): The Income-Led Growth in Korea: Status, Prospects and Lessons for Other Countries, Sejong, South Korea (223 pages, Korea Institute for International Economic Policy, softcover ISBN 978-89-322-1764-2)
by Marc Lavoie
April 2021, Volume 18, Issue 1
- 1-10 Interview with Jerzy Osiatyński: Linking economics with economic policy-making
by Grzegorz Konat
- 11-28 ‘Manna from heaven’: does the presence of central banks make technical analysis profitable?
by Smita Roy Trivedi
- 29-54 Technological progress, non-price factors competitiveness, and changes in trade income elasticities: empirical evidence from South Korea and Hong Kong
by Marco Flávio Cunha Resende & Vitor Leone & Daniela Almeida Raposo Torres & Simeon Coleman
- 55-76 Do fiscal rules decrease public investment? Evidence from European panel data
by Sebastiaan Wijsman & Christophe Crombez
- 77-101 Public expenditure and growth: the Indian case
by A. Bhatt Hakhu & C. Sardoni
- 102-105 Book review: Mazier, Jacques (2020): Global Imbalances and Financial Capitalism: Stock-Flow-Consistent Modelling, London, UK and New York, NY, USA (318 pages, Routledge, hardcover, ISBN 978-1-138-34558-4; also available as ebook)
by Marc Lavoie
- 106-109 Book review: Furtado, Celso (2020): The Myth of Economic Development, Medford, MA, USA and Cambridge, UK (111 pages, Polity Press, hardcover, ISBN 978-1-5095-4013-6; softcover, ISBN 978-1-5095-4014-3; ebook, ISBN 978-1-5095-4015-0)
by Santiago Graña Colella & Mariana Pellegrini
- 110-110 List of reviewers
by N/A
November 2020, Volume 17, Issue 3
- 277-277 Editorial
by The Editors
- 278-285 ‘I have never held models as depictions of anything real; they are just tools for understanding some aspects of the real world’: Interview with Amitava K. Dutt
by Eckhard Hein & Marc Lavoie
- 286–294-286–294 A note on Heterodox Macroeconomics by Blecker and Setterfield
by Emiliano Libman
- 295-306 On multi-sector and multi-technique models, production functions and Goodwin cycles: a reply to Libman
by Robert A. Blecker & Mark Setterfield
- 307-312 Editorial to the special issue
by Mark Setterfield
- 313-324 The economics of Basil Moore: slow progress toward horizontalism
by Louis-Philippe Rochon
- 325-338 The long road to accommodative central banking: the US case
by Jane Knodell
- 339-355 Monetary economics after the global financial crisis: what has happened to the endogenous money theory?
by Giuseppe Fontana & Riccardo Realfonzo & Marco Veronese Passarella
- 356-366 Endogenous money in an era of financialization
by Malcolm Sawyer
- 367-380 Endogenous money, liquidity and monetary reform
by Sheila Dow
- 381-398 Interest rates, income distribution and the monetary policy transmissions mechanism under endogenous money: what have we learned 30 years on from Horizontalists and Verticalists?
by John Smithin
- 399-412 Economics Group, UTS Business School, University of Technology Sydney, Australia
by Peter Docherty
- 413-417 Book review: Šaski, K. (2019): Lectures in Macroeconomics: A Capitalist Economy Without Unemployment, Jerzy Osiatyński and Jan Toporowski (eds), Oxford, UK and New York, NY, USA (192 pages, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-884211-8)
by Eckhard Hein
September 2020, Volume 17, Issue 2
April 2020, Volume 17, Issue 1
- 1-8 ‘If you are convinced that post-Keynesian economics is a good way of thinking, get on with it’: Interview with Victoria Chick
by Marc Lavoie
- 9-18 Heterodox economics as seen by Geoffrey Hodgson: an assessment
by Marc Lavoie
- 19-38 Is there scientific progress in macroeconomics? The case of the NAIRU
by Dany Lang & Mark Setterfield & Ibrahim Shikaki
- 39-60 What do the value-at-risk measure and the respective legislative framework really offer to financial stability? Critical views and pro-cyclicality
by Evangelos Vasileiou & Themistoclis Pantos
- 61-77 An attempt at a reconciliation of the Sraffian and Kaleckian views on desired utilization
by Reiner Franke
- 78-105 Inflation targeting, disinflation, and debt traps in Argentina
by Emiliano Libman & Gabriel Palazzo
- 106-109 Book review: Brancaccio, E. and Califano, A. (2018): Anti-Blanchard Macroeconomics, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA (158 pages, Edward Elgar Publishing, hardcover, also available as paperback and ebook, ISBN 978-1-78811-899-6)
by Torsten Niechoj
December 2019, Volume 16, Issue 3
- 287-290 Editorial to the special issue on the economics of Kazimierz Å aski
by Eckhard Hein & Martin Riese & Bernhard Schütz
- 291-301 An interview with Professor Kazimierz Å aski
by Grzegorz Konat
- 302-317 Kazimierz Å aski's Lectures in Macroeconomics under financial capitalism
by Jerzy Osiatyński
- 318-326 Kazimierz Å aski and the scope and significance of the price mechanism
by Jan Toporowski
- 327-343 From socialist command to a capitalist market economy: the case for an active state
by Hubert Gabrisch
- 344-369 Nicholas Kaldor and Kazimierz Å aski on the pitfalls of the European integration process
by Michael A. Landesmann
- 370-380 Is better economic integration in the EU possible?
by Leon Podkaminer
- 381-402 Forty years of real-estate bubbles in the US and the macroeconomy: a Keynesian perspective
by Herbert Walther
- 403-419 On understanding economic reality at the beginning of the twenty-first century: an essay in remembrance of Professor Laski
by Josef Falkinger
- 420-426 Book review: Toporowski, Jan (2013): Michał Kalecki: An Intellectual Biography, Volume 1: Rendezvous in Cambridge, 1899–1939, Basingstoke, UK (184 pages, Palgrave Macmillan, hardcover, ISBN 978-0-230-21186-5) and Toporowski, Jan (2018): Michał Kalecki: An Intellectual Biography, Volume 2: By Intellect Alone, 1939–1970, Basingstoke, UK (289 pages, Palgrave Macmillan, hardcover, ISBN 978-3-319-69663-8)
by Eckhard Hein
- 427-430 Book review: Baccaro, Lucio and Chris Howell (2017): Trajectories of Neoliberal Transformation: European Industrial Relations Since the 1970s, Cambridge, UK (261 pages, Cambridge University Press, hardcover, ISBN 978-1-10701-872-3)
by Engelbert Stockhammer
- 431-435 Book review: Mitchell, William, L. Randall Wray and Martin Watts (2019): Macroeconomics, London, UK (573 pages, Red Globe Press, softcover, ISBN 978-1-137-61066-9)
by Jo Michell
September 2019, Volume 16, Issue 2
April 2019, Volume 16, Issue 1
November 2018, Volume 15, Issue 3
- 249-249 Editorial
by N/A
- 250-258 Interview with Robert A. Blecker
by Eckhard Hein & Marc Lavoie
- 259-261 Obituary: Fernando José Cardim de Carvalho (1953–2018)
by Fernando Ferrari Filho
- 262-288 Arguments for austerity, old and new: the British Treasury in the 1920s and the Bundesfinanzministerium in the 2010s
by Fernando J. Cardim de Carvalho
- 289-312 Does fiscal consolidation promote economic growth and employment? Evidence from the PIIGGS countries
by Philip Arestis & Ayşe Kaya & Hüseyin Şen
- 313-334 Capital account regulation as part of the macroeconomic regime: comparing Brazil in the 1990s and 2000s
by Barbara Fritz & Daniela Magalhães Prates
- 335-363 Macroeconomic effects of unemployment benefits in small open economies: a stock–flow consistent approach
by Mikael Randrup Byrialsen & Hamid Raza
- 364-381 Germany’s brake on European capital-market development
by John Grahl & Photis Lysandrou
- 382-384 Book review: Fischer, Lilian, Joe Hasell, J. Christopher Proctor, David Uwakwe, Zach Ward-Perkins and Catriona Watson (eds) (2018): Rethinking Economics: An Introduction to Pluralist Economics, London, UK and New York, NY, USA (141 pages, Routledge, softcover, ISBN 978-1-138-22268-9)
by Marc Lavoie
September 2018, Volume 15, Issue 2