Current Scholarship
Will the Growth of Uber Increase Economic Welfare?

Hubert Horan

The urban car service firm Uber is currently the most highly valued private startup company in the world, with a venture capital valuation of over $68 billion based on direct investment of over $13 billion from numerous prominent Silicon Valley investors. Uber’s investors are not merely seeking a share of a still-competitive urban car service industry, but are openly pursuing global industry dominance and its huge valuation is based on expectations that it will be successful.
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Will the Growth of Uber Increase Economic Welfare?

Spring 2021 - Reassessing Central Bank Independence
G. Epstein, Democratic Money: Central Bank Independence vs. Contested Control (Part 1)

August 10, 2021

Gerald Epstein, University of Massachusetts Amherst

The US Constitution calls for three branches of government that are independent from one another and that can act as “checks and balances” on each other: The Executive, Congress and the Judiciary.
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G. Epstein, Democratic Money: Central Bank Independence vs. Contested Control (Part 1)

Spring 2021 - Reassessing Central Bank Independence
R. Hockett, Two Blades, One Scissors: Central Bank Independence with (Some) Central Bank Allocation

July 14, 2021

Robert Hockett, Cornell Law School

Just Money has arranged yet another timely and well-framed symposium. I could not be more delighted to take part. I’d like here to highlight the bearing on this season’s symposium topic
More Spring 2021 - Reassessing Central Bank Independence
R. Hockett, Two Blades, One Scissors: Central Bank Independence with (Some) Central Bank Allocation

Spring 2021 - Reassessing Central Bank Independence
R. Carrillo, Boots on the Rails: The National Security State, Racial Subordination, & the Myth of “Instrument Independence”

July 6, 2021

Raul Carillo, LPE Project & Yale Law School

Since at least the early 1990s, when discussing the administrative, operational, and technical properties of central bank independence (CBI), many economists, including former Federal Reserve Board (Board) Governor and MIT economist Laurence Mayer,
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R. Carrillo, Boots on the Rails: The National Security State, Racial Subordination, & the Myth of “Instrument Independence”

Current Scholarship
Modern Capitalism’s Multiple Pasts and Its Possible Future: The Rise of China, Climate Change, and Economic Transformation

R. Bin Wong

Few have pondered the possible relevance of the ideologies and institutions of political economies in different world regions before the modern era and how the spread of modern capitalism has shaped their contemporary approaches to the future.
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Modern Capitalism’s Multiple Pasts and Its Possible Future: The Rise of China, Climate Change, and Economic Transformation

Current Scholarship
The Student Debt Crisis is a Crisis of Non-Repayment

Marshall Steinbaum

Think of the student debt crisis as an overflowing bathtub. On the one hand, too much water is pouring in: more borrowers are taking on more debt. That is thanks to increased demand for higher education in the face of rising tuition, stagnant wages, diminishing job opportunities for those with less than a college degree, and the power of employers to dictate that would-be hires have the necessary training in advance. On the other hand, the drain is clogged and too little water is draining out: those who have taken on debt are increasingly unable to pay it off.
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The Student Debt Crisis is a Crisis of Non-Repayment

Current Scholarship
Inconsistent Definitions of Money and Currency in Financial Legislation as a Threat to Innovation and Sustainability

Leander Bindewald

External shocks, like the climate catastrophe or the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as intrinsic fallacies like the securitization of bad debt leading up to the financial crisis in 2008, point to the need for updating our monetary and financial systems.
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Inconsistent Definitions of Money and Currency in Financial Legislation as a Threat to Innovation and Sustainability

Current Scholarship
Written Testimony in a Senate Hearing on Building a Stronger Financial System: Opportunities of a Central Bank Digital Currency

Lev Menand

Written Testimony of Lev Menand for the hearing entitled "Building a Stronger Financial System: Opportunities for a Central Bank Digital Currency" before the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, Subcommittee on Economic Policy.
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Written Testimony in a Senate Hearing on Building a Stronger Financial System: Opportunities of a Central Bank Digital Currency

Roundtable: Monetary Policy in the EU
The Hegemony of Central Bankism and Authoritarian Neoliberalism as Obstacles to Human Progress and Survival

January 26, 2021

Jeremy Leaman, Loughborough University

Macroeconomic policy within the so-called advanced economies has, for more than four decades, been dominated by “central bankism” and its ideological cousins, monetarism, ordo-liberalism and supply-sidism.
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The Hegemony of Central Bankism and Authoritarian Neoliberalism as Obstacles to Human Progress and Survival