
Nobel Prize Winner in Economist 1995 – Robert Emerson Lucas
20 Feb 2020 Leave a comment
in business cycles, history of economic thought, macroeconomics, monetary economics, Robert E. Lucas
Champ and Freeman on financial intermediation
19 Feb 2020 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, economics of information, industrial organisation, macroeconomics, monetary economics Tags: adverse selection, asymmetric information, monetary policy, moral hazard, rational expectations

No housing bubbles if land supply is flexible
19 Feb 2020 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, business cycles, comparative institutional analysis, economics of regulation, global financial crisis (GFC), macroeconomics, politics - USA, Public Choice, rentseeking, urban economics
The key contributions of Fisher’s Appreciation and Interest (1896)
19 Feb 2020 Leave a comment
in business cycles, economics of information, history of economic thought, macroeconomics, monetary economics
What is the money illusion?
19 Feb 2020 Leave a comment
in business cycles, economics of information, history of economic thought, macroeconomics, monetary economics
Nobel Symposium Randall Kroszner Lessons from the global financial crisis, and crises past
19 Feb 2020 Leave a comment
in budget deficits, business cycles, economic growth, economic history, economics of information, economics of regulation, Euro crisis, financial economics, global financial crisis (GFC), great depression, great recession, law and economics, macroeconomics, monetary economics, property rights, Public Choice, public economics Tags: sovereign defaults
Debate: Abolish Banking Insurance?
18 Feb 2020 Leave a comment
in Austrian economics, business cycles, comparative institutional analysis, economic history, economics of information, economics of regulation, financial economics, industrial organisation, law and economics, macroeconomics, monetary economics, privatisation, survivor principle Tags: bank panics, bank runs, deposit insurance
Lucas and Sargent on equilibrium macroeconomics and imperfect information
16 Feb 2020 Leave a comment
in business cycles, economics of information, macroeconomics, monetary economics, Robert E. Lucas Tags: Keynesian macroeconomics, new classical macroeconomics, New Keynesian macroeconomics

Interest rates and cost-push fallacies
14 Feb 2020 Leave a comment
in business cycles, history of economic thought, macroeconomics, monetary economics Tags: monetary policy

Milton Friedman on old fallacies that never die at central banks
12 Feb 2020 Leave a comment
in business cycles, financial economics, great depression, inflation targeting, macroeconomics, Milton Friedman, monetary economics, politics - New Zealand, Public Choice
Edward Prescott, Monetary Policy with 100% Reserve Banking: An Exploration
12 Feb 2020 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, applied welfare economics, budget deficits, business cycles, econometerics, economic history, Edward Prescott, global financial crisis (GFC), great depression, great recession, industrial organisation, macroeconomics, Milton Friedman, monetarism, monetary economics, property rights, Public Choice, Robert E. Lucas Tags: real business cycles
Nobel Symposium Emi Nakamura Monetary policy: Conventional and unconventional
12 Feb 2020 Leave a comment
in budget deficits, business cycles, econometerics, economic growth, economic history, Euro crisis, fiscal policy, global financial crisis (GFC), great depression, great recession, macroeconomics, monetarism, monetary economics Tags: New Keynesian macroeconomics
Debate on Progress Steven Pinker, Matt Ridley, Malcolm Gladwell, Alain de Botton
11 Feb 2020 Leave a comment
in comparative institutional analysis, constitutional political economy, defence economics, development economics, discrimination, economic growth, economic history, economics of crime, economics of education, energy economics, environmental economics, gender, growth disasters, growth miracles, labour economics, law and economics, liberalism, poverty and inequality, property rights, Public Choice Tags: Age of Enlightenment, pessimism bias, The Great Enrichment





Recent Comments