Cambridge Companion to Keynes.
BBC Radio 4 - The Reith Lectures - Topics - Political economy
Collected Works of Michal Kalecki: Studies in Applied Economics, Harpham - - History of Political Thought 20 3: The "Revolution" of the Political Economy of the Sign: Yi-Bing Zhang - - Modern Philosophy 4: Lionel Robbins - - Science and Society 19 4: Gareth Stedman-Jones - unknown. Community and the Rise of Commercial Society: Nederman - - History of Political Thought 21 1: It also stresses the importance of open information flows and civic traditions in improving the quality of government.
The ideas in the new political economy are at the heart of many contemporary debates about the reform of public institutions and reforming public services.
They are also important in understanding how interactions between government and the economy may be a source of under-development problems. Economists have long held the view that the development of the financial system financial deepening and economic development are closely intertwined. The literature, however, contains relatively few formal models presumably because it has proved hard to integrate money and financial ininto a standard framework of macroeconomics and growth.
This lecture borrows from a model of money and liquidity that he has developed with Nobuhiro Kiyotaki, a model in the spirit of Keynes - to explore the impact of financial deepening. Our theory allows us to trace the evolution of different kinds of money, from ancient to modern.
The New Political Economy
This research imposes the framework of commodity chain analysis onto these projects. By doing so it illustrates a case in which state agencies have played a lead role in facilitating a commodity chain. This conflicts with literature that depicts market relations as being the primary force in commodity chains. As a result the role of state power is central to the dispossession and articulation of these spaces to a regional commodity chain.
Is American power in world politics in crisis?
Video and Audio Lectures in Political Economy
If so, why is American power in crisis? What are its implications to the global human rights regime?
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Exploring the implications of the US political crisis to global politics and international human rights norms, this essay offers two. First, it argues that the crisis of American decline is caused by the structural deficiencies and injustices that are entrenched in the US neoliberal political economy, a governance model that many countries worldwide have adopted in varying scales and extent of localization.
Second, this neoliberal model of governance is fundamentally designed to undermine the human dignity of all individuals, as it engenders severe material inequality within and between nations — an outcome, that, in the long-term, fundamentally undermines. Thus, the crisis of American power is not only a crisis of discursive legitimation as punctuated by the horrendous rhetoric of Trumpism.
Rather, the logic of capital accumulation through neoliberal governance has engendered a crisis of distributive injustice within the US and in the world economy — an outcome that has undermined the dignity and rights of people worldwide. The expansion of markets and market relations over past several decades ranks among the most transformative aspects of our times. Leading accounts of marketization credit it with having fostered trade, investment, and competition; technological and organizational advances and innovation; and having permitting sustained economic growth and capital accumulation on a previously unimagined scale.
Marketization and the expansion of the world economy with which it is credited is also seen to have permitted unprecedented improvements in welfare, understood broadly as improving living standards and the satisfaction of human needs.
- Political Economy - Hillsdale College.
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