Journal of Post Keynesian Economics
1978 - 2024
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Volume 31, issue 4, 2009
- Special symposium of discretionary fiscal policy: fiscal policy is back! pp. 547-548
- Philip Arestis and Giuseppe Fontana
- Fiscal and interest rate policies in the "new consensus" framework: a different perspective pp. 549-565
- Malcolm Sawyer
- The consensus view on interest rates and fiscal policy: reality or innocent fraud? pp. 567-586
- Alvaro Angeriz and Philip Arestis
- The transmission mechanism of fiscal policy: a critical assessment of current theories and empirical methodologies pp. 587-604
- Giuseppe Fontana
- Fiscal policy in the monetary theory of production: an alternative to the "new consensus" approach pp. 605-621
- Guglielmo Forges Davanzati, Andrea Pacella and Riccardo Realfonzo
- Fiscal and monetary policy interactions: lessons for revising the EU Stability and Growth Pact pp. 623-643
- Mark Setterfield
- Fiscal policy is back in France and the United Kingdom! pp. 645-667
- Jerome Creel, Paola Monperrus-Veroni and Francesco Saraceno
- Origins of banking crises in Latin America: a critical view pp. 669-690
- Wesley C. Marshall
- Sen's capability approach and Post Keynesianism: similarities, distinctions, and the Cambridge tradition pp. 691-706
- Nuno Martins
- Is there a growth imperative in capitalist economies? a circular flow perspective pp. 707-727
- Mathias Binswanger
Volume 31, issue 3, 2009
- Where Bernanke is taking the Federal Reserve: a Post Keynesian and institutionalist perspective pp. 367-382
- J. Patrick Raines, Heather R. Richardson and Charles G. Leathers
- A Post Keynesian theory of economic policyâfilling a void pp. 383-401
- Arne Heise
- Convergence and efficiency: evidence from the EU-15 pp. 403-430
- Evangelia Desli
- How bad is divergence in the euro zone? Lessons from the United States and Germany pp. 431-457
- Sebastian Dullien and Ulrich Fritsche
- Is the composition of public expenditures converging in EMU countries? pp. 459-484
- Jesus Ferreiro, M. Teresa Garcia-Del-Valle and Carmen Gomez
- Taylor and Keynesian monetary policy rules pp. 485-492
- H. Sonmez Atesoglu
- The two methods and the hard core of economics pp. 493-522
- Luiz Carlos Breser-Pereira
- Three difficulties with neo-chartalism pp. 523-541
- Eladio Febrero
Volume 31, issue 2, 2008
- Keynes and the reform of the capitalist social order pp. 191-212
- Fernando Cardim de Carvalho
- Financial economics at 50: an oxymoronic tautology pp. 213-226
- M. C. Findlay and E. E. Williams
- Exchange rate regime proposal for emerging countries: a Keynesian perspective pp. 227-248
- Fernando Ferrari-Filho and Luiz Fernando de Paula
- Inflation targeting and Keynes's political economy pp. 249-270
- Georgios Argitis
- Testing the neoclassical long-run and the Keynesian short-run effects of investment on output and growth in India pp. 271-298
- Tarlok Singh
- North-South Ricardian trade and growth under the balance-of-payments constraint pp. 299-324
- Hiroaki Sasaki
- Missing details and conspicuous absences: from the >i>Treatise>/i> to the >i>General Theory>/i> pp. 325-344
- Antonio Carlos Macedo e Silva
- What is spurious correlation? a reply to DÃaz and Osuna pp. 345-356
- Andrew Kliman
- Understanding spurious correlation: a rejoinder to Kliman pp. 357-362
- Emilio DÃaz and Ruben Osuna
Volume 31, issue 1, 2008
- A stages approach to banking development in transition economies pp. 3-33
- Sheila Dow, Dipak Ghosh and Kobil Ruziev
- Investment functions and the profitability gap pp. 35-56
- Colin Richardson and Peter Romilly
- Effective-demand-constrained growth in a two-sector Kaldorian model pp. 57-78
- John McCombie and Mark Roberts
- Financial dependency and growth cycles in Latin American countries pp. 79-99
- Carlos Aguiar de Medeiros
- Innovations, wages, and profits pp. 101-123
- Mario Pianta and Massimiliano Tancioni
- Teaching Minsky's financial instability hypothesis: a manageable suggestion pp. 125-138
- Sebastien Charles
- U.S. deficit control and private-sector wealth pp. 139-149
- Joëlle J. Leclaire
- East German unemployment: the myth of the irrelevant labor market pp. 151-165
- Christian Merkl and Dennis Snower
- Neoclassical versus Keynesian approaches to Eastern German unemployment: a rejoinder to Merkl and Snower pp. 167-185
- John Hall and Udo Ludwig
Volume 30, issue 4, 2008
- The discrete charm of the Washington consensus pp. 541-560
- Jan Kregel
- Capital controls and financial liberalization: removing the ideological bias pp. 561-582
- André De Melo Modenesi and Rui Lyrio Modenesi
- The coordination problem: expectations and inaction pp. 583-600
- Miguel Duran
- Alternative money theories: a G7 testing pp. 601-622
- Yannis Panagopoulos and Aristotelis Spiliotis
- Cycles and trends in U.S. net borrowing flows pp. 623-648
- Nelson Barbosa-Filho, Codrina Rada, Lance Taylor and Luca Zamparelli
- Fiscal policy in a stock-flow consistent model: a comment pp. 649-668
- Bill Martin
- Is the current financial distress caused by the subprime mortgage crisis a Minsky moment? or is it the result of attempting to securitize illiquid noncommercial mortgage loans? pp. 669-676
- Paul Davidson
Volume 30, issue 3, 2008
- Monetary policy rules and U.S. monetary policy pp. 403-408
- H. Atesoglu
Volume 30, issue 2, 2007
- Teaching Post Keynesian exchange rate theory pp. 147-168
- John Harvey
- Neoclassical versus Post Keynesian models of exchange rate determination: a comparison based on nonnested model selection tests and predictive accuracy pp. 169-185
- Imad Moosa
- Inheriting inequality: institutional influences on the distribution of wealth pp. 187-203
- Alan Isaac
- Market structure-driven discrimination and the earnings of subordinate managers: an analysis by union density pp. 205-225
- Jacqueline Agesa and Richard Agesa
- The case for the Swedish wage-earner funds: a Post Keynesian solution to the dynamic inefficiency of capitalism through the socialization of investment pp. 227-258
- Philip Whyman
- A Keynesian angle for the Taylor rule: mortgage rates, monthly payment illusion, and the scarecrow effect of inflation pp. 259-277
- Alan Haight
- Neoclassical, mainstream, orthodox, and heterodox economics pp. 279-302
- David Dequech
- Live and dead issues in the methodology of economics pp. 303-312
- David Colander, Richard Holt and J. Barkley Rosser
Volume 30, issue 1, 2007
- The state of Post Keynesian interest rate policy: where are we and where are we going? pp. 3-11
- Louis-Philippe Rochon
- Interest rates, income distribution, and monetary policy dominance: Post Keynesians and the "fair rate" of interest pp. 13-42
- Louis-Philippe Rochon and Mark Setterfield
- Why money matters: Wicksell, Keynes, and the new consensus view on monetary policy pp. 43-60
- Giuseppe Fontana
- Macroeconomics and monetary policy: competing theoretical frameworks pp. 61-78
- Thomas Palley
- Fiscal policy in a stock-flow consistent (SFC) model pp. 79-100
- Wynne Goldey and Marc Lavoie
- A real interest rate rule for monetary policy? pp. 101-118
- John Smithin
- A Post Keynesian view of central bank independence, policy targets, and the rules versus discretion debate pp. 119-141
- L. Randall Wray
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