Report NEP-PKE-2019-10-28
This is the archive for NEP-PKE, a report on new working papers in the area of Post Keynesian Economics. Karl Petrick issued this report. It is usually issued weekly.Subscribe to this report: email, RSS, or Mastodon.
Other reports in NEP-PKE
The following items were announced in this report:
- Jose Luis Oreiro & Kalinka Martins da Silva, 2019. "A new developmentalist model of structural change, economic growth and middle-income trap," Working Papers PKWP1920, Post Keynesian Economics Society (PKES).
- Filippo Gusella, 2019. "Modelling Minskyan financial cycles with fundamentalist and extrapolative price strategies: An empirical analysis via the Kalman filter approach," Working Papers - Economics wp2019_24.rdf, Universita' degli Studi di Firenze, Dipartimento di Scienze per l'Economia e l'Impresa.
- Srinivas Raghavendra & Kijong Kim & Sinead Ashe & Mrinal Chadha & Felix Asante & Petri T. Piiroinen & Nata Duvvury, 2019. "The Macroeconomic Loss Due to Violence against Women and Girls: The Case of Ghana," Economics Working Paper Archive wp_939, Levy Economics Institute.
- Anwar Shaikh, 2019. "The Econ in Econophysics," Working Papers 1913, New School for Social Research, Department of Economics.
- Palma, J. G., 2019. "The Chilean economy since the return to democracy in 1990. On how to get an emerging economy growing, and then sink slowly into the quicksand of a “middle-income trap”," Cambridge Working Papers in Economics 1991, Faculty of Economics, University of Cambridge.
- Stephan Schulmeister, 2019. "Keynes und die Finanzmärkte. Auf halbem Weg vom "homo oeconomicus" zum "homo humanus"," WIFO Working Papers 588, WIFO.
- Orit Zeevy-Solovey, 2019. "Oral presentation modeling in the EFL classroom," Proceedings of International Academic Conferences 9411384, International Institute of Social and Economic Sciences.
- Fetzer, Thiemo & Schwarz, Carlo, 2019. "Tariffs and Politics: Evidence from Trump’s Trade Wars," The Warwick Economics Research Paper Series (TWERPS) 1227, University of Warwick, Department of Economics.
- Freeman, Dena, 2018. "De-democratisation and rising inequality: the underlying cause of a worrying trend," LSE Research Online Documents on Economics 88038, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library.