Content
June 2024, Volume 44, Issue 2
- 201-202 Introduction
by J R Shackleton - 204-217 Monetary system stability as a precondition for local and international order
by Paul Tucker - 218-244 The economics of China's Holistic View of National Security: A preliminary assessment
by Kerry Liu - 245-266 Ralph Hawtrey: A forgotten pioneer of macroeconomics
by David Glasner - 267-280 The effect of economic uncertainty on remittance flows from developed countries
by Sèna Kimm Gnangnon - 281-293 The ‘means’ and the ‘ends’ of economic calculation: The missing aspect of an epochal dispute
by Dmitrii Trubnikov - 294-319 Rewarding performance through sustainability‐linked bonds
by Anne‐Marie Anderson & Richard Kish - 320-337 The scholastic perspective on the time value of money and the contribution of Martín de Azpilcueta (1491–1586)
by Mohammadhosein Bahmanpour‐Khalesi & Mohammadjavad Sharifzadeh - 338-352 Not following the script: When institutional development is uneven
by Ryan H Murphy - 354-362 Seven reasons why mission‐oriented innovation policies seldom work in practice
by Magnus Henrekson & Christian Sandström & Mikael Stenkula - 363-373 Popular perceptions of the rich in 13 countries
by Rainer Zitelmann - 374-375 Covid‐19 and Sweden: What constitutes success? A response to Fredrik Andersson and Lars Jonung
by David Goldsmith - 376-377 Rejoinder
by Fredrik N G Andersson & Lars Jonung - 378-385 Rebuilding the Roman imperial currency in nineteenth century Britain
by George Maher - 386-393 The new paternalism does not replace older wisdom
by Erik W Matson - 394-401 Denmark: The epitome of ‘innovism’?
by Stefan Kirkegaard Sløk‐Madsen & Henrik Mogensen Nielsen - 403-413 Selling renewable energy: A review of three new publications
by Lawrence Haar - 414-422 Do social justice fallacies imply social justice is a fallacy?
by Kaveh Pourvand - 423-425 Monitoring the state or the market: From laissez faire to market fundamergntalism By Vito Tanzi
by Carlo Stagnaro - 426-428 Pox Romana: The plague that shook the Roman world By Colin Elliott
by Mark Koyama - 429-431 How did Britain come to this? A century of systemic failures of governance By Gwyn Bevan
by Christopher Snowdon - 432-435 Seven crashes: The economic crises that shaped globalisation By Harold James
by Geoffrey Wood - 436-438 Milton Friedman: The last conservative By Jennifer Burns
by Tom Clougherty - 439-440 Liberalism's last man: Hayek in the age of political capitalism By Vikash Yadav
by Joshua Bowden - 441-444 May contain lies: How stories, statistics and studies exploit our biases – and what we can do about it By Alex Edmans
by Andy Mayer
February 2024, Volume 44, Issue 1
- 1-2 Introduction
by J R Shackleton - 3-16 The Covid‐19 lesson from Sweden: Don't lock down
by Fredrik N G Andersson & Lars Jonung - 17-30 Did government support delay bankruptcy during the pandemic?
by Hazwan Haini & Pang Wei Loon & Lawal Olamilekan Abdulwahab & Wafid Sophian - 31-56 Reassessing the Bengal Famine of 1943
by Hira Jungkow & Herbert Anderson - 57-70 The case for 100% money: Ten reasons for separating money issuance from banking
by Samuel Demeulemeester - 71-94 So far, Central Bank Digital Currencies have failed
by Kevin Dowd - 95-117 Reassessing climate disclosure demands: An examination of stakeholder perspectives beyond institutional investors
by Emre Kuvvet - 118-138 The political economy of fiscal dominance: Evidence from the Chilean government of Salvador Allende
by Víctor I Espinosa & David O Cueva - 139-153 Moving to the Left: what people in Chile think of capitalism and the rich
by Axel Kaiser & Rainer Zitelmann - 155-159 The 1.5o mantra
by Peter Zweifel - 160-168 An experiment in market‐led higher education: The case of the Buckingham ‘licence’
by James Tooley - 170-177 Who do you think is the greatest‐ever economist?
by Mark Skousen - 178-184 Gary Becker's extraordinary legacy
by Pedro Schwartz - 185-187 The capitalist manifesto: Why the global free market will save the world By Johan Norberg
by Michael James - 188-191 The individualists: Radicals, reactionaries and the struggle for the soul of libertarianism By Matt Zwolinski, John Tomasi
by Charles Amos - 192-193 Faith in markets: Christian capitalism in the early American republic By Joseph P Slaughter
by Benedikt Koehler - 194-196 Sing as we go: Britain between the wars By Simon Heffer
by J R Shackleton - 197-198 Why not better and cheaper? Healthcare and innovation By James B Rebitzer and Robert S Rebitzer
by Kristian Niemietz - 199-200 The women who made modern economics By Rachel Reeves
by Annabel Denham
October 2023, Volume 43, Issue 3
- 313-313 Introduction
by J R Shackleton - 314-339 Has Brexit affected employment in Japanese affiliates in the UK?
by Massimiliano Porto & Agata Wierzbowska - 340-352 Equality of competition: A consistent approach to equality of opportunity in sport
by Jasper Doomen - 353-371 Attitudes towards capitalism in 34 countries on five continents
by Rainer Zitelmann - 372-387 Adam Smith's moral foundations of self‐interest and ethical social order
by Mikko Arevuo - 388-405 The Russia–Ukraine conflict and investor psychology in financial markets
by Emon Kalyan Chowdhury & Umme Humaira - 406-422 Sismondi's principles of liberty and economic progress
by Rogério Arthmar - 423-435 The Talmud on usury
by Benedikt Koehler - 437-440 Does the monetary base matter? A response to Tim Congdon
by Scott Sumner - 441-444 Rejoinder
by Tim Congdon - 445-451 How creative destruction keeps churning
by Anthony J Greco - 453-457 Squaring the circle: Economic legacies of the Cold War
by Carlos Rodríguez Braun - 458-462 The Big Myth: How American business taught us to loathe government and love the free market By Naomi Oreskes and Erik M Conway
by Charles Amos - 463-465 We need to talk about inflation: 14 urgent lessons from the last 2,000 years By Stephen D. King
by Christopher Snowdon - 466-467 End times: Elites, counter‐elites and the path of political disintegration By Peter Turchin
by Susanna Booth - 468-469 The ends of freedom: Recovering America's lost promise of economic rights By Mark Paul
by Joshua Bowden - 470-472 Regime change: Towards a postliberal future By Patrick J Deneen
by Jamie Whyte - 473-474 Pioneers of capitalism: The Netherlands 1,000–1800 By Maarten Prak and Jan Luiten van Zanden
by J R Shackleton - 475-476 The tyranny of nostalgia: Half a century of British economic decline By Russell Jones
by Annabel Denham - 477-479 The monetarists: The making of the Chicago monetary tradition, 1927–1960 By George S Tavlas
by John Greenwood
June 2023, Volume 43, Issue 2
- 170-184 The evolution of the Swedish market model
by Nima Sanandaji & Viktor Ström & Mouna Esmaeilzadeh & Saeid Esmaeilzadeh - 185-200 If ‘money matters’, what about the monetary base?
by Tim Congdon - 201-210 Debt and currency value during COVID‐19 in the Global South
by Behrooz Gharleghi - 211-228 Currency under War Communism: An example of Gresham's Law?
by Cristóbal Matarán - 229-244 The relationship between economic freedom and peace
by Alexander Jelloian - 245-264 The impact of rising EU Allowance prices on core inflation in the Eurozone
by Hideki Nishigaki - 265-274 The UK's net neutrality regulation helps neither consumers nor innovators
by Roslyn Layton - 275-286 Are electric vehicles really green?
by Richard Kish - 287-296 Paul Sagar's contentious interpretation of Adam Smith
by Alberto Mingardi - 298-302 Hayek: A Life, 1899–1950 By Bruce Caldwell and Hansjörg Klausinger
by Pedro Schwartz - 303-304 Rethinking economics as social theory By Richard E. Wagner. Edward Elgar. 2022. pp. 208. £85.00 (hbk). ISBN: 978–1802204759. £25.00 (ebk). ISBN: 978–1802204766
by Eric Jones - 305-307 The fiscal theory of the price level By John H Cochrane
by Michael Ben‐Gad - 308-310 Better money: Gold, fiat, or Bitcoin? By Lawrence H White
by Geoffrey Wood
February 2023, Volume 43, Issue 1
- 1-1 Introduction
by J R Shackleton - 2-31 The widespread failure of central banks to control inflation
by Willem H Buiter - 32-52 America's decoupling from China: A perspective from stock markets
by Kerry Liu - 53-72 The monetary policy strategy of the Bank of England in 2020–21: An assessment
by John Greenwood - 73-88 Why is the West unique in linking religiosity to market friendliness?
by Pál Czeglédi - 89-108 Which factors affect the sustainability of pension schemes?
by Said Outlioua & Abdesselam Fazouane - 109-114 The postliberal confusion
by Jamie Whyte - 115-125 There is no capitalist conspiracy and the rich are not all‐powerful
by Rainer Zitelmann - 126-132 Benedikt Koehler on Moses
by David Conway - 133-141 The search for stability
by Geoffrey Wood - 142-148 Inventing austerity
by Alessandro Roselli - 149-150 The Federal Reserve: A new history by Robert L Hetzel
by Forrest Capie - 151-154 The price of time: The real story of interest
by Charles Amos - 155-157 The Baron: Maurice de Hirsch and the Jewish nineteenth century, by Matthias B Lehmann
by Benedikt Koehler - 158-160 A guide to good money: Beyond the illusions of asset inflation. By Brendan Brown
by Michael James - 161-163 Orderly Britain: How Britain has resolved everyday problems, from dog fouling to double parking, by Tim Newburn|Andrew Ward
by J R Shackleton - 164-166 Beyond positivism, behaviorism, and neoinstitutionalism in economics By Deirdre Nansen McCloskey
by Peter J Boettke
October 2022, Volume 42, Issue 3
- 418-441 The Industrial Revolution as a collective action problem: The House of Commons games patents of monopoly, November 1601
by Terence Kealey - 442-452 Testing the total consumption model of alcohol
by Christopher Snowdon - 453-476 Aid for Trade is more effective when the trading environment is more predictable
by Sèna Kimm Gnangnon - 477-499 Was David Hume a racist? Interpreting Hume's infamous footnote (Part II)
by Kendra Asher - 500-504 A response to Kendra Asher
by James F Fieser - 505-514 The early Christian origins of voluntary poor relief
by Benedikt Koehler - 515-527 The role of anti‐capitalism in Hitler's world view
by Rainer Zitelmann - 528-540 By the same author: Presenting Adam Smith's works as a whole
by Daniel B Klein & Caroline Breashears - 541-548 Economics laureates should disclose their political ideologies in policy petitions
by Emre Kuvvet - 549-558 The fallacies of central bank independence
by James Forder - 560-561 THE FUTURE OF MONEY: HOW THE DIGITAL REVOLUTION IS TRANSFORMING CURRENCIES AND FINANCE, by Eswar S Prasad
by Brandon Davies - 562-564 THE POWER OF GEOGRAPHY: TEN MAPS THAT REVEAL THE FUTURE OF OUR WORLD. by Tim Marshall
by Eric Jones - 565-566 INTEREST AND CAPITAL: THE MONETARY ECONOMICS OF MICHAL KALECKI by Jan Toporowski Oxford University Press (2022), pp. 208. ISBN: 978–0198816232 (hb, £65.00); 978–0192548221 (e‐book, £45.41)
by Forrest Capie - 567-570 BRITISH RAIL: A NEW HISTORY by Christian Wolmar
by J R Shackleton - 571-573 The Magic Money Tree And Other Economic Tales
by John Phelan
June 2022, Volume 42, Issue 2
- 209-209 Introduction
by J R Shackleton - 210-224 Attitudes towards the rich in China, Japan, South Korea, and Vietnam
by Rainer Zitelmann - 225-239 Was David Hume a racist? Interpreting Hume's infamous footnote (Part I)
by Kendra Asher - 240-258 The constitution of ambiguity: The effects of constitutions on economic freedom
by Ryan H Murphy - 259-274 Is inflation caused by deteriorating inflation expectations or excessive monetary growth?
by Kent Matthews & Kian Ong - 275-287 Whither monetarism?
by Scott Sumner - 288-306 On monetary growth and inflation in leading economies, 2021–22: Relative prices and the overall price level
by John Greenwood & Steve H Hanke - 307-326 Illiberal economic institutions and racial intolerance in the United States
by Walker Wright - 327-343 Rethinking the pandemic narrative: An ordoliberal perspective
by Dmitrii Trubnikov - 344-360 Venezuela's collapse: Exogenous shock or institutional design?
by Jorge Jraissati & Keith Jakee - 361-368 The different obligations owed to small groups, the poor – and to participants in the extended market order: Anscombe, Hayek, Hume and usury
by Robert C B Miller - 369-384 How might the United Kingdom's debt–GDP ratio be reduced? Evidence from the last 120 years
by Michael Wickens - 385-394 Russia versus the West: Facing the long‐term challenge
by Michael Ben‐Gad - 395-408 Is there a new case for reparations?
by John A Tatom - 409-410 A MONETARY AND FISCAL HISTORY OF LATIN AMERICA, 1960–2017 edited by Timothy J Kehoe, Juan Pablo Nicolini
by Forrest Capie - 411-413 A DUTY OF CARE: BRITAIN BEFORE AND AFTER COVID, by Peter Hennessy
by J R Shackleton - 414-416 THE JOURNEY OF HUMANITY: THE ORIGINS OF WEALTH AND INEQUALITY by Oded Galor
by John Phelan
February 2022, Volume 42, Issue 1
- 2-12 Monetary policy in a world of radical uncertainty
by Mervyn King - 13-29 Equality Street: Ideology and attitudes towards the purely relative definition of poverty
by Andrew Dunn - 30-49 Private regulation versus government regulation: The example of financial markets
by Philip Booth - 50-69 Health economics explained through six questions and answers
by Peter Zweifel - 70-86 International sanctions and development: Evidence from Latin America and the Caribbean (1950–2019)
by Fernando A I González - 87-114 Cognitive economics and the Market Mind Hypothesis: Exploring the final frontier of economics
by Patrick Schotanus - 115-134 Dynamic efficiency and economic complexity
by Vicente Moreno‐Casas & Philipp Bagus - 135-143 Gratefulness, resentfulness, and some modern slogans
by Daniel B Klein - 144-160 John Blundell's cricket blueprint revisited
by Andy Stevens - 161-167 Building from the bottom up: Politics after Covid
by Ruth Kelly - 168-178 State of deception: Propaganda in the war on terror
by Abigail R Hall - 179-185 Islamic and Western banking: A Chicago perspective
by Gerald R Steele - 186-194 Time to put ‘money’ back into ‘monetary policy’
by Julian Jessop - 195-197 COGS AND MONSTERS: WHAT ECONOMICS IS, AND WHAT IT SHOULD BE by Diane Coyle
by Charles Amos - 198-200 MONEY AND THE RULE OF LAW: GENERALITY AND PREDICTABILITY IN MONETARY INSTITUTIONS by Peter J. Boettke | Alexander William Salter | Daniel J Smith
by Geoffrey Wood - 201-203 TWO HUNDRED YEARS OF MUDDLING THROUGH: THE SURPRISING STORY OF BRITAIN'S ECONOMY FROM BOOM TO BUST AND BACK AGAIN by Duncan Weldon
by Stephen Davies - 204-206 THREE DAYS AT CAMP DAVID: HOW A SECRET MEETING IN 1971 TRANSFORMED THE GLOBAL ECONOMY Jeffrey E. Garten
by Michael James
October 2021, Volume 41, Issue 3
- 353-353 Introduction
by J R Shackleton - 354-376 What can we learn from the United Kingdom’s post‐1945 economic reforms?
by Nicholas Crafts - 377-390 Gender quotas and company financial performance: A systematic review
by Jeong Jin Yu & Guy Madison - 391-415 The challenge of removing a mistaken price cap
by Stephen Littlechild - 416-429 Economic complexity and poverty in developing countries
by Sena Kimm Gnangnon - 430-441 From bailout to bail‐in: Making banking a legitimate part of the market economy
by Pär Holmbäck Adelwald - 442-457 A call to embrace jural dualism
by Jonathon Diesel & Daniel B Klein - 458-464 The viability of the UK's assetless electricity retailers
by Lawrence Haar - 465-471 Configuring Hayek versus Keynes: Decentralisation, regulation, and computational discovery procedures
by Ron Wallace - 472-475 Tax tyranny: A classical liberal analysis
by Pascal Salin - 476-488 Defending liberal individualism against communitarian critiques
by Graham Dawson - 489-490 CONTROLLING CORRUPTION: THE SOCIAL CONTRACT APPROACH by Bo Rothstein
by Gabriel Stein - 491-492 ECONOMICS IN ONE VIRUS: AN INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMIC REASONING THROUGH COVID‐19 by Ryan A Bourne
by Christopher Snowdon - 493-495 TAXING SIN by Michael Thom
by Charles Amos - 496-498 Leave Me Alone And I'Ll Make You Rich: How The Bourgeois Deal Enriched The World
by John Phelan - 499-500 Islam & Economics: A Primer On Markets, Morality, And Justice
by Benedikt Koehler - 501-502 THE POWER OF CREATIVE DESTRUCTION: ECONOMIC UPHEAVAL AND THE WEALTH OF NATIONS by Philippe Aghion|Céline Antonin|Simon Bunel
by Nicholas Crafts - 503-505 THE GYPSY ECONOMIST: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF COLIN CLARK by Alex Millmow
by J R Shackleton - 506-508 FULLY GROWN: WHY A STAGNANT ECONOMY IS A SIGN OF SUCCESS by Dietrich Vollrath
by Paul Ormerod
June 2021, Volume 41, Issue 2
- 197-197 Introduction
by J R Shackleton - 198-210 COVID‐19 and complexity: Hayekian economics and the world after the pandemic
by Stephen Davies - 211-224 Attitudes to wealth in seven countries: The Social Envy Coefficient and the Rich Sentiment Index
by Rainer Zitelmann - 225-240 Attitudes to work and time spent unemployed across 30 years
by Andrew Dunn - 241-251 Sovereign wealth funds: A potential solution to market failure and government failure
by James Broughel - 252-270 Changes in Italy's education‐related digital divide
by Giorgio Di Pietro - 271-283 Nudges for better voters
by Nicolás Maloberti - 284-298 Rising repair costs and the throwaway society
by John McCollough & Ailian Qiu - 300-308 Hyperinflation, depression, and the rise of Adolf Hitler
by Alessandro Roselli - 309-312 The right to move and the right to exclude: Ilya Somin and ‘foot voting’
by Paul Graham - 313-316 Migration and liberal dilemmas: A comment on Ilya Somin's ‘foot voting’
by Stephen Davies - 317-319 Rejoinder
by Ilya Somin - 320-335 Interest rates or quantity of money? Edward Nelson on Milton Friedman
by Tim Congdon - 337-339 CRAFTING CONSENSUS: WHY CENTRAL BANKERS CHANGE THEIR SPEECH AND HOW SPEECH CHANGES THE ECONOMY by Nicole Baerg
by Geoffrey Wood - 340-342 CHINA'S GRAND STRATEGY AND AUSTRALIA'S FUTURE IN THE NEW GLOBAL ORDER by Geoff Raby
by Frank Milne - 343-345 DYNAMISM: THE VALUES THAT DRIVE INNOVATION, JOB SATISFACTION, AND ECONOMIC GROWTH by Edmund Phelps, Raicho Bojilov, Hian Teck Hoon, Gylfi Zoega
by Carlo Stagnaro - 346-348 RELIGION AND THE RISE OF CAPITALISM by Benjamin M. Friedman
by Benedikt Koehler - 349-350 RELENTLESS: THE FORENSICS OF MOBSTERS' BUSINESS PRACTICES, by Jerold L. Zimmerman, Daniel P. Forrester
by David Gindis
February 2021, Volume 41, Issue 1
- 1-2 Introduction
by J R Shackleton - 3-20 The fiscal and monetary response to COVID‐19: What the Great Depression has – and hasn't – taught us
by George Selgin - 21-37 Can central banks run out of ammunition? The role of the money‐equities‐interaction channel in monetary policy
by Tim Congdon - 38-50 Debt, deficits, and inflation
by Forrest Capie & Geoffrey Wood - 51-58 Assessing the Powell policy review
by Robert Hetzel - 59-83 Do enlarged fiscal deficits cause inflation? The historical record
by Michael D. Bordo & Mickey D. Levy - 84-95 Poverty volatility and poverty in developing countries
by Sena Kimm Gnangnon - 96-110 Salvador Allende's development policy: Lessons after 50 years
by Victor I. Espinosa - 111-122 Impact of the Affordable Care Act on diabetes diagnoses in the United States: A county‐level analysis
by Rupa Palanki & Siva Chamarthy & Srinivas Palanki - 123-140 International free riding on institutions
by Robert Gmeiner - 141-152 Freedom through foot voting
by Ilya Somin - 153-161 Samuel Brittan: Liberal Keynesian?
by Michael James - 162-174 The mystery of Modern Monetary Theory
by Joakim Book - 175-177 CHANGING TIMES: ECONOMICS, POLICIES, AND RESOURCE ALLOCATION IN BRITAIN SINCE 1951 by Martin Chick
by Nicholas Crafts - 178-179 GREED IS DEAD: POLITICS AFTER INDIVIDUALISM. by Paul Collier, John Kay
by Emily Carver - 180-181 YOU'RE HIRED: UNTOLD SUCCESSES AND FAILURES OF A POPULIST PRESIDENT by Casey B. Mulligan
by John Phelan - 182-184 CLASSICAL LIBERALISM AND THE INDUSTRIAL WORKING CLASS: THE ECONOMIC THOUGHT OF THOMAS HODGSKIN by Alberto Mingardi
by Pedro Schwartz - 185-187 ULTIMATE PRICE: THE VALUE WE PLACE ON LIFE by Howard Friedman
by Christopher Snowdon - 188-190 THE WEIRDEST PEOPLE IN THE WORLD: HOW THE WEST BECAME PSYCHOLOGICALLY PECULIAR AND PARTICULARLY PROSPEROUS by Joseph Henrich
by Benedikt Koehler