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Content
August 2024, Volume 12, Issue 4
October 2024, Volume 12, Issue 4
- 435-452 Are jobless recoveries history? Okun’s law, insufficient stimulus, and slow recoveries
by Gabriel Mathy
- 453-474 Considerations on inflation, economic growth, and the 2 per cent inflation target
by Robert Pollin & Hanae Bouazza
- 475-498 Demand-led growth under political constraints: a long-run model of conflict inflation
by Guilherme Spinato Morlin & Riccardo Pariboni
- 499-517 Hysteresis and the long shadow of the exchange rate regime
by Thomas Barnebeck Andersen
- 518-537 The effect of fiscal austerity on citizens’ trust in the European Union
by Giorgio Liotti & Rajmund Mirdala & Luigi Salvati
- 538-561 Autonomous demand and economic growth in Mexico (1993–2019): theory and empirics in a small, open and peripheral economy
by Maria Cristina Barbieri Góes & Santiago José Gahn & Ettore Gallo
- 562-563 Book review: Perry Mehrling, Money and Empire: Charles P. Kindleberger and the Dollar System (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK 2022) 298 pp
by Gonzalo Luis Fernánde
- 564-567 Book review: Peter Skott, Structuralist and Behavioral Macroeconomics (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK 2023) 384 pp
by Marwil J. Dávila-Fernandez
August 2024, Volume 12, Issue 3
May 2024, Volume 12, Issue 2
- 153-156 Robert Solow, eclectic American Keynesianism, and the Review of Keynesian Economics
by MatÃas Vernengo
- 157-158 Introduction
by Esteban Pérez Caldentey & Julia Braga & Thomas Palley
- 159-180 The different roles of liquidity and capital in preventing financial crises: insights from a Post-Keynesian model
by Peter Docherty
- 181-196 Theorising non-bank financial intermediation
by Jo Michell
- 197-219 Liquidity, solvency and regulation in the Classical–Keynesian theory of crises
by Carlo Panico
- 220-238 Optimal inflation targeting with anchoring
by Thomas R. Michl & Robert Rowthorn
- 239-264 The Argentine economy through the lens of an adapted Mundell–Fleming model for small open peripheral economies
by Ariel Dvoskin & Germán David Feldman & MatÃas Torchinsky Landau
- 265-269 Book review: Lucio Baccaro, Mark Blyth and Jonas Pontusson (eds), Diminishing Returns: The New Politics of Growth and Stagnation (Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK 2022) 541 pp
by Eduardo F. Bastian
- 270-273 Book review: Martin Wolf, The Crisis of Democratic Capitalism (Penguin Books/Allen Lane, London, UK 2023) 474 pp
by Engelbert Stockhammer
November 2023, Volume 11, Issue 4
- 435-459 Hysteresis and path dependence in economic analysis: formalizations, causes and implications
by Amitava Krishna Dutt
- 435-459 Hysteresis and path dependence in economic analysis: formalizations, causes and implications
by Amitava Krishna Dutt
- 460-488 Broadening the application of hysteresis in economics: institutions, policy lock-in, psychology, identity, and ideas
by Thomas Palley
- 460-488 Broadening the application of hysteresis in economics: institutions, policy lock-in, psychology, identity, and ideas
by Thomas Palley
- 489-506 Revisiting the hysteresis hypothesis: an ARIMAX approach
by Robert Calvert Jump & Engelbert Stockhammer
- 489-506 Revisiting the hysteresis hypothesis: an ARIMAX approach
by Robert Calvert Jump & Engelbert Stockhammer
- 507-528 Will hysteresis effects afflict the US economy during the post-COVID-19 recovery?
by Mark Setterfield
- 507-528 Will hysteresis effects afflict the US economy during the post-COVID-19 recovery?
by Mark Setterfield
- 529-553 Central Bank Digital Currencies: a proper reaction to private digital money?
by Sergio Cesaratto & Eladio Febrero
- 529-553 Central Bank Digital Currencies: a proper reaction to private digital money?
by Sergio Cesaratto & Eladio Febrero
- 554-584 Secular stagnation: a Classical–Marxian view
by Manuel David Cruz & Daniele Tavani
- 554-584 Secular stagnation: a Classical–Marxian view
by Manuel David Cruz & Daniele Tavani
- 585-587 Book review: Dong Wang and Dejun Cao, Re-Globalisation: When China Meets the World Again (Routledge, London, UK 2020, ISBN 978-1-0031-2693-5) 168 pp
by Oktay Özden
- 585-587 Book review: Dong Wang and Dejun Cao, Re-Globalisation: When China Meets the World Again (Routledge, London, UK 2020, ISBN 978-1-0031-2693-5) 168 pp
by Oktay Özden
- 588-590 Book review: Louis-Phillipe Rochon and Sergio Rossi (eds), Elgar Encyclopedia of Post-Keynesian Economics (Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2023, hardcover, ISBN 978-1-78897-392-2, US$305.00) 474 pp
by Ivan D. Velasquez
- 588-590 Book review: Louis-Phillipe Rochon and Sergio Rossi (eds), Elgar Encyclopedia of Post-Keynesian Economics (Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2023, hardcover, ISBN 978-1-78897-392-2, US$305.00) 474 pp
by Ivan D. Velasquez
July 2023, Volume 11, Issue 3
- 261-289 Critical notes on some recent Neo-Kaleckian contributions on capacity utilization
by Santiago José Gahn
- 290-327 Pure Harrodian dynamics: heterogeneous expectations and the loss of three established propositions
by Reiner Franke
- 328-349 A sectoral perspective on the persistence of economic sentiment: mere transitory effect or a long memory process?
by Ivana Lolić & Petar Sorić & Marija Logarušić
- 350-376 Growth trajectories and political economy in a Structuralist open economy model
by Gabriel Porcile & Danilo Spinola & Giuliano Yajima
- 377-399 The effect of public social expenditure on imports
by Carlos GarcimartÃn & Arnoldo L. Marmolejo & Carlos Eggers
- 400-415 Why the conventional test of Thirlwall’s law is still not a ‘near-tautology’: a rejoinder to Professor Blecker
by John S.L. McCombie
- 418-426 On empirical tests of Thirlwall’s law: a reply to Professor McCombie’s rejoinder
by Robert A. Blecker
- 427-429 Book review: Charles J. Whalen, Reforming Capitalism for the Common Good: Essays in Institutional and Post-Keynesian Economics (Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2022, ISBN 978-1-80392-628-5) 386 pp
by Jacob Powell
- 430-434 Book review: Aleksandr V. Gevorkyan (ed.), Foreign Exchange Constraint and Developing Economies (Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2023, ISBN 978-1-80088-049-8) 278 pp
by Terence M. Yhip
April 2023, Volume 11, Issue 2
- 117-128 The first inflation problem of the twenty-first century
by Brad DeLong
- 129-146 Price and prejudice: reflections on the return of inflation and ideology* , *
by MatÃas Vernengo & Esteban Pérez Caldentey
- 147-171 Inflation phobia, myths and dogma exacerbate policy responses
by Anis Chowdhury & Jomo Kwame Sundaram
- 172-182 The quasi-inflation of 2021–2022: a case of bad analysis and worse response
by James K. Galbraith
- 183-213 Sellers’ inflation, profits and conflict: why can large firms hike prices in an emergency?
by Isabella M. Webe & Evan Wasner
- 214-231 Recession and deflation?
by David G. Blanchflower & Alex Bryson
- 214-231 Recession and deflation?
by David G. Blanchflower & Alex Bryson
- 252-255 Book review: James Crotty, Keynes Against Capitalism: His Economic Case for Liberal Socialism (Routledge, London, UK 2019) ISBN: 978-1138612846, 397 pp
by MatÃas Vernengo
- 256-259 Book review: Jonathan Levy, Ages of American Capitalism: A History of The United States (Random House, New York, NY, USA 2021) ISBN 978-0812995015, 944 pp
by Syed Mohib Ali
January 2023, Volume 11, Issue 1
July 2022, Volume 10, Issue 4
- 443-461 The international currency system revisited
by Tabitha M. Benney & Benjamin J. Cohen
- 462-498 Theorizing dollar hegemony: the political economic foundations of exorbitant privilege
by Thomas Palley
- 499-512 Will the Chinese renminbi replace the US dollar?
by Michael Pettis
- 513-532 The peso problem and dollar hegemony under inflation targeting
by Juan Alberto Vázquez-Muñoz & Ignacio Perrotini-Hernández
- 533-558 Old and new proposals for global monetary reform
by Jan Priewe
- 580-582 Book review: Mark G. Hayes, The Economics of Keynes: A New Guide to The General Theory (Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2006, ISBN 978-1-84844-056-2) 288 pp
by Suranjana Nabar-Bhaduri
- 583-587 Book review: Robert Skidelsky, Money and Government: The Past and Future of Economics (Yale University Press, New Haven, CT, USA 2017, ISBN 978-0-24135-282-3) 492 pp
by Esteban Pérez Caldentey
July 2022, Volume 10, Issue 3
- 1-11 Testing the global extent of the endogenous-money hypothesis: a panel vector autoregression approach – Online appendix
by Leonardo Vera & John Cajas Guijarro & Bryan Pérez
- 291-315 The relation between Keynesian monetary theory and demand-led growth: a Sraffian exploration
by Sergio Cesaratto & Riccardo Pariboni
- 316-347 Testing the global extent of the endogenous-money hypothesis: a panel vector autoregression approach
by Leonardo Vera & John Cajas Guijarro & Bryan Pérez
- 348-354 Understanding the consequences of IMF surcharges: the need for reform
by Joseph E. Stiglitz & Kevin P. Gallagher
- 355-381 The paper studies endogenous employment and distribution dynamics in a Post-Keynesian growth model of the Kalecki–Steindl tradition. Abstract: Productivity adjustments stabilise employment and the labour share in the long run: technological change allows firms to replenish the reserve army of workers in a struggle over income shares and thereby keeps wage demands in check. Labour market dynamics follow from separate wage and price curves. The authors discuss stability conditions and the equilibrium dynamics and investigate how legal working time and its reduction affect this equilibrium
by Stefan Ederer & Armon Rezai
- 382-405 The paper studies endogenous employment and distribution dynamics in a Post-Keynesian growth model of the Kalecki–Steindl tradition. Abstract: A particularly influential group among heterodox economists argues that a ‘competitive’ real exchange rate by itself triggers economic growth. New Developmentalism, a sub-group within this broader view, makes a valuable contribution to the discussion by assigning two different roles to the ‘competitive’ or ‘equilibrium’ exchange rate: first, it acts as a ‘light switch’ by allowing tradable sectors that employ ‘state of the art’ technology to earn the normal profit rate of the economy by selling their goods in global markets. And, second, to ensure that domestic firms have ‘access to foreign demand’, growth is accelerated through several mechanisms. This paper exclusively focuses on the first role, which has received much less attention in the literature. To do so, the authors present a formal framework inspired by the classical approach to prices and distribution that (a) captures the idea of the exchange rate as a ‘light-switch’ and (b) allows the examination of the scopes and limits of the concept of ‘Dutch disease’, the main structural feature that, according to New Developmentalism, may cause the systematic overvaluation of the exchange rate
by Ariel Dvoskin & Germán David Feldman
- 406-434 Drivers of private consumption in the era of financialisation: new evidence for European Union countries
by Ricardo Barradas
- 435-439 Book review: Charles Camic, Veblen: The Making of an Economist Who Unmade Economics (Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, USA 2020) 492 pp
by William McColloch
- 440-442 Book review: Yanis Varoufakis, Another Now: Dispatches from an Alternative Present (The Bodley Head, London, UK 2020) 240 pp
by Stefanos Ioannou
January 2022, Volume 10, Issue 1
- 1-24 The Godley-Tobin Memorial Lecture
by Marc Lavoie
- 25-45 Why do we think that inflation expectations matter for inflation? (And should we?)
by Jeremy B. Rudd
- 46-62 Keynes vs Kalecki: risk and uncertainty in their theories of the rate of interest
by Hubert Gabrisch
- 63-87 Towards a general, modern theory of animal spirits
by Michael Lainé
- 88-108 Monetary Keynesianism before Keynes? The January 1932 Harvard memorandum on anti-depression policies
by Ramesh Chandra
- 109-122 Hysteresis and the New Consensus three-equation model: a Post-Keynesian amendment
by Nelson H. Barbosa-Filho
- 123-125 Book review: Marc Lavoie, Post-Keynesian Monetary Theory: Selected Essays (Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2020, ISBN 978-1-83910-008-6) 416 pp
by Pablo G. Bortz
- 126-128 Book review: Alex M. Thomas, Macroeconomics: An Introduction (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK 2021) 254 pp
by Santiago J. Gahn
- 129-166 Theorizing Varieties of Capitalism: economics and the fallacy that ‘there is no alternative (TINA)’
by Thomas Palley
- 167-183 In search of varieties of capitalism: hardy perennial or troublesome weed?
by Mark Blyth & Herman Mark Schwartz
- 184-203 Learning from distant cousins? Post-Keynesian Economics, Comparative Political Economy, and the Growth Models approach
by Engelbert Stockhammer & Karsten Kohler
- 204-221 The politics of growth models
by Lucio Baccaro & Jonas Pontusson
- 222-241 Rethinking Varieties of Capitalism and growth theory in the ICT era
by David Soskice
- 222-241 Rethinking Varieties of Capitalism and growth theory in the ICT era
by David Soskice
- 242-263 Varieties of peripheral capitalism: on the institutional foundations of economic backwardness
by Esteban Pérez Caldentey & MatÃas Vernengo
- 264-290 Varieties and interdependencies of demand and growth regimes in finance-dominated capitalism: a Post-Keynesian two-country stock–flow consistent simulation approach
by Franz Prante & Eckhard Hein & Alessandro Bramucci
October 2021, Volume 9, Issue 4
- 435-460 Rent-seeking and asset-price inflation: a total-returns profile of economic polarization in America
by Michael Hudson
- 461–492-461–492 Financialization revisited: the economics and political economy of the vampire squid economy
by Thomas Palley
- 493–511-493–511 Financialization, premature deindustrialization, and instability in Latin America
by Esteban Pérez Caldentey & MatÃas Vernengo
- 512–520-512–520 Globalization of capital, erosion of economic policy sovereignty, and the lessons from John Maynard Keynes
by Biagio Bossone
- 521–551-521–551 Effectiveness of capital controls in dampening international shocks
by Chokri Zehri
- 552–574-552–574 China: capital flight or renminbi internationalization?
by Paulo van Noije & Bruno De Conti & Marina Zucker-Marques
- 575–578-575–578 Book review: Geoff Mann, In the Long Run, We are All Dead: Keynesianism, Political Economy, and Revolution (Verso Books, London, UK 2017) 432 pp
by Nina Eichacker
- 579–581-579–581 Book review: Zachary D. Carter, The Price of Peace: Money, Democracy, and the Life of John Maynard Keynes (Random House, New York, NY, USA 2020) 656 pp
by MatÃas Vernengo
July 2021, Volume 9, Issue 3
- 1-14 Distribution, wealth and demand regimes in historical perspective: the USA, the UK, France and Germany, 1855–2010 Online Appendices
by Engelbert Stockhammer & Joel Rabinovich & Niall Reddy
- 297-318 Household indebtedness, distribution, and bargaining power under distribution-induced technological change: a macroeconomic analysis
by Eric Kemp-Benedict & Y.K. Kim
- 319-336 Human capital accumulation, income distribution, and economic growth: a demand-led analytical framework
by Gilberto Tadeu Lima & Laura Carvalho & Gustavo Pereira Serra
- 337-367 Distribution, wealth and demand regimes in historical perspective: the USA, the UK, France and Germany, 1855–2010
by Engelbert Stockhammer & Joel Rabinovich & Niall Reddy
- 368-393 Omitted-variable bias in demand-regime estimations: the role of household credit and wage inequality in Brazil
by Julia Burle & Laura Carvalho
- 394-412 Wage- and profit-led growth regimes: a panel-data approach
by Guilherme de Oliveira & Eduardo Prado Souza
- 413-424 A note on ‘Wage-led versus profit-led demand regimes: the long and the short of it’
by Lilian N. Rolim
- 425-428 Life among the Econ: 50 years on
by Thomas Palley
- 429-431 Book review: Ajit Sinha, A Revolution in Economic Theory: The Economics of Piero Sraffa (Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, UK, New York, NY, USA and Melbourne, Australia 2016) 264 pp
by Enes Işık
- 432-434 Book review: Book review: Sergio Cesaratto, Heterodox Challenges in Economics: Theoretical Issues and the Crisis of the Eurozone (Springer, Cham, Switzerland 2020) 296 pp
by Karsten Kohler
April 2021, Volume 9, Issue 2
- 165-174 The macroeconomics of COVID-19: a two-sector interpretation
by Halvor Mehlum & Ragnar Torvik
- 175-203 Thirlwall's law is not a tautology, but some empirical tests of it nearly are
by Robert A. Blecker
- 204-231 A macroeconomic critique of integrated assessment environmental models: the case of Brazil
by Rafael Cattan & Florent McIsaac
- 232-252 External balance sheets of emerging economies: low-yielding assets, high-yielding liabilities
by Yılmaz Akyüz
- 253-269 Questioning the effect of the real exchange rate on growth: new evidence from Mexico
by Florencia Médici & AgustÃn Mario & Alejandro Fiorito
- 270-288 Expectations and exchange rates in a Keynes–Harvey model: an analysis of the Brazilian case from 2002 to 2017
by Leandro Vieira Araújo Lima & Fábio Henrique Bittes Terra
- 289-291 Book review: Adem Yavuz Elveren, The Economics of Military Spending: A Marxist Perspective (Routledge, London, UK and New York, NY, USA 2019) 224 pp
by David M. Fields
- 292-295 Book review: Naomi Lamoreaux and Ian Shapiro (eds), The Bretton Woods Agreements: Together with Scholarly Commentaries and Essential Historical Documents (Yale University Press, New Haven, CT, USA 2019) 504 pp
by Adrien Faudot
January 2021, Volume 9, Issue 1
October 2020, Volume 8, Issue 4
- 469-471 In memoriam: Julio López Gallardo (22 September 1941 – 3 May 2020)
by Gerardo Fujii-Gambero & Juan Carlos Moreno-Brid & Carlo Panico & MartÃn Puchet Anyul
- 472–493-472–493 What's wrong with Modern Money Theory: macro and political economic restraints on deficit-financed fiscal policy
by Thomas Palley
- 494–511-494–511 Beyond Modern Money Theory: a Post-Keynesian approach to the currency hierarchy, monetary sovereignty, and policy space
by Daniela Prates
- 512–535-512–535 Can tax competition boost demand? Causes and consequences of the global race to the bottom in corporate tax rates
by Ryan Woodgate
- 536–559-536–559 Employment hysteresis: an argument for avoiding front-loaded fiscal consolidations in the eurozone
by Paulo R. Mota & Abel L.C. Fernandes & Paulo B. Vasconcelos
- 560–588-560–588 Peripheral Europe beyond the Troika: assessing the ‘success’ of structural reforms in driving the Spanish recovery
by Luis Cárdenas & Paloma Villanueva & Ignacio Alvarez & Jorge Uxó
- 589–615-589–615 Macroeconomic performance under evolutionary dynamics of employee profit-sharing
by Gilberto Tadeu Lima & Jaylson Jair da Silveira
- 616–621-616–621 Fiscal policy in a depressed economy: a note
by Robert Rowthorn
- 622–623-622–623 Book review: Aleksandr V. Gevorkyan, Transition Economies: Transformation, Development, and Society in Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union (Routledge, New York, NY, USA 2018) 272 pp
by Gonzalo Luis Fernández
- 624–628-624–628 Book review: Esteban Pérez Caldentey, Roy Harrod (Great Thinkers in Economics, Palgrave Macmillan, London, UK 2019) 455 pp
by VÃctor Manuel Isidro Luna & Francisco Antonio MartÃnez Hernández
July 2020, Volume 8, Issue 3
April 2020, Volume 8, Issue 2
- 147-167 A Structuralist and Institutionalist developmental assessment of and reaction to New Developmentalism
by Carlos Aguiar de Medeiros
- 168-177 New and Classical Developmentalism compared: a response to Medeiros
by Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira
- 178-194 Modeling the real exchange rate: looking for evidence of wage-share effect
by Verónica De Jesús Romo & Julio López Gallardo
- 195-219 Making sense of Piketty's 'fundamental laws' in a Post-Keynesian framework: the transitional dynamics of wealth inequality
by Stefan Ederer & Miriam Rehm
- 220-239 Autonomous expenditures and induced investment: a panel test of the Sraffian supermultiplier model in European countries
by José A. Pérez-Montiel & Carles Manera Erbina
- 240-267 Distribution and capacity utilization in the United States: evidence from state-level data
by Luke Petach
- 268-286 Using non-linear estimation strategies to test an extended version of the Goodwin model on the US economy
by Julio Fernando Costa Santos & Ricardo Azevedo Araujo
- 287-302 Understanding the Brazilian demand regime: a Kaleckian approach
by Bruno Thiago Tomio
- 303-303 Corrigendum
by Thomas I. Palley
- 304-306 Book review: Jane D'Arista, All Fall Down: Debt, Deregulation and Financial Crises (Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2018) 240 pp
by Gökçer Özgür
- 307-309 Book review: John Smithin, Rethinking the Theory of Money, Credit, and Macroeconomics (Lexington Books, Lanham, MD, USA 2018) 239 pp
by Gregory A. Krohn
January 2020, Volume 8, Issue 1
- 1-20 The Godley-Tobin lecture
by Robert Rowthorn
- 21-22 Do current times vindicate Keynes and is New Keynesian macroeconomics Keynesian?
by Thomas I. Palley & Esteban Pérez Caldentey & MatÃas Vernengo
- 23-35 Keynesian economics: can it return if it never died?
by Barry Eichengreen
- 36-45 THe much-exaggerated death of Keynesian economics
by Robert W. Dimand
- 46-60 Was Keynesian economics ever dead? If so, has it been resurrected?
by Steven M. Fazzari
- 61-83 Reviving Keynesianism: the modelling of the financial system makes the difference
by Peter Bofinger
- 84-101 The return of Keynes and the Phillips curve in Latin America: evidence from four countries
by Esteban Pérez Caldentey & Nathan Perry & MatÃas Vernengo
- 102-118 Tobin (1975) meets rational expectations
by Emiliano Libman
- 119-137 Why does the history of economic thought neglect Post-Keynesian economics?
by Danielle Guizzo
- 138-141 Book review: Ann E. Davis, Money as a Social Institution: The Institutional Development of Capitalism (Routledge, New York, NY, USA 2017) 208 pp
by Victor Manuel Isidro Luna
- 142-145 Book review: Darrell M. West, The Future of Work: Robots, AI, and Automation (Brookings Institution Press, Washington, DC, USA 2018) 205 pp
by Kevin Cashman
October 2019, Volume 7, Issue 4
- 427–428-427–428 Thirlwall's law at 40
by Esteban Pérez Caldentey & MatÃas Vernengo
- 429-443 Why Thirlwall's law is not a tautology: more on the debate over the law
by J.S.L. McCombie
- 444-462 Thirlwall's law and the terms of trade: a parsimonious extension of the balanceof-payments-constrained growth model
by Ignacio Perrotini-Hernández & Juan Alberto Vázquez-Muñoz
- 463-485 Thirlwall's law and the terms of trade: a parsimonious extension of the balanceof-payments-constrained growth model
by Esteban Pérez Caldentey & Juan Carlos Moreno-Brid
- 486-497 Thirlwall's law, external debt sustainability, and the balance-of-payments-constrained level and growth rates of output
by Gustavo Bhering & Franklin Serrano & Fabio Freitas
- 498-516 Growth transitions and the balance-of-payments constraint
by Excellent Mhlongo & Kevin S. Nell
- 517-536 New Structuralism and the balance-ofpayments constraint
by Gabriel Porcile & Giuliano Toshiro Yajima
- 537-553 Is Indonesia's growth rate balance-ofpayments-constrained? A time-varying estimation approach
by Jesus Felipe & Matteo Lanzafame & Gemma Estrada
- 554-567 Thoughts on balance-of-paymentsconstrained growth after 40 years
by A.P. Thirlwall
- 568-569 James Crotty, Capitalism, Macroeconomics and Reality: Understanding Globalization, Financialization, Competition and Crisis (Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA 2017) 448 pp
by Juan MatÃas De Lucchi
July 2019, Volume 7, Issue 3