Quelle: HBS
FMM Conference: Progressive perspectives in times of Polycrisis
Veranstalter: | Hans-Böckler-Stiftung |
Ort: | Berlin, Holiday Inn Berlin |
vom: | 24.10.2024, 09:00 Uhr |
bis: | 26.10.2024, 20:00 Uhr |
The world is facing a variety of severe challenges that are in tension with one another. On the one hand, there is a perceived necessity for an investment offensive bring about decarbonisation. As the paradigm of the night-watchman state is (slowly) disappearing, governments around the globe are developing strategies for structural change that they hope will be growth-enhancing. On the other hand, demographic ageing and the desire for a better work-life balance raise doubts in the Global North whether economic growth is possible or meaningful. In times of accelerating digitalization, spreading post-materialistic norms and more demands for gender equality, calls for shorter and more flexible working hours are emerging.
These debates are taking place against a backdrop of geopolitical tensions and wars. The current system of the global division of production and trade in value chains is under question. It is viewed as inherently unjust from the perspective of the Global South. From the perspective of the Global North, the supply of affordable fossil and mineral resources is jeopardized, and yet conflicts over resources crucial for electrification and a "green growth model" become geostrategic battlegrounds.
At our conference, we will focus on progressive perspectives to face these challenges. What can macroeconomists from different schools of thought contribute to these debates?
The submission of papers in the following areas is particularly encouraged:
- Structural Change and Industrial Policy
- Macroeconomic Impacts of Decarbonization and the Role of the Government in the Transition
- Potential for and Desirability of Economic Growth
- Paid and Unpaid Working Time in Times of Structural Change, Ageing and Digitalization
- Distributional Consequences of the Ecological Transition within countries and between regions
- Effects of Geopolitical Tensions on Trade, Production and Employment
Submissions on the general subjects of the FMM, macroeconomics and macroeconomic policy analysis and modeling, are encouraged as well. Women are strongly encouraged to apply. We particularly welcome submissions for graduate student sessions. Those who have already presented a paper at a student session in previous FMM conferences should submit to the regular sessions to improve chances for newcomers. There will also be a day of introductory lectures for graduate students prior to the opening panel on 24 October.
Hotel costs will be covered for graduate student presenters (max. four nights). Details will be announced in decision letters by mid-August. A limited number of travel stipends for graduate student presenters will be sponsored by INET’s Young Scholar Initiative (YSI).
Submissions are to be made electronically via the web application at the bottom of this website. The deadline is 14 June 2024.
Decisions will be made by mid-July and will be based on clarity, relevance and originality of the abstracts. After acceptance, full papers are due by 30 September and will be posted on the conference webpage. Selected papers may be published in a special issue of the FMM’s peer reviewed European Journal of Economics and Economic Policies: Intervention (EJEEP).
The conference will take place as an in-person event. The Plenary Sessions will be livestreamed on this site.
Contact:
Sabine Nemitz
fmm[at]boeckler.de
A1: FISCAL POLICY, DEBT AND STRUCTURAL CHANGE
Determinants of Economic Growth and Fiscal Fragility in a Kaleckian Model with Public Capital and Targeted Debt Accumulation
Hiroshi Nishi (Hannan University)
Long run effects of austerity: an analysis of size-dependence and persistence in fiscal multipliers
Guilherme Klein Martins (University of Leeds)
Fiscal policy composition, multipliers and public debt sustainability: Evidence from OECD countries
Matteo Deleidi (University of Bari „Also Moro“),Giovanna Ciaffi, Lorenzo Di Domenico
The café economy: Structural transformation in Greece in the wake of austerity and „reforms“
Michalis Nikiforos (University of Geneva), V. Missos, C. Pierros, N. Rodousakis
A2: [zur Zeit leer]
A3: INFLATION AND DISTRIBUTION
Do markups respond to cost shocks? Firm-level evidence from the U.S.
Simon Grothe (University of Geneva)
UK Markups and Profit Margins during the pandemic and its aftermath
Alexander Guschanski (University of Greenwich), Özlem Onaran
The (Dis)Equalizing Effects of Production Networks: Income-dependent Inflation Exposure in EU Countries
Leonhard Ipsen (University of Bamberg), Jan Schulz
Distributive conflict and Inflation in Neoliberal Capitalism
Hugo Iasco Pereira (Federal University of Parana), Felipe Almeida
A4: GLOBAL VALUE CHAINS AND TRADE
Gains from regional trade integration? An analysis of SADC’s value chain integration in the transport equipment sector
Melike Döver (FU Berlin)
Global Value Chains, Structural Change, and Inequality: An industry-level analysis
Arpan Ganguly (FLAME University), Anwesha Basu
Global productive fluctuations hindering structural change: effects on Brazilian industrial investment
Vinicius Martinez (Unverstiy Paris City), André Biancarelli
The External Market Effect: Evidence from 18th century Britain
Syed Mohib Ali Ahmed (University of Sienna)
A5: MONETARY ECONOMICS I
Output and inflation effects of monetary policy shocks
Franz Prante (Chemnitz University of Technology), M. Enzinger, S. Gechert, P. Heimberger,
D. Fernández-Romero
Booms, busts and the regime-dependent effects of monetary policy
Philipp Heimberger (Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies), M. Enzinger, S. Gechert, F. Prante, D. Fernández-Romero
Inside the black box: Insights into the Monetary Transmission Mechanism across 5 OECD Countries
Antonino Lofaro (University of Bari), Matteo Deleidi, Enrico Sergio Levrero
The Post-2015 German Lending Surge - What Role for QE?
Sebastian Eiblmeier (University Hannover)
A6: ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS I
Economic Preconditions and Impacts of the Mobility Transition in Austria’s Railway Sector
Lukas Cserjan (Johannes Kepler University Linz), Anna Hornykewycz
Carbon Giants: Exploring the top 100 industrial CO2 emitters in the EU
Simon Sturn (Vienna University of Economics and Business), Xenia Miklin, Thomas Neier, Klara Zwickl
State vs market: Do energy price elasticities differ?
Bianka Mey (Chemnitz University of Technology), S. Gechert, T. Müller, F. Prante
Implications of basic income policies for climate goals
Guilherme Spinato Morlin (University of Pisa), I. Arto, K. Kratena, S. D‘Alessandro, M. V. Román, M. Tomás
S1: DISTRIBUTION, INEQUALITY AND ECONOMIC THOUGHT
Constructing the Field of German Economics
Rouven Reinke (Hamburg University), Andreas Schmitz
Intersectional Differential Returns in Germany
Theresa Lagemann (University Duisburg-Essen), Miriam Rehm
Can Growth Be Both Wage-Led and Profit-Led? Investigating Growth-Inequality-Cycles through Spectral Analysis
Jonas Dominy (University Duisburg-Essen)
Childcare services for everyone?-The distributional effect of public childcare services in Germany
Helena Vitt (University Duisburg-Essen)
S2: FISCAL & MONETARY POLICY
Output Gap Uncertainty, Fiscal Policy and Risk Premia under Endogenous Credibility
Jonas Dix (Bamberg University), Christian R. Proaño
“Who are we to decide what a good transition plan is?” Supervisory authorities and the decarbonization of EU banks
Janina Urban (University Witten/Herdecke), S. Schairer, R. Baioni, P. Haufe, N. Aguila, J. Wullweber
How Fitting is One-Size-Fits-All? Revisiting the Dynamic Effects of ECB’s Interest Policy on Euro Area Countries
Maybrit Wächter, Christian R. Proaño, Juan Carlos Peña
Inflation Expectations and Economic Preferences
Maximilian Floto (Hannover University), Lena Dräger, Marina Schröder
S3: ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS AND GREEN TRANSITION
Crashing the prototypes: Assessing the financial transitional impacts on inequalities in energy-climate-transition models
Mattia Leoni (Roma Tre University)
Technological Change: A Magic Bullet in Mitigating Climate Change? An Intersectoral Analysis for Germany
Katharina Preuß (University Duisburg-Essen)
The green banking gap or why are banks not financing the green transition
Nicolás Aguila (University Witten/Herdecke), Paula Hufe, Riccardo Baioni
When the Bunch Becomes a System - the EU-27’s Affection by the Global Polycrisis
Jasper Lüke (Europa University Viadrina)
S4: GROWTH MODELS, ECONOMIC DYNAMICS
Productivity Growth and Class Struggle in a Growth Regime Framework
Philip Blees
Wealth distribution with and without real estate assets and mortgage debt in ten European countries – a post-Kaleckian approach
Moritz Marpe (Berlin School of Economics and Law), Karolina Schütt, Eckhard Hein
Currency devaluations, distribution conflict and inflation: revisiting Kaleckian open economy models
Juan Manuel Campana (Berlin School of Economics and Law)
Financialization, distribution and inflation: A Kaleckian approach and an empirical application to Germany and Austria
Cara Dabrowski
S5: LABOR MARKETS, WORKING TIME AND CARING ECONOMY
Introducing the 4-day-week in a medium-size firm: effects on productivity, job satisfaction, and health
Dominik Unterein (University of Siegen), Svenja Flechtner, Meike Stephan
Working Time Tournaments: How Wage Inequality Affects Working Hours in Germany
Zarah Westrich
Living up to one’s word? Labor safeguarding in family firms during the Corona Crisis
Jeremiah Nollenberger (University Duisburg-Essen)
Macroeconomic and sectoral impacts of the
transition to a green and caring economy: a global input-output analysis
Jasmin Lukasz (University of Greenwich), Maria Nikolaidi, Özlem Onaran
S6: INTERNATIONAL AND GEOECONOMICS
Corporate Financialization and Global Value Chains: Case Studies in Argentina
Ignacio Juncos (Universidad Nacional de Córdoba)
Time-frequency nexus of geopolitical tension, economic uncertainty, and trade flows: A wavelet coherence-based evidence from China and USA
Sodiq Bisiriyu (SRM University-AP), Manzoor Malik
De-Risking as a perpetuation of Dependency? A Political-Economic Analysis of the Hyphen-Hydrogen-Project in Namibia
Fabio Banet, Armin Höpfner
20 Years of FDI in Cambodia: Towards Upper Middle-Income Status and Beyond
Kosal Nith (Cambodia Development Resource Institute), Simona Iammarino, Sumontheany Muth
B1: ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS
The environmental turn in monetary regimes, the environmental state, and accumulation regimes consistency
Louison Cahen-Fourot (Roskilde University), Steven Knauss
Precautionary financial policy in practice - exploring financial flows linked to ecosystem tipping points
Lydia Marsden (The Bartlett: UCL Faculty of the Built
Environment), Josh Ryan-Collins
Ground rent and ecological breakdown in the labor theory of value
Patrick Mokre (Chamber of Labor Vienna)
The Price Elasticity of Heating and Cooling Energy Demand: A meta-analysis
Sebastian Gechert (Chemnitz University of Technologie), T. Müller, F. Prante, B. Mey
B2: HETERODOX MACROECONOMIC MODELLING
Institutional changes, effective demand and inequality: a model of secular stagnation
Daniele Tavani (Colorado State University), Vinicius Curti Cicero
Income distribution and cyclical dynamics in a supermultiplier model
Ricardo Araujo (University of Brasilia), G. Morlin, H. Moreira, R. Pariboni
Heterogenous labour, earnings inequality, and business cycles
Peter Skott (University of Massachusetts Amherst), Adam Aboobaker
Are Macroeconomic Agent-Based Models transformation ready? A survey of the current macro ABM landscape and its capability to simulate societal
Lasare Samartzidis (Leibniz Institute of Ecological Urban and Regional Development (IOER))
B3: SOCIAL SPENDING AND MINIMUM WAGE
Sustainable Consumption and the Comprehensive Economic Well-Being of American Households
Steven Fazzari (Washington University), Daniel Cooper, Barry Cynamon
The Simulated Impact of Universal Elder Care on Paid and Unpaid Work in Mexico
Thomas Masterson (Levy Economic Institute),A. Zacharias; F. Rios-Avila; A. Sinha
Demand Responses of Minimum Wage: An Empirical Micro-Macro Assessment
Daniel Fernández-Romero ( Autonomous University of Madrid), R., L. Cárdenas, P. Villanueva, R. Gonzálvez
Aktienrente: Driver of financialization
Christoph Scherrer, Justus Hallegger
B4: ECONOMIC GROWTH
Deindustrialization paths and growth models: Germany and Spain in comparative perspective
Daniel Herrero (Complutense University of Madrid), Miguel Ángel Casaú
The evolution of demand regimes in Mediterranean countries and the role of the demand multiplier: between wage devaluation and financial leverage
Paloma Villanueva (Complutense University of Madrid), Rubén Gonzálvez, Luis Cárdenas
Keynes is still alive: Autonomous demand and aggregate supply in Italy (1995-2023)
Davide Romaniello (Roma Tre University), Santiago J. Gahn, Loreno Di Domenico
Kaldorian cumulative causation in the Euro area: an empirical assessment of divergent export competitiveness
Sascha Keil (TU Chemnitz), Walter Paternesi Meloni
B5: MONETARY ECONOMICS II
Green-Digital Finance: the potential role of Central Bank Digital Currencies in addressing climate change
Olivia Bullio Mattos (St. Francis College), A. R. Ribeiro de Mendonça, F. Ultremare, S. Silva de Deos
Enhancing Financial Inclusion in Developing Countries: The Potential of Drex, the Bazilian CBDC
Paula Duarte (Fundação Getúlio Vargas)
The Role of Public Banks Credit Policy to Sustainable Growth in Brazil
Debora Pimentel (UFRRJ), Antonio Alves Junior, Erlon Domingues da Silva
Inflation targeting and the real exchange rate trend: Theoretical discussion and empirical evidence for developed and developing countries
André Nassif (Fluminense Federal University (UFF)), C. Feijó, E. Araújo, R. Leão
B6: INDUSTRIAL POLICY AND FINANCE
The monetary circuit in a developed financial system: from credit creation to profit realization
Eugenio Caverzasi (University of Greenwhich), Alberto Botta, Daniele Tori
The Structural Interdependency of Industries: An Agent-Based Model
Bernhard Schütz (The Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies (wiiw)), Oliver Reiter, Andreas Lichtenberger
Financing the green industrial policy for a sustainable and just transition
Linnit Pessoa (Fluminense Federal University (UFF)), Carmen Feijó, Fernanda Feil
Endogenous real-financial cycles: An empirical assessment
Filippo Gusella (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore Milano), Domenico Delli Gatti, Giorgio Ricchiuti
C1: FISCAL RULES AND PUBLIC SPENDING
Back to fiscal rules: The insanity of normality (unless the rich pay for it!)
Alberto Botta (University of Greenwich Business School), Eugenio Caverzasi, Alberto Russo
The revised EU fiscal rules and social spending
Catherine Mathieu (OFCE); Henri Sterdyniak
Do political narratives shape preferences for public spending and debt?
Ekaterina Juergens (IMK Macroeconomic Policy Institute), Sebastian Gechert
The General Relativity of Fiscal Space: Theory and Applications
Marc Morgan (University of Geneva), Jacob Assa
C2: GREEN MACROECONOMICS
Long-term sustainability of zero-growth capitalism: activity, employment and unemployment according to different modes of income distribution
Laurent Cordonnier (University of Lille), Jacques Mazier
The industrial core of a degrowth economy
Eric Kemp-Benedict (University of Leeds)
Green investment and productivity: Main policy challenges
Ettore Gallo (University of Parma), Cecilia Jona-Lasinio, Benedetta Samoncini
An AB-SFC model of finance, technological diffusion, and the low-carbon transition
Jessica Reale (IUSS Pavia), Alessandro Caiani, Teresa Felici
C3: GENDER ECONOMICS AND WAGE INEQUALITY
Gender and education gaps in employment: New evidence for the EU
Meryem Goekten (The Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies (wiiw)), P. Heimberger, A. Arsenev, A. Lichtenberger, B. Schütz
Female labor force participation and the role of aggregate demand
Anna Vergnano (Università Roma Tre), Davide Romaniello, Antonella Stirati
The rise in the supervisory wage premium: evidence from European survey data
Thomas Rabensteiner (University of Greenwich),Alexander Guschanski
Labor informality, inequality and gender wage gap
Lida-Vrisiida Vandorou (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens)
C4: DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
The nexus between structural transformation and poverty alleviation in South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC). A sectoral value-added analysis
Freeman Mateko (University of Johannesburg)
Below the Dollar Dominance: Patterns of the emerging fragmented, multipolar and multi-layered currency world
Bianca Orsi (University of Leeds), M. Zucker Marques, B. Fritz, A. Kaltenbrunner
The Broken link between demand and production: Demand leakages in Brazil’s 21st-century economic development
Tiago Porto (Getulio Vargas Foundation), Nelson Marconi
David vs Goliath: An endogenous Lotka-Volterra competition analysis
Lesslie Valencia (Open University)
C5: MONETARY POLICY AND INCOME
Monetary policy and income inequality: an heterogenous agents’ approach
Giorgio Ricchiuti (Università degli Studi di Firenze), Andrea Boitani; Lorenzo Di Domenico
A post-mortem of interest rate policy: beware of financial fragility
Huub Meijers (Maastricht University School of Business and Economics), Joan Muysken
The Gender of Wealth Accumulation: Gender Differences in Risky Portfolio Choices and Their Determinants
Carolin Dylla
One Fiscal Swallow does Make a Summer: An Empirical Tale of the US Economy
Maria Cristina Barbieri Goes (University of Bergamo), Ettore Gallo
C6: ECOLOGICAL MACROECONOMICS AND POLICY
Endogenous political cleavages and the social dimension of climate change
Christian Proaño (Bamberg University), Márwil
Dávila-Fernández, Serena Sordi
How personal exposure affects the support for carbon pricing
Maike Korsinnek (IMK Macroeconomic Policy Institute), Jan Behringer, Lukas Endres
Green Fiscal Policies in an ABM with Interdependent Industries
Andreas Lichtenberger (The New School for Social Research), Oliver Reiter, Bernhard Schütz
Policies Against Climate Risks and Behavioral Constraints
Behnaz Minooei Fard (Ca Foscari University of Venice), Willi Semmler
D1: POST-KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS
The rise and decline of PKE in Austria
Engelbert Stockhammer (King´s College London), Quirin Dammerer, Andreas Maschke
On the History of Post-Keynesian Economics in Germany since the 1970s
Eckhard Hein (HWR Berlin)
Kalecki’s and Keynes’s Perspectives on Achieving Full Employment in a Global Economy
Hagen M. Krämer (Karlsruhe University of Applied Sciences), Eckhard Hein
To which extent do monetary policies affect inequality? An assessment using an AB-SFC model
Dany Lang (University of Sorbonne Paris Nord)
D2: ECOLOGICAL MACROECONOMIC MODELLING I
Impacts of the EU ETS reform and the Carbon Boarder Adjustment Mechanism on the economy and labor market in Germany
Anke Mönnig (Gesellschaft für Wirtschaftliche Strukturforschung mbH (GWS)), Johanna Zenk, Peter Dreuw, Christian Schneemann, Alexander Schur
Financial transition risks and the multiverse of mitigation pathways
Louis Daumas (European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE)), Céline Guivarch
Effective Demand for a Sustainable Global Economy: A Sraffian Supermultiplier Model of Pathways to Net Zero Emissions
Valeria Jiménez (HWR Berlin), Ryan Woodgate
The Globalization of Climate Change: Amplification of Climate-related Physical Risks Through Input-Output Linkages
Richard Senner (Swiss National Bank), Andrea Vismara, Stephan Fahr
D3: PRODUCTIVITY, COMPETITION AND LABOR MARKETS
How structural reforms of labour markets contribute to a productivity slump. An essay on neoclassical versus evolutionary efficiency
Alfred Kleinknecht
Does Structure Matter? Competitiveness, Productivity, and Income Distribution: Evidence from EU27
Nikolaos Rodousakis
Demand in the long-run and Technichal Change: The case of the United States after Breton Woods
Santiago Jose Gahn (Università Niccolò Cusano), Lorenzo Di Domenico, Davide Romaniello
Industrial Policy in Times of Market Power: An Agent-Based Model Perspective
Enrico Maria Turco (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore Milano)
D4: ECONOMIC POLICY
The Information hierarchy and the limits of economic policy in the era of polycrises: Challenging the systematic invisibilization of bottom-up approaches
Gary Dymski (University of Leeds), Lesslie Valencia
Impacts of Climate Change on Inflation and Distributive Conflict: A Case Study of the 2011 Mexican Drought
Araceli Martinez Holguin (Universidad Nacional Autónoma De México)
Structural Inequality and Input-Output Tables: Methods and Implications for Germany
Jan David Weber (Institut für Sozioökonomie, University Duisburg-Essen)
Impacts of a green hydrogen value chain on the labor market in Germany
Johanna Zenk (Institute for Employment Research IAB), A. Mönnig, L. Ronsiek, J. Zenk, C. Schneemann, A. Schur, D. Samray
D5: ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND DISTRIBUTION
The Effect of Income Inequality on Ecological Damage Across the Distribution
Svenja Flechtner (University of Siegen), Martin Middelanis
We live in the same planet, but are we on the same boat? Analysis of the distributive impacts of the climate crisis
Edoardo Sala
Which policy mix for handling socio-ecological trade-offs? A macrosimulation approach for Italy
David Cano Ortiz (University of Pisa), T. Heydenreich, G. Spinato Morlin, S. D‘Alessandro
Structural change for a just and sustainable economy
Giacomo Ravaioli (University of Lisbon), Simone d‘Alessandro, Tiago Domingos
D6: INCOME DYNAMICS AND DUAL LABOR MARKETS
The Austrian wage negotiation system in the inflation crisis
Daniel Witzani-Haim (AK Wien), M. Marterbauer
The impact of dualization of the labour market, and product market concentration, on sector wages over the cycle. Evidence from Spain
Antonio Rodriguez Gil (University of Leeds)
Sectoral Shifts and Wage Dynamics: Analysing the Impact of Production Composition on Occupational Structures and Earnings
Tiago Porto (Getulio Vargas Foundation) D. Spinola, N. Marconi, E. Araújo
Income sources and consumption – does financial income induce less consumption than labour income?
Gal Rakover
E1: INDUSTRIAL POLICY
From core to periphery: workplace evidence of GVCs restructuring in the Italian auto industry
Claudia Collodoro (Sant‘Anna School of Advanced Studies Pisa), A. Cetrulo, L. Nelli, M. Enrica Virgillito
Absorptive capacity for productive knowledge accumulation: Global evidence
Thomas Goda (Universidad EAFIT), Germán Tabares
Catalytic Industrial Policy -- in concordia varietas
Mario Holzner (The Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies (wiiw))
Industrial Policy Space in Emerging Economies – The Case of Chile and the Energy Raw Materials Chapter in the EU-Chile Free Trade Agreement
Petra Dünhaupt (HWR Berlin), H. Gräf, V. Jiménez, B. Jungmann
E2: GREEN MACRECONOMICS IN THE GLOBAL SOUTH
Capital stranding and firms‘ financial fragility in Brazil
Angela Modica Scala (IUSS Pavia), G. Santos Carneiro, A. Caiani
Economic risks and opportunities for developing countries in the global energy transition: Neo-developmentalist perspectives
Martin Middelanis (FU Berlin), Barbara Fritz, Luiz Fernando de Paula
Challenges in the Transition to a Low-Carbon Economy for Developing Countries Estimating Capital-Use Matrices and Imported Needs
Luca Tausch (AFD), Guilherme Magacho
Blue Decarbonisation: Quantifying Emissions from Brazil‘s Ocean Economy
Isabela Marques (UFRJ), A. de Freitas, I. Marques, K. da Costa
E3: ECOLOGICAL MACROECONOMIC MODELLING II
Greening the European economy at the expense of other world regions? Tracing the EU’s quest for green hydrogen in Chile
Jakob Rammer (University Wien), Julia Eder
Macroeconomic Impacts of ETS Revenue Allocation: A Post-Keynesian Analysis of Decarbonization Strategies in the EU
Ioannis Gutzianas (Cambridge Econometrics), Áron Dénes Hartvig; Emile Petravičiūtė
Reassessing Carbon Tax Policies in Denmark: Insights from an Empirical Input-Output Environmental SFC Model
Simon Fløj Thomsen, Hamid Raza, Mikael Byrialsen
Assessing climate policy mixes in the UK: an ecological stock-flow consistent approach
Adam George (SOAS), Yannis Dafermos
E4: CONFLICT INFLATION
Chair: Svenja Flechtner
Conflicting-claims inflation and the Phillips curve: rethinking their microfoundations in an ABM setting
Lilian Rolim (University of Campinas)
A General Theory of Conflict Inflation: Hyperinflation, Debt-Deflation and Business Cycles
Ryan Woodgate (Forward College Berlin)
Technical Change and the Rate of Profit in Classical-Marxian Models of Economic Growth
Deepankar Basu (Universrsity of Masschusetts Amherst)
An upward-sloping Phillips Curve?: Non-inflationary rate of wage growth and poverty
Ilhan Dögüs (Independet Economist)
E5: DEBT AND STRUCTURAL CHANGE
Debt sustainability and (green) structural change at the time of global finance: An emerging and developing countries’ perspective
Giuliano Toshiro Yajima (Levy Economics Institute), A. Botta, D. Spinola, G. Porcile
Sinless default: why do Governments default on local currency debt?
Thibault Laurentjoye (Aalborg University)
Debt, Demand, and Growth in Emerging Market Economies
Yun K. Kim (University of Massachusetts), Syed Mohib Ali Ahmed
Types of credit and structural change
Jimena Castillo
E6: ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS II
Assessing the macrofinancial consequences of a Net Zero energy transition through hard coupled energy-macroeconomic models, a case study for Morocco
Achilleas Mantes (AFD), A. Godin, C. Wagner, J. Veysey
An Empirical Ecological Stock Flow Consistent Model of the Chinese Economy
David An (University of Siena)
Navigating the Energy Transition in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) States: The Role of Industrial Policies in Fostering Sustainable Economic Competitiveness
Malcolm Sawyer (University of Leeds), Jalal Qanas
Pigou and the Climate Crisis – internalizing external effects is no panacea
Jan Priewe (HTW Berlin)