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Archive
Volume 4 (2007), No. 2
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| Content |
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| Editorial |
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Interview with Kazimierz Laski
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| Susanne Uhl:
The European Member States and Tax Sovereignty (in German)
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Sandor Richter: A European Tax on
Foreign Exchange Transactions?
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Christian Bellak: Shift of the Use of Bilateral Investment
Treaties as a Shield to Using Them as a Sword Against Government Activity?
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Sünne Andresen: Vorstellung
des Ökonominnen-Netzwerks efas
Introduction of the Network of Feminist Economists efas (in German) |
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Mary V. Wrenn:
Searching for Common Ground: Interactive Agency in Heterodox Economics
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Eckhard Hein, Achim Truger:
Editorial to the Special Issue on How to cope with divergence in an
enlarging European Union? |
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Catherine Mathieu, Henri Sterdyniak:
How to deal with economic divergences in EMU? |
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Sergio Rossi:
International capital flows within the European Monetary Union: Increasing
economic divergence between the centre and the periphery |
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Michael Holz:
Asset-Based Reserve Requirements: A New Monetary Policy Instrument for
Targeting Diverging Real Estate Prices in the Euro Area |
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Özlem Onaran:
Capital Flows, Turbulences, and Distribution: The Case of Turkey |
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Markus Marterbauer: Wem gehört
der Wohlstand? Perspektiven für eine neue österreichische Wirtschaftspolitik
(Martin Schürz)
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Hubert Gabrisch, Jens Hölscher:
The Successes and Failures of Economic Transition. The European Experience
(Mario Holzner) |
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Marc Lavoie:
Introduction to Post-Keynesian Economics
Geoffrey C. Harcourt
The Structure of Post-Keynesian Economics
(Eckhard Hein) |
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Martin Beckmann:
Das Finanzkapital in der Transformation der europäischen Ökonomie
(Johannes Schulten) |
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Abstracts
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| Searching
for Common Ground: Interactive Agency in Heterodox Economics
Mary V. Wrenn
The individual, economic agent has antecedents and consequences that
shape her perceptions of the world, in other words, form the individual’s
mental models. Furthermore, the individual is a totality of mental models,
which shape perception and influence the selection of relevant models
to apply to data and
interpret input. The influence of mental models therefore directly influences
the degree of agency the individual is able to exercise. Moreover, whatever
assumptions are made regarding the degree of agency an individual possesses
informs the theoretical structure from which any approach to economics
is built. This paper seeks to examine and compare the role of agency in
heterodox economic thought and proposes that the theme of the individual
might well serve as a missing link between otherwise disparate groups
of thought.
JEL classifications: B40, B51, B52, B53, B59
Keywords: agency, structure, institutions, mental models, heterodox economics |
| How
to Deal With Economic Divergences in EMU?
Catherine Mathieu and Henri Sterdyniak
Since the launch of the euro, persistent and even rising disparities
among member states have made it diffcult to implement short-term or structural
common
economic policies. The article gives an overview of Euro area disparities
in terms of growth and inflation and imbalances, mainly unemployment and
current accounts. Four explanations are considered: the benefits of the
single currency for catching-up countries, the weaknesses of the Euro
area economic policy framework; the implementation of non-cooperative
domestic policies which have induced excessive competition and insufficient
coordination and hurt
mainly the larger economies; and the crisis of the European continental
model in a global world. Four strategies are discussed: increasing market
flexibility;
moving towards the knowledge society of the Lisbon Agenda; re-nationalising
economic policies; and introducing a more growth-oriented policy framework.
JEL classification: E61
Keywords: European economy, policy-mix, European social model |
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International Capital Flows Within the
European Monetary Union: Increasing Economic Divergence Between the Centre
and the Periphery
Sergio Rossi
This paper aims at investigating some neglected consequences of free
capital mobility in the Euro area. The approach we use in this work is
based on the bookkeeping nature of money, which shows that capital –
in the form of bank deposits – is mobile within a currency area
but actually immobile between different monetary spaces. Within the Euro
area both short- and long-term investments are directed into those economies
where the return on investment is highest, a magnitude that is positively
correlated with the rate of real growth. If so, then economic divergence
might increase between member countries of the European Monetary Union
(EMU), giving rise thereby to a higher rate of unemployment in those member
countries that suffer from net capital outflows, to the benefit of some
other countries in the same area.
JEL classifications: E31, E63, F21, F36
Keywords: capital mobility, economic divergence, monetary policy, monetary
union |
Asset-Based
Reserve Requirements: A New Monetary Policy Instrument for Targeting Diverging
Real Estate Prices in the Euro Area
Michael Holz
Can monetary policy prevent real estate bubbles from harming economic
welfare? The European Central Bank (ECB) has to conduct monetary policy
for
the Euro area as a whole, but her policy affects countries with rapidly
rising house prices (e. g. Spain) in a markedly different way than those
with stagnating
house prices (like Germany). For opposing divergent real estate price
developments within the European Monetary Union (EMU), interest rate policy
is
not the appropriate instrument; whereas fine tuning« may be possible
with the help of asset-based reserve requirements. All financial institutions
would be
forced to deposit them at the ECB (as a percentage of asset holdings).
Reserve rates are free to vary between countries. Therefore, rates should
be highest in
those countries where appropriate indicators signal a house price bubble.
JEL classifications: E44, E52, G18
Keywords: monetary policy, real estate prices, Tobin’s Q, minimum
reserve policy, financial stability |
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Capital Flows, Turbulences, and Distribution:
The Case of Turkey
Özlem Onaran
This paper presents the mechanism of the boom-bust cycles in the context
of domestic and international financial liberalisation in the developing
countries,
and the effects of crises and exchange rate volatility on functional income
distribution. It is based on the case of Turkey, which has experienced
two severe crises in 1994 and 2001 after the liberalisation of capital
flows, and which has also been hit the hardest during the May-June 2006
turbulences. The paper analyses the recent turbulences in the global economy
and their consequences in the emerging markets as a case study to illustrate
the endogenous formation of expectations. The recovery in Turkey after
the turmoil is not based on a solution to the structural causes of the
problem, since it has completely depended on the reversal of the capital
outflows thanks to high interest rate, but the continuity of this game
is far from clear.
JEL classifications: E12, E22, E25, F32, G32
Keywords: financial fragility, boom-bust cycles, post-Keynesian, distribution,
Turkey
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