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| Content |
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| Editorial |
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| Interview with Paul Davidson |
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| Peter Bartelheimer, Volker Baethge-Kinsky, Alexandra Wagner:
Zu den Auswirkungen von Hartz IV auf den Arbeitsmarkt -- Fakten und Fragen
| Effects of Hartz IV on the Labour Market -- Facts and Questions |
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Jan Pieter Schulz:
Steuerreformen jenseits der politischen Farbenlehre | Tax Reforms Beyond
Political Colours |
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Jürgen Leibiger:
Die Zukunft des Wohlfahrtsstaats im Lichte der Generationenbilanz | The
Future of the Welfare State in the Light of Generational Accounting |
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Markus Marterbauer:
Interessenpolitik und ihre Grenzen -- sechs Jahre rechtsliberale Wirtschaftspolitik
in Österreich | Special Interest Policies and Their Limits -- Six Years
of Liberal Economic Policies in Austria |
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Marica Frangakis:
Integrated Guidelines for Growth and Jobs, 2005--2008: A Shift in EU Economic
Policy? |
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| Stefan Collignon:
Democracy and Europe's Crisis of Legitimacy |
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Marc Lavoie:
Do Heterodox Theories Have Anything in Common? A Post-Keynesian Point of
View |
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Karin Astrid Siegmann:
Globalisation, Gender, and Equity -- Effects of Foreign Direct Investment
on Labour Markets in Rural Indonesia |
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Martina Metzger:
Basel II -- Benefits for Developing Countries? |
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Narciso Tuñez-Area:
Does Public Deficit Mean Inflation? A Reflection on the Kaleckian and Minskian
Tradition |
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Barbara Fritz/Katja Hujo (Hg.): Ökonomie
unter den Bedingungen Lateinamerikas. Erkundungen zu Geld und Kredit, Sozialpolitik
und Umwelt
(Florian Moritz) |
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Marc Lavoie/Mario Seccareccia (eds.):
Central Banking in the Modern World. Alternative Perspectives
(Eckhard Hein) |
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Reinhard Pirker:
Märkte als Regulierungsformen sozialen Lebens
(Torsten Niechoj) |
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Dorothee Wolf: Ökonomische Sicht(en) auf das Handeln.
Ein Vergleich der Akteursmodelle in ausgewählten Rational-Choice-Konzeptionen
(Elisabeth Springler) |
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Book Review of
Brian Snowdon/Howard R. Vane: Modern Macroeconomics;
Brian Snowdon/Howard R. Vane (eds.): An Encyclopedia of Macroeconomics;
John E. King (ed.): The Elgar Companion to Post Keynesian Economics
(Jan Priewe) |
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Abstracts
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| Do
Heterodox Th eories Have Anything in Common? A Post-Keynesian Point of
View
by Marc Lavoie
The paper questions the wide-spread assertion that non-orthodox schools
of thought in economics have only one thing in common --their rejection
of mainstream (neoclassical) economics. The author shows by contrast that
heterodox currents share some fundamental analytical insights. The paper
focuses on a comparison of modern Marxist conceptions with those of Post-Keynesian
economists, including the works of Kaleckians and Sraffians. This is shown
by examining four fields: the issue of rationality (where the adjustment
principle is explicitly accepted by important heterodox authors), price
theory (with cost-plus pricing combined to some long-run adjustment),
growth theory (where the Kaleckian model has been adopted by authors from
all schools), and finally monetary theory (where authors from all backgrounds
are successfully integrating real and monetary analysis by taking into
account financial markets). The author concludes that mutual feedback
between the various heterodox currents has been beneficial to all, despite
an unavoidable hyper-specialisation.
JEL classification: B5
Keywords: heterodox schools, coherence, procedural rationality, cost-plus
pricing, effective demand, integration of money |
| Globalisation,
Gender, and Equity -- Effects of Foreign Direct Investment on Labour
Markets in Rural Indonesia
by Karin Astrid Siegmann
This study assesses the impact of foreign direct investment (FDI) on
gendered labour markets in rural Indonesia. It focuses on the gender composition
of the
workforce, female and male workers' employment conditions and gender wage
inequality. The research strategy of "between-methods triangulation"
is chosen, denoting the combination of quantitative and qualitative types
of data generation and analysis. Two underlying mechanisms have been identified.
A "cost effect" associated with transnational corporations'
(TNCs') greater orientation towards the world market is the preferential
recruitment of, on average, lower paid female workers. In light of global
competitive cost considerations, this appears as a rational strategy for
TNCs. Conversely, foreign firms' advanced technological endowments relative
to domestic companies require a well-educated workforce with technical
skills. In light of these perspectives, gender gaps in education and,
on average, women's weaker labour market attachment disadvantage female
workers' employment in TNCs. Both effects are mediated by a "reproductive
constraint". This refers to the asymmetric distribution of reproductive
obligations between
female and male household members, whereby female input into the domestic
economy is more demanding relative to that of males.
JEL classifications: J16, J31, J81, F02, F21, B41
Keywords: gender, globalisation, foreign direct investment, labour markets,
Indonesia,
economic methodology |
| Basel
II -- Benefits for Developing Countries?
by Martina Metzger
The major target of the new capital accord which was adopted in 2004 and
is implemented not before 2007 is to prevent bad banking by introducing
more
risk-sensitive capital requirements. This paper analyses the impacts of
Basel II on developing countries which have been most strongly affected
by bad banking. The paper identifies structural, price and displacement
effects of Basel II which will change international lending to developing
countries. While lower-rated developing countries' access to international
capital markets will be restrained even further, an accumulation of foreign
debt by higher-rated developing countries will be encouraged. Moreover,
the new capital accord induces structural and displacement effects on
credit markets in developing countries themselves. Due to the use of different
approaches toward the measurement of risk, domestic banks will loose competitiveness
against subsidiaries of internationally operating banks. For the former
this will result in an increased vulnerability to shocks and financial
crises.
JEL classifications: E44, F34, G15, G28
Keywords: Basel II, currency crises, bad banking, herding behaviour |
Does Public
Deficit Mean Inflation? A Reflection on the Kaleckian and Minskian Tradition
by Narciso Tuñez-Area
This paper analyses the determination of prices within a Kaleckian and
Minskian framework. In the Minskian model, public deficit generates mark-up
inflation, a result that resembles Neo-Keynesian models of growth. In
the Kaleckian model, an increase in aggregate demand is not absorbed by
inflated prices but by a higher utilisation of capacity. This paper discusses
issues at the core of Post-Keynesian thought.
JEL classification: E12
Keywords: Kalecki, Minsky, public deficit, inflation, mark-up, Post-Keynesian
economics |
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