Meat Loaf
Leave a Reply Cancel reply
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
RWER 26,369 subscribers
WEA Books
“a conceivably seminal contribution to this debate on economic systems and their place in human and natural systems.” – Steve Keen

“Some of his insights will no doubt become the key building blocks of the new economics the world needs so desperately today.” – Richard Koo

“This remarkable volume presents the full range of opinions on MMT, from its enthusiastic proponents to its severest critics” – John King

Regular Contributors
follow this blog on Twitter
Top Posts- last 48 hours
- Weekend read - MMT, post-Keynesians and currency hierarchy: Notes towards a synthesis
- Lock Step: How the Rockefeller Foundation wants to implement its autocratic pandemic scenario
- Can you think of something snappier than “Understanding the Economy – A Learning System”?
- The threat of a pharma-dictatorship
- Gödel and the limits of mathematics
- Formalizing economic theory
- Statistical inference and sampling assumptions
- Oligarchs—American style
- Weekend read - Has economics — really — become an empirical science?
- Reflections on the “Inside Job”
Real World Economics Review
The RWER is a free open-access journal, but with access to the current issue restricted to its 25,952 subscribers (07/12/16). Subscriptions are free. Over one million full-text copies of RWER papers are downloaded per year.
WEA online conference: Trade Wars after Coronavirus
Comments on recent RWER issues
————– WEA Paperbacks ————– ———– available at low prices ———– ————- on most Amazons ————-
WEA Periodicals
----- World Economics Association ----- founded 2011 – today 13,800 members
Recent Comments
- scottonthespot on Can you think of something snappier than “Understanding the Economy – A Learning System”?
- Meta Capitalism on Statistical inference and sampling assumptions
- Meta Capitalism on Statistical inference and sampling assumptions
- ghholtham on Statistical inference and sampling assumptions
- evidencebasedeconomics on Can you think of something snappier than “Understanding the Economy – A Learning System”?
- Romar Correa on Weekend read – MMT, post-Keynesians and currency hierarchy: Notes towards a synthesis
- yoshinorishiozawa on Can you think of something snappier than “Understanding the Economy – A Learning System”?
- Hepion on The magnitude of the required reductions
- Meta Capitalism on Gödel and the limits of mathematics
- Meta Capitalism on Gödel and the limits of mathematics
- Edward Ross on Can you think of something snappier than “Understanding the Economy – A Learning System”?
- Meta Capitalism on Gödel and the limits of mathematics
- Econoclast on Can you think of something snappier than “Understanding the Economy – A Learning System”?
- Romar Correa on Can you think of something snappier than “Understanding the Economy – A Learning System”?
- Kevin Cox on Can you think of something snappier than “Understanding the Economy – A Learning System”?
Comments on issue 74 - repaired
Comments on RWER issues
WEA Online Conferences
—- More WEA Paperbacks —-
———— Armando Ochangco ———-

Shimshon Bichler / Jonathan Nitzan

————— Herman Daly —————-

————— Asad Zaman —————

—————– C. T. Kurien —————

————— Robert Locke —————-

Guidelines for Comments
• This blog is renowned for its high level of comment discussion. These guidelines exist to further that reputation.
• Engage with the arguments of the post and of your fellow discussants.
• Try not to flood discussion threads with only your comments.
• Do not post slight variations of the same comment under multiple posts.
• Show your fellow discussants the same courtesy you would if you were sitting around a table with them.
Most downloaded RWER papers
- The housing bubble and the financial crisis (Dean Baker)
- Global finance in crisis (Jacques Sapir)
- Green capitalism: the god that failed (Richard Smith)
- Why some countries are poor and some rich: a non-Eurocentric view (Deniz Kellecioglu)
- What Is Neoclassical Economics? (Christian Arnsperger and Yanis Varoufakis)
- Trade and inequality: The role of economists (Dean Baker)
- New thinking on poverty (Paul Shaffer)
- The state of China’s economy 2009 (James Angresano)
- Debunking the theory of the firm—a chronology (Steve Keen and Russell Standish)
Family Links
Contact
follow this blog on Twitter
RWER Board of Editors
Nicola Acocella (Italy, University of Rome) Robert Costanza (USA, Portland State University) Wolfgang Drechsler ( Estonia, Tallinn University of Technology) Kevin Gallagher (USA, Boston University) Jo Marie Griesgraber (USA, New Rules for Global Finance Coalition) Bernard Guerrien (France, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne) Michael Hudson (USA, University of Missouri at Kansas City) Frederic S. Lee (USA, University of Missouri at Kansas City) Anne Mayhew (USA, University of Tennessee) Gustavo Marqués (Argentina, Universidad de Buenos Aires) Julie A. Nelson (USA, University of Massachusetts, Boston) Paul Ormerod (UK, Volterra Consulting) Richard Parker (USA, Harvard University) Ann Pettifor (UK, Policy Research in Macroeconomics) Alicia Puyana (Mexico, Latin American School of Social Sciences) Jacques Sapir (France, École des hautes études en sciences socials) Peter Söderbaum (Sweden, School of Sustainable Development of Society and Technology) Peter Radford (USA, The Radford Free Press) David Ruccio (USA, Notre Dame University) Immanuel Wallerstein (USA, Yale University)
“it’s wild that a country whose politics is 99% economic class war has a media that is 99% culture war.”
David Sirota on Twitter today.
Since Nixon’s southern strategy embraced right wing talk radio hosts it has been all about culture war and now the armed right is ready for civil war ii.
Attaboy Lars! So we should learn that economics is just good for a one-night stand right? Because, after all, we are all rock and roll consumers…