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Speaking in Seattle (and elsewhere)

May09
by Steve Keen on May 9, 2013 at 1:20 pm

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The Seattle Economics Council has invited me to speak on the topic of “The Great Financial Crisis and the Great Recession: How we got here and the way out“. The details are:

Venue: Seattle Town Hall
Date: May 23rd
Time: 6PM

If you’d like to attend, click on this link.


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ABS House Price Update Today

May07
by Steve Keen on May 7, 2013 at 12:22 pm

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The ABS publishes its house price index data today. My leading indicator for this is the Mortgage Accelerator, and it implies another increase in prices—and the first sign of rising real prices on an annual basis since early 2011. But there’s also a turnaround developing in mortgage acceleration which implies that the rate of increase will top out at a much lower level than the 2008 and 2010 booms.


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Who says zero is the right level for deficits?

May06
by Steve Keen on May 6, 2013 at 3:06 pm

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I interrupt my series on the instability of capitalism for a special report on the serious problem of Australia’s budget deficit. As everyone knows, the world will end tomorrow unless Australia’s government plugs its $12 billion ‘budget black hole’.


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Instability May Not Be Optional (2)

Apr29
by Steve Keen on April 29, 2013 at 1:10 pm

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As I noted in my previous post, neoclassical economics made it an item of faith that capitalism was inherently stable, and dismissed arguments to the contrary as no more than left-wing propaganda. My favourite statement of this perspective came from the pen of Nobel Prize winner Ed Prescott, who was one of the key players in introducing the concept of “rational expectations” into economics. Not only was capitalism inherently stable, he claimed in 1999, but it was so stable that we can reliably expect the economy to double the standard of living every 40 years. Marx and his ilk were simply wrong:


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Instability may not be optional (1)

Apr23
by Steve Keen on April 23, 2013 at 3:16 pm

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Sydney Morning Herald commentator Gareth Hutchens commented that the Rogoff and Reinhart affair shows how slow economists are to realise that their data may be dodgy, but to my mind that is insignificant compared to how slow they are to realise that their theories are dodgier still.


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House prices shoot towards a ceiling

Apr15
by Steve Keen on April 15, 2013 at 11:24 am

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The bulls are roaring, house prices are rising, and all’s well with the world.

Or maybe not. Certainly house prices have risen — and contrary to popular opinion, I expected price rises this year, since mortgage debt has been accelerating since the beginning of 2012 (see Figure 1). One of my many economic heresies is the argument that asset prices are driven by rising debt. Rising asset prices — in this case, houses — require accelerating debt (in this case, mortgage debt), and that’s indeed what we’ve had since the beginning of 2012.


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Eric Aarons – Art and Politics

Apr14
by Steve Keen on April 14, 2013 at 8:46 am

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Sorry for the late notice here (the total crash of my ISP prevented me from posting when I had hoped to—and thanks to Phil Stevens for his brilliant work in reviving the site from the wreckage), but if anyone in Sydney has free time today (Sunday 14 April) I recommend attending this event between 2:00 pm and 5:00 pm. It is a festschrift to Eric Aarons, a remarkable man whom I am proud to call a friend.


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Australia’s Margin Story

Apr11
by Steve Keen on April 11, 2013 at 10:38 am

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Last week’s column on margin debt and the US stock market confirmed that leverage plays a key role in driving movements in share markets – and vice versa. But it left one technical question unanswered for me: is the causal link between change in debt and change in asset prices, or between acceleration in debt and change in asset prices?


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Greenspan’s bullish, time to sell

Apr02
by Steve Keen on April 2, 2013 at 1:18 pm

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Stock markets are booming — not only in USA and Australia where economic growth is positive, but even in economies still locked in the doldrums like the UK and Japan.

Graph for Why the markets have decoupled from reality | Greenspan's bullish, time to sell |

Alan Greenspan observed last month that this augured well for the economy, since


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What is the World Economics Association?

Mar31
by Steve Keen on March 31, 2013 at 10:25 am

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For participants of the Hong Kong INET Conference


What is the
World Economics Association?

The World Economics Association (WEA) was launched in May 2011. The WEA seeks to increase the relevance, breadth and depth of economic thought. Its key qualities are worldwide membership and governance, and inclusiveness with respect to: (a) the variety of theoretical perspectives; (b) the range of human activities and issues which fall within the broad domain of economics; and (c) the study of the world’s diverse economies.


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Steve Keen in Seattle

Talk at Seattle Town Hall on May 23. Click here for details

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Recent Posts

  • Speaking in Seattle (and elsewhere)
  • ABS House Price Update Today
  • Who says zero is the right level for deficits?
  • Instability May Not Be Optional (2)
  • Instability may not be optional (1)

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Financial Instability

Roving Cavaliers of Credit
Read Some Minsky
Monetary Profits Paradox
Are We "It" Yet?
Monetary Multisectoral Model

The New Depression

"No-one saw this coming"?
Why the Crisis is not over
Deleveraging with a twist
Bernanke doesn't understand the Great Depression
The Case Against Bernanke

Australian Housing

Rescuing the Bubble
Australian house prices
Competition No Panacea
House Prices & Banks I
House Prices & Banks II

Video overview

Lectures on Endogenous Money
Debt and Australian housing
BBC HARDtalk Interview
INET Interview on why I saw "It" coming

Debunking Economics II


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