Interview on Switzer TV

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Peter Switzer inter­viewed me on his cable TV show for Sky News last week.

You can watch the inter­view here. I would also rec­om­mend watch­ing the inter­view with John Hew­son (for inter­na­tion­al view­ers, John Hew­son was a pre­vi­ous leader of the Lib­er­al Par­ty of Aus­tralia, which despite its name is Aus­trali­a’s con­ser­v­a­tive polit­i­cal par­ty), in which amongst oth­er things he not­ed that Cen­tral Bank inde­pen­dence, for which he had cam­paigned while a politi­cian, had not worked out as he had hoped, and had instead left unac­count­able econ­o­mists in charge of mon­e­tary pol­i­cy.

Vote for Ignoble/Dynamite Economics Prize

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Vot­ing is now open for what has been renamed the Dyna­mite Prize in Eco­nom­ics.

The renam­ing was nec­es­sary because the own­ers of the Ig Nobel Prize object­ed to the similarity–which is under­stand­able. They also sug­gest­ed the Dyna­mite Prize as a use­ful alter­na­tive.

We are, after all, intend­ing to award the prize to the three econ­o­mists who did most to drop the GFC bomb on the glob­al econ­o­my, via their naive and utter­ly unre­al­is­tic the­o­ries of eco­nom­ics.

The selec­tion process pro­duced the fol­low­ing set of nom­i­nees:

  • Fis­ch­er Black and Myron Scholes
  • Eugene Fama
  • Mil­ton Fried­man

Talking about the Blog (1)

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I am giv­ing a talk on the blog today at Swin­burne Uni­ver­si­ty in Mel­bourne, and frankly I am not all that pre­pared on the main issue of inter­est to the organ­is­ers there, which is the edu­ca­tion­al impact of this blog (and blog­ging in gen­er­al) ver­sus oth­er forms of edu­ca­tion.

I just estab­lished this blog to get the Debt­watch report out ini­tial­ly, and it’s grown in both size and per­son­al­i­ty in ways that I nev­er envis­aged. It’s been very grat­i­fy­ing, but I haven’t real­ly had the time to reflect on they whys and hows of the process of blog­ging.

Swinburne Talks

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I’m giv­ing two talks at Swin­burne Uni­ver­si­ty of Tech­nol­o­gy on Thurs­day Feb­ru­ary 4th. The infor­ma­tion below is repro­duced from the fly­er for the event devel­oped by reg­u­lar blog con­trib­u­tor Matt Mitchell, who has arranged the talks:

12.00pm – 2.00pm: DebtWatch : Observations and reflections on the educative role of modern media

  • Dr Keen will dis­cuss his expe­ri­ence using his Debt­watch­blog on which he posts reg­u­lar arti­cles for dis­cus­sion and the role of this media in both edu­cat­ing the pub­lic and stim­u­lat­ing debate among econ­o­mists, stu­dents and lay peo­ple around eco­nom­ic the­o­ry and prac­tice.

CSIRO-UNEP Modelling

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The Unit­ed Nations Envi­ron­ment Pro­gram did a very unusu­al and far-sight­ed thing last year: it asked the CSIRO to pro­duce a ver­sion of its bio­phys­i­cal mod­el of the Aus­tralian econ­o­my for devel­op­ing coun­tries, and to pair that with an eco­nom­ic mod­el which had to be non-equi­lib­ri­um in nature.

The Stocks and Flows Resource Mod­el­ling team at CSIRO Sus­tain­able Ecosys­tems, which main­tains this bio­phys­i­cal mod­el, approached me in July to see whether I would be will­ing to attempt the devel­op­ment of that non­equi­lib­ri­um mul­ti­sec­toral eco­nom­ic mod­el.

Debtwatch No. 42: The economic case against Bernanke

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The US Sen­ate should not reap­point Ben Bernanke. As Oba­ma’s reac­tion to the loss of Ted Kennedy’s seat showed, real change in pol­i­cy only occurs after polit­i­cal scalps have been tak­en. An eco­nom­ic scalp of this scale might final­ly shake Amer­i­ca from the unsus­tain­able path that reck­less and feck­less Fed­er­al Reserve behav­ior set it on over 20 years ago.

Some may think this would be an unfair out­come for Bernanke. It is not. There are sol­id eco­nom­ic rea­sons why Bernanke should pay the ulti­mate polit­i­cal price.

Google–lower bandwidth version

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A num­ber of read­ers have com­plained that the video of my talk at Google took up too much band­width, result­ing in “jerky” vision. Here are the same two files in a some­what low­er qual­i­ty compression–half the size of the orig­i­nal files.

Steve Keen’s Debt­watch Pod­cast 

| Open Play­er in New Win­dow

Steve Keen’s Debt­watch Pod­cast 

| Open Play­er in New Win­dow

As one view­er not­ed, it is also fea­si­ble to down­load the files to your PC and view there with­out band­width prob­lems dur­ing play­back.

Talks@Google

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Google runs a reg­u­lar sem­i­nar series on top­i­cal issues, which I spoke at last week. There was a sub­stan­tial audi­ence (see the quick scan of the audi­ence below) and Google’s staff lived up to their hyper-intel­li­gent and hyper-engaged rep­u­ta­tion.

Steve Keen’s Debt­watch Pod­cast 

| Open Play­er in New Win­dow

I gave a pre­sen­ta­tion that com­bined my stan­dard talk on debt and Min­sky, with some expo­si­tion of the Cir­cuit and Min­sky mod­els, befit­ting of an audi­ence to whom sim­u­la­tion is no big deal–unlike eco­nom­ics con­fer­ences where such approach­es are still fringe activ­i­ties.

The Ignoble Prize for Economics

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The Real World Eco­nom­ics Review Blog–which is run by PAECON, the “Protest against Autis­tic ECONomics”–has just launched “The Igno­ble Prize for Eco­nom­ics”.

The intent is to select by pop­u­lar vote the “three econ­o­mists who con­tributed most to enabling the Glob­al Finan­cial Col­lapse (GFC)”.

Nom­i­na­tions are now open, and any­one can nom­i­nate up to three indi­vid­u­als by vis­it­ing this page and leav­ing a com­ment.

As it is cur­rent­ly stat­ed, the prize is open for posthu­mous award; this may change if there are sim­ply too many dead econ­o­mists who get a guernsey.