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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250829
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251030
DTSTAMP:20260410T040234
CREATED:20250604T204955Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250703T030303Z
UID:10007475-1756425600-1761782399@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Perspectivas Críticas de las Cadenas Globales de Valor
DESCRIPTION:El Seminario “Perspectivas Críticas de las Cadenas Globales de Valor” es una iniciativa académica consolidada desde 2019. Originalmente impulsado por la División de Estudios Profesionales de la Facultad de Economía de la UNAM y\, posteriormente\, por su División de Estudios de Posgrado\, ha estado bajo la coordinación académica de la Dra. Seyka Sandoval y la Dra. Paty Montiel. A partir de 2024\, se integró el Dr. Iván Cortés\, de la Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana–Iztapalapa\, y recientemente a través del apoyo de la Dra. Julia Juárez García\, hemos abierto el proyecto a través de la plataforma del Young Scholars Initiative (YSI). \nEn sus últimas tres ediciones\, el Seminario ha reunido anualmente a más de 100 participantes\, entre académicos y estudiantes de licenciatura y posgrado provenientes de distintos países de América Latina\, consolidando un amplio reconocimiento institucional. A lo largo de este lustro\, el seminario ha dado lugar a colaboraciones académicas en el marco de grupos de trabajo de redes como ESOCITE y 4S\, así como a diversas publicaciones y direcciones de tesis de posgrado. \n\nINSCRIBIRSE EN:\nhttps://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeYbEzhXJHtTx5SCiiYRdKFwIA3fwsLaBm3NFQfTRwKHyrQcw/viewform?usp=header\n  \nEn esta edición\, extendemos una cordial invitación a la comunidad académica en general —estudiantes de posgrado\, investigadores jóvenes y docentes— a participar en las distintas mesas y talleres que conforman el programa. Para ello\, deberán registrarse a través del formulario indicado en la convocatoria. \nEs importante señalar que se trata de una actividad híbrida\, por lo que quienes deseen asistir presencialmente serán bienvenidos. No obstante\, aclaramos que el evento no cuenta con financiamiento para transporte o alojamiento. \nIdioma oficial del seminario: Español.Todos los horarios del programa están en Tiempo del Centro de México (CDMX). \nPara más información contactar: julia.juarez.garcia@comunidad.unam.mx \nPrograma\nMesa 1: Reconfiguraciones del Estado y nuevas estrategias de desarrollo en América Latina\nEsta sesión introduce la discusión a partir de la configuración actual del Estado latinoamericano en un contexto marcado por crisis sucesivas (económica\, sanitaria y tecnológica)\, abordando cómo distintas corrientes de pensamiento económico representan y analizan la configuración estatal frente a desafíos estructurales: crecimiento\, digitalización\, innovación y desigualdad social. Preguntas ejes para la discusión: ¿qué perspectivas teóricas permiten problematizar las configuraciones del Estado en el capitalismo actual y periférico?\, ¿cuáles son las características del Estado? y ¿cuáles son las estrategias de desarrollo para América Latina? \nPonentes: \n\nCarolina Lauxmann (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento\, Argentina).\nPaty Montiel (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México).\nEmilia Ormaechea (confirmada) (Universidad de Hamburgo).\n\nFecha: viernes 29 de agosto de 2025 (híbrida) \nHorario: 9:00 – 11:30 horas \nLugar: División de Estudios de Posgrado\, FE-UNAM (por definir) \nMesa 2: Políticas de desarrollo comparadas: aprendizajes de Brasil\, Colombia\, Asia y Europa\nEsta sesión busca identificar experiencias recientes de políticas que busquen inspirar respuestas estratégicas en América Latina frente a los desafíos de la desaceleración económica\, las tensiones comerciales\, los retos del cambio climático y la desigualdad persistente. Preguntas eje para la discusión: ¿cuáles son las características de las políticas de desarrollo estratégicas actuales?\, ¿qué características del Estado permiten el impulso de políticas de desarrollo? \nPonentes: \n\nValeria Lopes Ribeiro (confirmada) (Universidade Federal do ABC\, Brasil)\nJulia Juárez (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México\, México)\nMónica Simanca- Sotelo (confirmada) (Universidad de Córdoba\, Colombia).\n\n  \nFecha: viernes 26 de septiembre de 2025 (híbrida) \nHorario: 9:00-11:30 \nLugar: División de Estudios de Posgrado\, FE-UNAM (por definir) \nTaller 1: Medición sobre valor agregado y evaluación de políticas en los encadenamientos productivos. Experiencias para México\, América Latina y China\nInstructoras:  \n\nLesbia Pérez-Santillan y Rosalinda Arriaga Navarrete (por confirmar) (Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Iztapalapa) [24 de septiembre]\nRosa Gómez (conformada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México) [25 de septiembre]\n\nFecha: miércoles 24 y jueves 25 de septiembre (en línea) \nHorario: Por definir \nMesa 3: Desafíos del Estado y las políticas ante la reorganización productiva global y la economía digital en México\nEsta sesión profundiza en los retos particulares que México enfrenta hoy en día en términos de política industrial\, digitalización y soberanía tecnológica\, en el marco de las presiones comerciales derivadas del T-MEC y las estrategias nacionales frente al dominio creciente de plataformas digitales. Preguntas eje para la discusión: ¿cuáles son las determinaciones geopolíticas y económicas de México? y ¿cuáles son las características de las políticas de desarrollo ante esas determinaciones? \nPonentes: \n\nSeyka Sandoval (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)\nMonika Meireles (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)\n\nFecha: viernes 24 de octubre de 2025 (híbrida) \nHorario: 9:00 – 11:30 horas \nLugar: División de Estudios de Posgrado\, FE-UNAM (por definir)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/perspectivas-criticas-de-las-cadenas-globales-de-valor/2025-08-29/1/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/perspectivas-criticas-de-las-cadenas-globales-de-valor/2025-08-29/1/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250929
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251001
DTSTAMP:20260410T040234
CREATED:20241210T103238Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250414T144939Z
UID:10007095-1759104000-1759276799@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Europe as a Global Actor? A Historical Perspective
DESCRIPTION:The recent shocks in the global economy and geopolitics triggered unprecedented reactions by the European institutions\, that accelerated a widespread call for a comprehensive rethinking of the scope\, instruments\, and collective decision-making mechanisms of economic governance in the European Union. Hence\, institutional and academic debates on the urge: to increase the European budget and single out European-wide public goods; to increase EU-own resources in view of an autonomous supranational fiscal capacity; to engage in a European industrial policy\, implement common investments to face the digital and green transition and contrast climate changes; and to address the need for greater European security and defense sovereignty. In short\, to acquire a global actorness. \nAlthough these issues sound very topical today\, most of them were already raised and discussed on several occasions in the long history of European integration: the European Coal and Steel Community in 1951 was endowed with autonomous fiscal capacity\, later watered down; in 1953 the treaty for a European Defense Community was signed\, but never ratified; in 1956 the Spaak Report pushed for a European industrial policy and European-wide investments\, as did the Delors’s White Paper of 1993 (pointing precociously at a digital and green transition)\, both without success; several attempts at establishing a European Monetary Fund systematically failed; the McDougall report in 1977 suggested the enlargement of the supranational budget and the outlining of a few European public goods\, which ignited a debate on own resources\, both later ignored; in the last two decades academics have suggested the euro would become an international currency\, comparable to the dollar\, which nevertheless did not happen\, etc. Tracing the reasons for the failure of these projects and the motivations that led to their abandonment in favor of different perspectives is essential to understanding the challenges that await the European Union in the years ahead. The current system is the outcome of the several paths – taken and not taken – by the European integration process in the past\, with their conflicting intellectual forces\, economic backgrounds\, and national interests. The need for a full historical analysis of such crossroads is more necessary than ever\, also to shed light on the current  public  and  academic  debates\,  biased  by  an  increasing  radicalization  of  dominant narratives\, in turn serving specific ideologies and interests. The goal of this workshop is to pierce through the veil of narratives\, exploring the untaken roads of European economic integration\, with their related intellectual background. \nA few scholars in the history of economics\, economic policy\, and international relations have attempted to enquire into some aspects of past crossroads\, especially those that appear to be relevant for todays’ debates. Such commendable attempts\, lacking any coordination strategy\, did not manage to surface either academic or public debates. They failed precisely in enhancing critical thought and a historical perspective on European economic integration. Hence\, there is a need for a joint\, scholarly effort. \nAbstract Submission Guidelines: \nSubmit an abstract within 1\,000 words. The abstract should ideally fall under one of the themes. When reviewing the abstracts\, we will look for theoretical considerations/ assumptions\, research questions\, methodology\, nature of evidence used to draw conclusions\, and findings. \nWe encourage PhD scholars in the final year of writing up their doctoral work\, postdoctoral scholars\, and early career scholars (within 5 years of their PhD) to submit their abstracts for consideration. \nFinancial Support: \nA limited number of travel and accommodation stipends are available for young scholars in the final year of their PhD and within seven years of completing their PhD. The travel stipend may not be enough for intercontinental travel. \nOrganizational details \nThe two-full-day workshop is not only open to – but warmly welcomes – the participation of young scholars from all areas of research dealing with the untaken roads of European economic integration (from perspectives\, for example\, of political science\, international relations\, contemporary history\, etc). \nThe workshop will involve 10 young scholars who will have the opportunity to present their papers and enjoy a conversation with peers and senior scholars and 3 senior scholars\, who will deliver one keynote speech each. \nEach presentation/keynote speech will enjoy a time slot of 30 minutes\, plus 30 minutes of Q&A session. \nImportant dates: \nLast Date for abstract submission: 31st January 2025 \nNotification of selected Abstract: 15th February 2025 \nFull paper submission deadline: 31st August 2025 \nNotification of paper acceptance: 3rd August 2025 \nConference: September 29-30\, 2025 \nOrganisers \nInstitute for New Economic Thinking (INET) and its Young Scholars Initiative (YSI)\, Dept. of Political Science\, Roma Tre\, AUSE (University Association for European Studies)\, and AISPE (the Italian Association for the History of Economic Thought). \nFor any further information\, please contact us; het@youngscholarsinitiative.org\, sattwick@gmail.com\, yakufl@gmail.com \nHost at Dept. of Political Science\, Roma Tre: Prof. Fabio Masini\, and Albertina Nania (albertina.nania@uniroma3.it)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/europe-as-a-global-actor-a-historical-perspective/
LOCATION:Dept. of Political Science\, Roma Tre\, Via Gabriello Chiabrera\, Roma\, Città metropolitana di Roma Capitale\, 00145\, Italy
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250930T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250930T153000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040234
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
UID:10008151-1759240800-1759246200@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Money View Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:The Money View Reading Group reads and discusses writings on money\, banking\, and finance. We are a self-directed group. Anyone interested in money and banking can read the readings\, join us for discussions\, or suggest future readings.We meet for 90 minutes via Zoom on Tuesdays at 2 pm Eastern Time US (New York).\n\nCurrent Book\n  \n\n\nBetween Payments and Credit: An Introduction to the IOU Economy by George Pantelopoulos (2025)\n  \n\nhttps://www.amazon.com/Between-Payments-Credit-Introduction-Economy-ebook/dp/B0FF3RR3T4/ \nFrom the description: \nIn unpacking credit relationships and payments over the past 1000 years in addition to how technological innovations are shifting the credit relationships/payments landscape – from barter\, commodity money\, single layered to dual-layered financial money systems and from CBDC to stablecoins – this book systematically explores the various techniques that have been introduced in an attempt to improve the organisation\, efficiency and stability of the IOU economy as a way to mitigate or prevent the universal challenge of the IOU economy from binding. \nPantelopolous says the “universal challenge” of an IOU economy is the scenario in which liquidity dries up. \n\n2026-03-10 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5) (Recording)\n\n\nUpcoming Sessions\n  \n\n\n2026-03-24 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 6–10 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 2\n\n\n\n\nThe Central Bank as the LOLR\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 2\n\n\n\n\n2026-04-07 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 11–13 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCentral Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC)\n\n\n\n\nThe Crypto-Verse: Terminologies and Technologies\n\n\n\n\nUnbacked Crypto-Assets and Stablecoins\n\n\n\n\nFuture Suggested Readings\n  \n\n\nAgainst Money by J.W. Mason and Arjun Jayadev (2026)\nOur Money: Monetary Policy as if Democracy Matters by Leah Downey (2025)\nThe History of Money: A Story of Humanity by David McWilliams (2025)\nAfter the Accord: A History of Federal Reserve Open Market Operations\, the US Government Securities Market\, and Treasury Debt Management from 1951 to 1979 by Kenneth D. Garbade (2021)\nHow a Ledger Became a Central Bank: A Monetary History of the Bank of Amsterdam by Quinn and Roberds (2023)\nA Study of Money Flows in the United States by Morris Copeland (1952)\nA History of the Greenbacks by Wesley Clair Mitchell (1903)\nCalming the Storms: The Carry Trade\, the Banking School and British Financial Crises Since 1825 by Charles Read (2023)\nBenjamin Strong: Central Banker by Lester V. Chandler (1958)\nAn Engine\, Not a Camera: How Financial Models Shape Markets by Donald MacKenzie (2007)\nCurrency and Credit (4e) by Ralph Hawtrey (1950)\nThe Golden Age of the Quantity Theory by David Laidler (1991)\nCapitalizing on Crisis: The Political Origins of the Rise of Finance by Greta Krippner (2011)\nThe Federal Reserve System by Paul Warburg (1930)\nCentral Bank Capitalism: Monetary Policy in Times of Crisis by Joscha Wullweber (2024)\nIntroduction to Central Banking by Ulrich Bindseil and Alessio Fota (2021)\nThe Chairman: John J. McCloy & The Making of the American Establishment by Kai Bird (1992)\nManias\, Panics\, and Crashes (8e) by Robert McCauley (2023)\nThe Bailout State: Why Governments Rescue Banks\, Not People by Martijn Konings (2025)\n\n\nPast Readings with Discussion Recordings\n  \n\n\nMinsky by Daniel H. Neilson (2019)\n2021-03-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-03-31 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-04-07 — Discussion with Daniel Neilson\nThe Art of Central Banking (Chapter IV) by Ralph Hawtrey (1933)\n2021-04-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-05-05 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-05-26 — Discussion with David Glasner\nMaking Money: Coin\, Currency\, and the Coming of Capitalism by Christine Desan (2014)\n2021-06-02 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-06-16 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-06-30 — Discussion Session 3\n2021-07-14 — Discussion with Christine Desan\nMoney in a Theory of Finance by John G. Gurley\, Edward S. Shaw (1960)\n2021-07-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-08-04 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-08-18 — Discussion Session 3\nThe World in Depression\, 1929-1939 by Charles P. Kindleberger (1973)\n2021-09-01 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-09-15 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-09-29 — Discussion Session 3\nThe Rise of Carry by Jamie Lee et al (2019)\n2021-10-13 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-10-27 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Interest and the Public Interest by Perry Mehrling (1998)\n2021-11-10 — Discussion Session 1 | Allyn Young\n2021-11-24 — Discussion Session 2 | Alvin Hanson\n2021-12-08 — Discussion Session 3 | Edward Shaw\nControlling Credit by Eric Monnet (2018)\n2022-01-05 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-01-19 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Menace of Fiscal QE by George Selgin (2020)\n2022-02-02 — Discussion Session\nThe New Lombard Street by Perry Mehrling (2011)\n2022-02-23 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-03-09 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-03-23 — Discussion Session 3\nFighting Financial Crises: Learning from the Past by Gary Gorton\, Ellis Tallman (2021)\n2022-04-20 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-05-11 — Discussion Session 2\nMoney and empire: The international gold standard\, 1890-1914 by Marcello De Cecco (1974)\n2022-05-25 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-06-15 — Discussion Session 2\nCentral Bank Cooperation 1924-31 by Stephen Clarke (1967)\n2022-06-22 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-07-06 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Problem: Rethinking Financial Regulation by Morgan Ricks (2016)\n2022-07-27 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-08-10 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-08-17 — Discussion with Morgan Ricks\nThe Evolution of Central Banking: Theory and History by Stefano Ugolini (2017)\n2022-08-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-09-07 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-09-21 — Discussion Session 3\n2022-10-05 — Discussion with Stefano Ugolini\nA Financial History of Western Europe by Charles P. Kindleberger (1984\, 1993)\n2022-10-19 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Money\n2022-11-02 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: Banking\n2022-11-16 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Finance\n2023-01-11 — Discussion Session 4 | Part 4: The Interwar Period\n2023-01-18 — Discussion Session 5 | Part 5: After World War II\nMoney and Empire: Charles P. Kindleberger and the Dollar System by Perry Mehrling (2022)\n2022-11-30 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Intellectual Formation\, 1910–1948\n2022-12-14 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: International Economist\, 1948–1976\n2022-12-21 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Historical Economist\, 1976–2003\n2022-12-21 — Discussion #1 with Perry Mehrling\n2023-01-04 — Discussion #2 with Perry Mehrling\nBonds without Borders: A History of the Eurobond Market by Chris O’Malley (2015)\n2023-02-15 — Discussion Session 1\n2023-03-01 — Discussion Session 2\nMonetary Policy Operations and the Financial System by Ulrich Bindseil (2014)\n2023-03-15 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-8)\n2023-03-29 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 9-12)\n2023-04-12 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 13-18)\nCapital Wars: The Rise of Global Liquidity by Michael J. Howell (2020)\n2023-04-26 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-05-10 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-14)\nA Market Theory of Money by John Hicks (1989)\n2023-05-24 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-06-07 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-15)\nThe Currency of Politics: The Political Theory of Money from Aristotle to Keynes by Stefan Eich (2022)\n2023-06-28 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2023-07-19 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\n2023-08-02 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 5 & 6)\n2023-08-14 — Discussion with Stefan Eich\nFischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance by Perry Mehrling (2005)\n2023-08-22 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2023-09-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–8)\n2023-09-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 9–11)\n2023-09-26 — Discussion with Perry Mehrling\nThe Evolution of Central Banks by Charles Goodhart (1988)\n2023-10-03 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–6)\n2023-10-17 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–8\, Appendix)\nThe Repo Market: Shorts\, Shortages\, and Squeezes by Scott Skyrm (2023)\n2023-11-07 — Discussion Session 1 (pages 1–92)\n2023-11-21 — Discussion Session 2 (pages 93–186)\n2023-12-05 — Discussion Session 3 (pages 187–310) Part 1 — Part 2\n2023-12-12 — Discussion with Scott Skyrm From 39:20\nThe Volatility Machine: Emerging Economies and the Threat of Financial Collapse by Michael Pettis (2001)\n2023-12-19 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2024-01-02 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–10)\n2024-01-09 — Discussion with Michael Pettis\nInternational Capital Movements by Charles P. Kindleberger (1987)\n2024-01-16 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2024-01-30 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\nA Political Theory of Money by Anush Kapadia (2024)\n2024-02-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–4)\n2024-03-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 5–7)\n2024-03-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–12)\n2024-03-26 — Discussion with Anush Kapadia\nThe Rise of Central Banks: State Power in Financial Capitalism by Leon Wansleben (2023)\n2024-04-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-04-23 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2024-05-07 — Discussion with Leon Wansleben\nThe Money Illusion: Market Monetarism\, the Great Recession\, and the Future of Monetary Policy by Scott Sumner (2021)\n2024-05-14 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 & 2)\n2024-05-28 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 & 4)\n2024-06-18 — Discussion Session 3 (Parts 5 & 6)\n2024-06-25 — Discussion with Scott Sumner\nPrivate Money and Public Currencies: The Sixteenth Century Challenge: The Sixteenth Century Challenge by Boyer-Xambeu\, Deleplace\, and Gillard (1994)\n2024-07-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-07-16 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4 & 5)\n2024-07-30 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6\, 7 & Conclusion)\nThe Arena of International Finance by Charles A. Coombs (1976)\n2024-08-13 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1ー6)\n2024-08-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–12)\nThe Bill on London: or The Finance of Trade by Bills of Exchange by Gillett Brothers (1952/1976)\n2024-09-17 — Discussion Session\nBirth of a Market: The U.S. Treasury Securities Market from the Great War to the Great Depression by Kenneth D. Garbade (2012)\n2024-10-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–10)\n2024-10-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 11–15)\n2024-10-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 16–24)\nA Monetary and Fiscal History of the United States\, 1961–2021 by Alan S. Blinder (2022)\n2024-11-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–7)\n2024-11-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8–13)\n2024-12-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 14–19)\nBuilding a Ruin: The Cold War Politics of Soviet Economic Reform by Yakov Feygin (2024)\n2025-01-07 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2025-01-21 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2025-02-04 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 7 & Afterword)\nA Crash Course on Crises: Macroeconomic Concepts for Run-Ups\, Collapses\, and Recoveries by Markus K. Brunnermeier and Ricardo Reis (2023)\n2025-02-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 and 2)\n2025-03-11 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 and 4)\nThe Empire of Value: A New Foundation for Economics by Andre Orlean (2014)\n2025-03-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Introduction and Part 1) Part 1 — Part 2\n2025-04-08 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 2 and 3)\n2025-04-22 — Discussion Session 3 (Part 4 and Conclusion)\nThe Wheels of Commerce by Fernand Braudel (1979/1982)\n2025-05-06 — Discussion Session 1 (Chapter 1)\n2025-05-13 — Discussion Session 2 (Chapter 2)\n2025-05-20 — Discussion Session 3 (Chapter 3)\n2025-05-27 — Discussion Session 4 (Chapter 4)\n2025-06-03 — Discussion Session 5 (Chapter 5)\nBeyond Banks: Technology\, Regulation\, and the Future of Money by Dan Awrey (2024)\n2025-06-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Intro & Ch 1–3)\n2025-07-01 — Discussion Session 5 (Ch 4–7 & Conclusion)\n2025-07-08 — Discussion with Dan Awrey\nOur Dollar\, Your Problem: An Insider’s View of Seven Turbulent Decades of Global Finance by Kenneth Rogoff (2025)\n2025-08-19— Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1-3)\n2025-08-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 4-6)\nCentral Banking Before 1800: A Rehabilitation by Ulrich Bindseil (2019)\n2025-09-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-09-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3–5)\n2025-09-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6&7)\n2025-10-13 — Discussion with Ulrich Bindseil\nThe Long Twentieth Century: Money\, Power and the Origins of Our Times by Giovanni Arrighi (2010)\n2025-10-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-11-03 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3)\n2025-11-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 4)\nFragile by Design: The Political Origins of Banking Crises and Scarce Credit by Charles W. Calomiris and Stephen Haber (2014)\n2025-11-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2025-12-01 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6-9)\n2025-12-15 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 10–15)\n2026-01-05 — Discussion with Charles Calomiris\nTreatise on Money by Joseph Schumpeter (1970/2014)\n2026-01-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2026-01-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–7)\n2026-02-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–10)\n2026-02-24 — Discussion Session 4 (Ch 11–12)\n\n\nOff-Week Sessions\n  \n\n2021-05-19 BIS Working Paper: Breaking free of the triple coincidence in international finance (2015)\n2021-07-07 Global Domain of the Dollar: 8 Questions by Robert McCauley Author Discussion\n2021-07-28 BIS and Bank of England reports on Central Bank Digital Currencies\n2022-09-28 The Crypto Banking System by Sébastien Derivaux (2022) Author Discussion\n2023-04-05 Discussion of Silicon Valley Bank\n2023-04-19 Institutional Cash Pools by Zoltan Pozsar (2011)\n2023-05-03 BIS Bulletin #73: Stablecoins vs. Tokenized Deposits (May 3\, 2023)\n2023-07-05 The Credit–Money Hierarchy: a Republican \, Egalitarian Appraisal by Aaron James (2023)\n2023-07-26 Public Purpose Finance: The Government’s Role as Lender by Nadav Orian Peer (2020) Author Discussion 2023-10-24 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 1\n2023-10-31 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 2\n2023-11-14 ICMA Repo FAQ by Richard Comotto (2013/2019)\n2023-11-28 Basis Trades and Treasury Market Illiquidity by Daniel Barth & Jay Kahn (2020)\n2024-01-23 Capital flows and the current account by Borio and Disyatat (2015)\n2024-02-13 The dual currency system of Renaissance Europe by Luca Fantacci (2008)\n2024-02-27 BIS: Buy now\, pay later: a cross-country analysis by Cornelli et al. (2023)\n2024-03-12 The non-use of money in the Middle Ages by Bell\, Brooks\, and Moore (2017)\n2024-04-09 The Central Role of Credit Crunches in Recent Financial History by Albert M. Wojnilower (1980)\n2024-04-16 Measuring Equilibrium in the Balance of Payments by Charles P. Kindleberger (1969)\n2024-04-30 The Rise and Risks of Private Credit — GFSR (April\, 2024)\n2024-06-04 BIS Working Paper No 1100: Getting up from the floor by Claudio Borio (May\, 2023)\n2024-06-11 The Offshore Dollar and US Policy by Robert McCauley (May\, 2024)\n2024-07-09 The (impossible) repo trinity: the political economy of repo markets by Daniela Gabor (2016)\n2024-08-07 A Safe Haven for Hidden Risks (May 30\, 2024) and Rate Transformation (November 4\, 2023) by Elham Saeidinezhad\n2024-08-20 The Collateral Supply Effect on Central Bank Policy by Carolyn Sissoko (2020)\n2024-09-10 Monetary Policy Implications of Market Maker of Last Resort Operations by Anil K Kashyap (August 23\, 2024)\n2024-11-05 BIS Bulletin No 90: The market turbulence and carry trade unwind of August 2024 (August 27\, 2024)\n2024-11-19 Yen Carry Trade and the Subprime Crisis by Masazumi Hattori and Hyun Song Shin (2009)\n2024-12-03 After the Allocation: What Role for the Special Drawing Rights System? by Pforr\, Pape\, and Murau (2022)\n2025-01-14 Where Profits Come From by the Levy Forecasting Center by Levy\, Farnham\, & Rajan (2008/1997)\n2025-01-28 The Broad Consequences of Narrow Banking by Matheus R. Grasseli and Alexander Lipton (2019)\n2025-02-11 Failing Banks by Sergio Correia\, Stephen Luck\, and Emil Verner (2024)\n2025-02-18 Odd Lots — The Hidden History of Eurodollars by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (January 2025)\n2025-03-04 Of Last Resort: Evaluating the Treasury-Equity Model of Federal Reserve Emergency Lending by Steven Kelly (2024)\n2025-03-18 Commercial Banking and Capital Formation I–IV by Harold Moulton (1918)\n2025-04-01 Climate Alignment For Banks: The Stories That Numbers Tell by Nadav Orian Peer (2025) Author Discussion\n2025-04-15 Shadow Banking: Why Modern Money Markets are Less Stable Than 19th c. Money Markets But Shouldn’t Be Stabilized by a ‘Dealer of Last Resort’ by Carolyn Sissoko (2014)\n2025-04-29 Treasury Market and the Basis Trade (Adrian et al. 2025; Kashyap et al. 2025)\n2025-06-10 Structural Changes in the Global Financial System lecture by Hyun Song Shin (May 19\, 2025)\n2025-06-24 International Regimes\, Transactions\, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order by John Gerard Ruggie (1982)\n2025-07-15 BIS Annual Report Chapter: Financial conditions in a changing global financial system (2025)\n2025-07-22 Banks Are Intermediaries of Loanable Funds by George Selgin (2024)\n2025-07-29 Theorising non-bank financial intermediation by Jo Michell (2024)\n2025-08-05 Banks are different: why bank-based versus market-based lending is a false dichotomy by Carolyn Sissoko (2024)\n2025-09-08 Did France Cause the Great Depression? by Douglas A. Irwin (2010)\n2025-09-22 Rethinking Monetary Sovereignty: The Global Credit Money System and the State by Murau and van’t Klooster (2023)\n2025-10-06 Rethinking currency internationalisation: offshore money creation and the EU’s monetary governance by Murau and van’t Klooster (2025)\n2025-10-27 BIS Bulletin No 114: “Financial channel implications of a weaker dollar for emerging market economies” by Juselius\, Wooldridge and Xia (October 13\, 2025)\n2025-11-24 Bubble or Nothing: Data Center Project Finance by Advait Arun (November 12\, 2025)\n2025-12-08 Discussion of Debate over Whether Money Multiplier Requires Cash Lending\n2026-01-20 Gresham’s Law by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-03 The Law of One Price by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-17 Bank Runs With and Without Bank Failures by Correia\, Luck\, and Verner (2026)\n2026-03-03 Monetary Experience and the Theory of Money by John Hicks (1977)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-09-30/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-09-30/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Mexico_City:20251006T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Mexico_City:20251017T170000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040234
CREATED:20250625T162449Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251001T150519Z
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SUMMARY:Rethinking Latin America’s Development: History and Economic Policy Perspectives
DESCRIPTION:Call for Applications \nSummer School: Summer School “Rethinking Development: Foundations and Public Policies for Economic\, Social\, and Environmental Transformation” \n  \nOctober 6 – October 17\, 2025 | UAM-Xochimilco\, Mexico City | In English and Spanish \nWe are pleased to invite applications for the 2025 edition of the Summer School “Rethinking Development: Foundations and Public Policies for Economic\, Social\, and Environmental Transformation” \, jointly organized by the Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana (UAM) and UAM-Xochimilco\, in collaboration with the Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies (Pisa)\, the Institute for Social Research (IIS\, UNAM)\, and with the support of Open Society and the Young Scholars Initiative. \nBuilding on the success of last year’s YSI-backed seminar\, this two-week program offers an immersive learning and research environment for master’s and doctoral students\, both in-person and online. The summer school targets young scholars working in economics\, development studies\, political economy\, economic history\, public policy\, sociology\, and related disciplines\, aiming to equip them with the tools to analyze and respond to Latin America’s development challenges in an increasingly complex global context. \nParticipants will engage with both theoretical foundations and policy-oriented debates structured around four interrelated thematic pillars: \n(A) Historical Foundations and Structural Challenges \nFrom long-run development patterns and institutional legacies to the contemporary transformations reshaping the global economy\, this pillar explores the historical and structural roots of Latin America’s development trajectories. \n(B) Growth\, Productivity\, and External Constraints \nThis module examines the region’s persistent macroeconomic challenges—such as external dependency\, low investment\, and financial instability—through lenses including structuralist theory\, evolutionary economics\, and agent-based modeling. \n(C) Social Dynamics of Poverty\, Distribution\, and Informality \nWith a focus on inequality\, informality\, and exclusion\, this pillar addresses the design of macro-social policies aimed at fostering inclusion\, redistributive justice\, and social cohesion in the face of persistent disparities. \n(D) Industrial Change\, Technological Capability\, and Adaptation to the Global Economy \nThis section explores strategies for industrial upgrading\, export diversification\, technological learning\, and integration into global value chains\, emphasizing the tools and policies needed to reposition Latin America in a changing world economy. \nFormat: \n\nMorning sessions: Theoretical masterclasses led by leading scholars.\nAfternoon sessions: Empirical workshops\, economic policy forums\, and thematic group work.\n\nLanguages: The activities will be conducted in both English and Spanish\, and working knowledge of both languages is required for full participation and engagement. \nKey offerings: \n\nLearn from world-class scholars such as Mario Cimoli\, Giovanni Dosi\, Wilson Peres\, Gabriel Porcile\, Ariel Dvoskin and Andrea Roventini.\nPartial financial support may be granted for transportation\, accommodation\, and meals in Mexico City.\nAccess conceptual and methodological training in evolutionary economics\, agent-based modeling\, and policy evaluation tailored to Latin American realities.\nEngage in collaborative article and policy brief development for academic publication and policy audiences.\nJoin a vibrant international community of scholars committed to addressing the region’s structural constraints and development challenges.\n\nWho can apply: \n\nGraduate students (Master’s or PhD level) and early-career researchers.\n\nWe especially welcome: \n\nDoctoral candidates with more than 75% progress on their dissertations.\nYoung doctors in the early stages of their academic careers.\n\nApplication ProcessApplication Deadline: July 30\, 2025 \nRequired documents must be submitted through the Summer School’s registration platform. Required documents are: \n\n\nUpdated curriculum vitae (maximum 3 pages) \n\n\nMotivation letter (maximum 700 words) explaining the relevance of the Summer School for your research \n\n\nLetter of support from a professor or thesis advisor \n\n\nIncomplete applications or those submitted after July 30 will not be considered. \nSelection Criteria \n\n\nThematic relevance and academic quality of the ongoing research \n\n\nDisciplinary\, institutional\, and geographic diversity \n\n\nGender balance and representation of underrepresented groups \n\n\nPriority will be given to applicants with proven knowledge of both English and Spanish\, and with proficiency in statistical and econometric analysis tools such as R\, Stata\, Excel\, or equivalent \n\n\nNotification of ResultsThe results will be announced on the website of the Department of Economic Production at UAM-Xochimilco. Selected participants will also be notified via email. \nInquiries and Additional InformationFor questions or further information\, interested applicants may contact: latam@youngscholarsinitiative.org \nNotes: \n\nThis event will be held in a hybrid format: a limited number of participants will be accepted to attend online\, while others will participate in person.\nTo apply for funding\, please use the same application form as for general admission. The amount of financial support will be communicated after participants are selected.\nDocuments may be submitted in either English or Spanish.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/rethinking-latin-americas-development-history-and-economic-policy-perspectives/
LOCATION:Departamento de Producción Económica at UAM-Xochimilco\, Calzada del Hueso\, Colonia Villa Quietud\, Alcaldía Coyoacán\, CDMX\, 04960\, Mexico
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251007T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251008T170000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040234
CREATED:20250704T173304Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250704T173304Z
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SUMMARY:Banco de México\, a cien años de su fundación: su historia y sus retos
DESCRIPTION:Organizado por el Instituto de Investigaciones Económicas (IIEc) de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM) \n  \nColoquio: Banco de México\, a cien años de su fundación | IIEc \n  \nCon motivo del centenario de la fundación del Banco de México\, el Instituto de Investigaciones Económicas de la UNAM convoca al coloquio “Banco de México\, a cien años de su fundación: su historia y sus retos”\, un espacio de reflexión académica acerca del papel del banco central en el desarrollo económico del país a lo largo de su historia\, desde la teoría y la praxis. Sin dejar de lado a los actores que han guiado la política del banco. El establecimiento del Banco de México se concretó en 1925\, gracias a los esfuerzos presupuestarios y de organización impulsados por el entonces Secretario de Hacienda\, Alberto J. Pani\, y con el respaldo del Presidente Plutarco Elías Calles. \n  \nA cien años de su fundación\, esta actividad busca reunir a especialistas para debatir y revisar su trayectoria histórica institucional y su contribución en el largo plazo a la estabilidad y desarrollo económico del país\, así como los retos que enfrenta ante el contexto económico contemporáneo. \n  \n  \n\nModalidad: presencial (invitación abierta) y en línea (transmisión en vivo por YouTube) \n(1) Instituto de Investigaciones Económicas UNAM – YouTube \nFechas: martes 7 y miércoles 8 de octubre de 2025 \nHorario: de 10:00 a 18:00 hrs \nLugar: Auditorio Mtro. Ricardo Torres Gaitán\, Instituto de Investigaciones Económicas\, UNAM \nIdioma oficial: español \nActividad académica sin costo. \nNo contamos con financiamiento de transporte ni alojamiento para este evento. \n  \n  \nCoordinación académica: Ángeles Cortés\, María Eugenia Romero Sotelo y Armando Sánchez
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/banco-de-mexico-a-cien-anos-de-su-fundacion-su-historia-y-sus-retos/
LOCATION:Ciudad Universitaria\, Mexico City\, Mexico
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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DTSTAMP:20260410T040234
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
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SUMMARY:Money View Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:The Money View Reading Group reads and discusses writings on money\, banking\, and finance. We are a self-directed group. Anyone interested in money and banking can read the readings\, join us for discussions\, or suggest future readings.We meet for 90 minutes via Zoom on Tuesdays at 2 pm Eastern Time US (New York).\n\nCurrent Book\n  \n\n\nBetween Payments and Credit: An Introduction to the IOU Economy by George Pantelopoulos (2025)\n  \n\nhttps://www.amazon.com/Between-Payments-Credit-Introduction-Economy-ebook/dp/B0FF3RR3T4/ \nFrom the description: \nIn unpacking credit relationships and payments over the past 1000 years in addition to how technological innovations are shifting the credit relationships/payments landscape – from barter\, commodity money\, single layered to dual-layered financial money systems and from CBDC to stablecoins – this book systematically explores the various techniques that have been introduced in an attempt to improve the organisation\, efficiency and stability of the IOU economy as a way to mitigate or prevent the universal challenge of the IOU economy from binding. \nPantelopolous says the “universal challenge” of an IOU economy is the scenario in which liquidity dries up. \n\n2026-03-10 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5) (Recording)\n\n\nUpcoming Sessions\n  \n\n\n2026-03-24 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 6–10 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 2\n\n\n\n\nThe Central Bank as the LOLR\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 2\n\n\n\n\n2026-04-07 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 11–13 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCentral Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC)\n\n\n\n\nThe Crypto-Verse: Terminologies and Technologies\n\n\n\n\nUnbacked Crypto-Assets and Stablecoins\n\n\n\n\nFuture Suggested Readings\n  \n\n\nAgainst Money by J.W. Mason and Arjun Jayadev (2026)\nOur Money: Monetary Policy as if Democracy Matters by Leah Downey (2025)\nThe History of Money: A Story of Humanity by David McWilliams (2025)\nAfter the Accord: A History of Federal Reserve Open Market Operations\, the US Government Securities Market\, and Treasury Debt Management from 1951 to 1979 by Kenneth D. Garbade (2021)\nHow a Ledger Became a Central Bank: A Monetary History of the Bank of Amsterdam by Quinn and Roberds (2023)\nA Study of Money Flows in the United States by Morris Copeland (1952)\nA History of the Greenbacks by Wesley Clair Mitchell (1903)\nCalming the Storms: The Carry Trade\, the Banking School and British Financial Crises Since 1825 by Charles Read (2023)\nBenjamin Strong: Central Banker by Lester V. Chandler (1958)\nAn Engine\, Not a Camera: How Financial Models Shape Markets by Donald MacKenzie (2007)\nCurrency and Credit (4e) by Ralph Hawtrey (1950)\nThe Golden Age of the Quantity Theory by David Laidler (1991)\nCapitalizing on Crisis: The Political Origins of the Rise of Finance by Greta Krippner (2011)\nThe Federal Reserve System by Paul Warburg (1930)\nCentral Bank Capitalism: Monetary Policy in Times of Crisis by Joscha Wullweber (2024)\nIntroduction to Central Banking by Ulrich Bindseil and Alessio Fota (2021)\nThe Chairman: John J. McCloy & The Making of the American Establishment by Kai Bird (1992)\nManias\, Panics\, and Crashes (8e) by Robert McCauley (2023)\nThe Bailout State: Why Governments Rescue Banks\, Not People by Martijn Konings (2025)\n\n\nPast Readings with Discussion Recordings\n  \n\n\nMinsky by Daniel H. Neilson (2019)\n2021-03-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-03-31 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-04-07 — Discussion with Daniel Neilson\nThe Art of Central Banking (Chapter IV) by Ralph Hawtrey (1933)\n2021-04-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-05-05 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-05-26 — Discussion with David Glasner\nMaking Money: Coin\, Currency\, and the Coming of Capitalism by Christine Desan (2014)\n2021-06-02 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-06-16 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-06-30 — Discussion Session 3\n2021-07-14 — Discussion with Christine Desan\nMoney in a Theory of Finance by John G. Gurley\, Edward S. Shaw (1960)\n2021-07-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-08-04 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-08-18 — Discussion Session 3\nThe World in Depression\, 1929-1939 by Charles P. Kindleberger (1973)\n2021-09-01 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-09-15 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-09-29 — Discussion Session 3\nThe Rise of Carry by Jamie Lee et al (2019)\n2021-10-13 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-10-27 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Interest and the Public Interest by Perry Mehrling (1998)\n2021-11-10 — Discussion Session 1 | Allyn Young\n2021-11-24 — Discussion Session 2 | Alvin Hanson\n2021-12-08 — Discussion Session 3 | Edward Shaw\nControlling Credit by Eric Monnet (2018)\n2022-01-05 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-01-19 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Menace of Fiscal QE by George Selgin (2020)\n2022-02-02 — Discussion Session\nThe New Lombard Street by Perry Mehrling (2011)\n2022-02-23 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-03-09 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-03-23 — Discussion Session 3\nFighting Financial Crises: Learning from the Past by Gary Gorton\, Ellis Tallman (2021)\n2022-04-20 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-05-11 — Discussion Session 2\nMoney and empire: The international gold standard\, 1890-1914 by Marcello De Cecco (1974)\n2022-05-25 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-06-15 — Discussion Session 2\nCentral Bank Cooperation 1924-31 by Stephen Clarke (1967)\n2022-06-22 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-07-06 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Problem: Rethinking Financial Regulation by Morgan Ricks (2016)\n2022-07-27 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-08-10 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-08-17 — Discussion with Morgan Ricks\nThe Evolution of Central Banking: Theory and History by Stefano Ugolini (2017)\n2022-08-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-09-07 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-09-21 — Discussion Session 3\n2022-10-05 — Discussion with Stefano Ugolini\nA Financial History of Western Europe by Charles P. Kindleberger (1984\, 1993)\n2022-10-19 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Money\n2022-11-02 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: Banking\n2022-11-16 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Finance\n2023-01-11 — Discussion Session 4 | Part 4: The Interwar Period\n2023-01-18 — Discussion Session 5 | Part 5: After World War II\nMoney and Empire: Charles P. Kindleberger and the Dollar System by Perry Mehrling (2022)\n2022-11-30 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Intellectual Formation\, 1910–1948\n2022-12-14 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: International Economist\, 1948–1976\n2022-12-21 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Historical Economist\, 1976–2003\n2022-12-21 — Discussion #1 with Perry Mehrling\n2023-01-04 — Discussion #2 with Perry Mehrling\nBonds without Borders: A History of the Eurobond Market by Chris O’Malley (2015)\n2023-02-15 — Discussion Session 1\n2023-03-01 — Discussion Session 2\nMonetary Policy Operations and the Financial System by Ulrich Bindseil (2014)\n2023-03-15 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-8)\n2023-03-29 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 9-12)\n2023-04-12 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 13-18)\nCapital Wars: The Rise of Global Liquidity by Michael J. Howell (2020)\n2023-04-26 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-05-10 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-14)\nA Market Theory of Money by John Hicks (1989)\n2023-05-24 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-06-07 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-15)\nThe Currency of Politics: The Political Theory of Money from Aristotle to Keynes by Stefan Eich (2022)\n2023-06-28 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2023-07-19 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\n2023-08-02 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 5 & 6)\n2023-08-14 — Discussion with Stefan Eich\nFischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance by Perry Mehrling (2005)\n2023-08-22 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2023-09-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–8)\n2023-09-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 9–11)\n2023-09-26 — Discussion with Perry Mehrling\nThe Evolution of Central Banks by Charles Goodhart (1988)\n2023-10-03 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–6)\n2023-10-17 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–8\, Appendix)\nThe Repo Market: Shorts\, Shortages\, and Squeezes by Scott Skyrm (2023)\n2023-11-07 — Discussion Session 1 (pages 1–92)\n2023-11-21 — Discussion Session 2 (pages 93–186)\n2023-12-05 — Discussion Session 3 (pages 187–310) Part 1 — Part 2\n2023-12-12 — Discussion with Scott Skyrm From 39:20\nThe Volatility Machine: Emerging Economies and the Threat of Financial Collapse by Michael Pettis (2001)\n2023-12-19 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2024-01-02 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–10)\n2024-01-09 — Discussion with Michael Pettis\nInternational Capital Movements by Charles P. Kindleberger (1987)\n2024-01-16 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2024-01-30 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\nA Political Theory of Money by Anush Kapadia (2024)\n2024-02-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–4)\n2024-03-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 5–7)\n2024-03-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–12)\n2024-03-26 — Discussion with Anush Kapadia\nThe Rise of Central Banks: State Power in Financial Capitalism by Leon Wansleben (2023)\n2024-04-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-04-23 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2024-05-07 — Discussion with Leon Wansleben\nThe Money Illusion: Market Monetarism\, the Great Recession\, and the Future of Monetary Policy by Scott Sumner (2021)\n2024-05-14 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 & 2)\n2024-05-28 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 & 4)\n2024-06-18 — Discussion Session 3 (Parts 5 & 6)\n2024-06-25 — Discussion with Scott Sumner\nPrivate Money and Public Currencies: The Sixteenth Century Challenge: The Sixteenth Century Challenge by Boyer-Xambeu\, Deleplace\, and Gillard (1994)\n2024-07-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-07-16 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4 & 5)\n2024-07-30 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6\, 7 & Conclusion)\nThe Arena of International Finance by Charles A. Coombs (1976)\n2024-08-13 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1ー6)\n2024-08-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–12)\nThe Bill on London: or The Finance of Trade by Bills of Exchange by Gillett Brothers (1952/1976)\n2024-09-17 — Discussion Session\nBirth of a Market: The U.S. Treasury Securities Market from the Great War to the Great Depression by Kenneth D. Garbade (2012)\n2024-10-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–10)\n2024-10-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 11–15)\n2024-10-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 16–24)\nA Monetary and Fiscal History of the United States\, 1961–2021 by Alan S. Blinder (2022)\n2024-11-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–7)\n2024-11-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8–13)\n2024-12-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 14–19)\nBuilding a Ruin: The Cold War Politics of Soviet Economic Reform by Yakov Feygin (2024)\n2025-01-07 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2025-01-21 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2025-02-04 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 7 & Afterword)\nA Crash Course on Crises: Macroeconomic Concepts for Run-Ups\, Collapses\, and Recoveries by Markus K. Brunnermeier and Ricardo Reis (2023)\n2025-02-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 and 2)\n2025-03-11 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 and 4)\nThe Empire of Value: A New Foundation for Economics by Andre Orlean (2014)\n2025-03-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Introduction and Part 1) Part 1 — Part 2\n2025-04-08 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 2 and 3)\n2025-04-22 — Discussion Session 3 (Part 4 and Conclusion)\nThe Wheels of Commerce by Fernand Braudel (1979/1982)\n2025-05-06 — Discussion Session 1 (Chapter 1)\n2025-05-13 — Discussion Session 2 (Chapter 2)\n2025-05-20 — Discussion Session 3 (Chapter 3)\n2025-05-27 — Discussion Session 4 (Chapter 4)\n2025-06-03 — Discussion Session 5 (Chapter 5)\nBeyond Banks: Technology\, Regulation\, and the Future of Money by Dan Awrey (2024)\n2025-06-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Intro & Ch 1–3)\n2025-07-01 — Discussion Session 5 (Ch 4–7 & Conclusion)\n2025-07-08 — Discussion with Dan Awrey\nOur Dollar\, Your Problem: An Insider’s View of Seven Turbulent Decades of Global Finance by Kenneth Rogoff (2025)\n2025-08-19— Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1-3)\n2025-08-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 4-6)\nCentral Banking Before 1800: A Rehabilitation by Ulrich Bindseil (2019)\n2025-09-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-09-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3–5)\n2025-09-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6&7)\n2025-10-13 — Discussion with Ulrich Bindseil\nThe Long Twentieth Century: Money\, Power and the Origins of Our Times by Giovanni Arrighi (2010)\n2025-10-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-11-03 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3)\n2025-11-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 4)\nFragile by Design: The Political Origins of Banking Crises and Scarce Credit by Charles W. Calomiris and Stephen Haber (2014)\n2025-11-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2025-12-01 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6-9)\n2025-12-15 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 10–15)\n2026-01-05 — Discussion with Charles Calomiris\nTreatise on Money by Joseph Schumpeter (1970/2014)\n2026-01-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2026-01-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–7)\n2026-02-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–10)\n2026-02-24 — Discussion Session 4 (Ch 11–12)\n\n\nOff-Week Sessions\n  \n\n2021-05-19 BIS Working Paper: Breaking free of the triple coincidence in international finance (2015)\n2021-07-07 Global Domain of the Dollar: 8 Questions by Robert McCauley Author Discussion\n2021-07-28 BIS and Bank of England reports on Central Bank Digital Currencies\n2022-09-28 The Crypto Banking System by Sébastien Derivaux (2022) Author Discussion\n2023-04-05 Discussion of Silicon Valley Bank\n2023-04-19 Institutional Cash Pools by Zoltan Pozsar (2011)\n2023-05-03 BIS Bulletin #73: Stablecoins vs. Tokenized Deposits (May 3\, 2023)\n2023-07-05 The Credit–Money Hierarchy: a Republican \, Egalitarian Appraisal by Aaron James (2023)\n2023-07-26 Public Purpose Finance: The Government’s Role as Lender by Nadav Orian Peer (2020) Author Discussion 2023-10-24 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 1\n2023-10-31 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 2\n2023-11-14 ICMA Repo FAQ by Richard Comotto (2013/2019)\n2023-11-28 Basis Trades and Treasury Market Illiquidity by Daniel Barth & Jay Kahn (2020)\n2024-01-23 Capital flows and the current account by Borio and Disyatat (2015)\n2024-02-13 The dual currency system of Renaissance Europe by Luca Fantacci (2008)\n2024-02-27 BIS: Buy now\, pay later: a cross-country analysis by Cornelli et al. (2023)\n2024-03-12 The non-use of money in the Middle Ages by Bell\, Brooks\, and Moore (2017)\n2024-04-09 The Central Role of Credit Crunches in Recent Financial History by Albert M. Wojnilower (1980)\n2024-04-16 Measuring Equilibrium in the Balance of Payments by Charles P. Kindleberger (1969)\n2024-04-30 The Rise and Risks of Private Credit — GFSR (April\, 2024)\n2024-06-04 BIS Working Paper No 1100: Getting up from the floor by Claudio Borio (May\, 2023)\n2024-06-11 The Offshore Dollar and US Policy by Robert McCauley (May\, 2024)\n2024-07-09 The (impossible) repo trinity: the political economy of repo markets by Daniela Gabor (2016)\n2024-08-07 A Safe Haven for Hidden Risks (May 30\, 2024) and Rate Transformation (November 4\, 2023) by Elham Saeidinezhad\n2024-08-20 The Collateral Supply Effect on Central Bank Policy by Carolyn Sissoko (2020)\n2024-09-10 Monetary Policy Implications of Market Maker of Last Resort Operations by Anil K Kashyap (August 23\, 2024)\n2024-11-05 BIS Bulletin No 90: The market turbulence and carry trade unwind of August 2024 (August 27\, 2024)\n2024-11-19 Yen Carry Trade and the Subprime Crisis by Masazumi Hattori and Hyun Song Shin (2009)\n2024-12-03 After the Allocation: What Role for the Special Drawing Rights System? by Pforr\, Pape\, and Murau (2022)\n2025-01-14 Where Profits Come From by the Levy Forecasting Center by Levy\, Farnham\, & Rajan (2008/1997)\n2025-01-28 The Broad Consequences of Narrow Banking by Matheus R. Grasseli and Alexander Lipton (2019)\n2025-02-11 Failing Banks by Sergio Correia\, Stephen Luck\, and Emil Verner (2024)\n2025-02-18 Odd Lots — The Hidden History of Eurodollars by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (January 2025)\n2025-03-04 Of Last Resort: Evaluating the Treasury-Equity Model of Federal Reserve Emergency Lending by Steven Kelly (2024)\n2025-03-18 Commercial Banking and Capital Formation I–IV by Harold Moulton (1918)\n2025-04-01 Climate Alignment For Banks: The Stories That Numbers Tell by Nadav Orian Peer (2025) Author Discussion\n2025-04-15 Shadow Banking: Why Modern Money Markets are Less Stable Than 19th c. Money Markets But Shouldn’t Be Stabilized by a ‘Dealer of Last Resort’ by Carolyn Sissoko (2014)\n2025-04-29 Treasury Market and the Basis Trade (Adrian et al. 2025; Kashyap et al. 2025)\n2025-06-10 Structural Changes in the Global Financial System lecture by Hyun Song Shin (May 19\, 2025)\n2025-06-24 International Regimes\, Transactions\, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order by John Gerard Ruggie (1982)\n2025-07-15 BIS Annual Report Chapter: Financial conditions in a changing global financial system (2025)\n2025-07-22 Banks Are Intermediaries of Loanable Funds by George Selgin (2024)\n2025-07-29 Theorising non-bank financial intermediation by Jo Michell (2024)\n2025-08-05 Banks are different: why bank-based versus market-based lending is a false dichotomy by Carolyn Sissoko (2024)\n2025-09-08 Did France Cause the Great Depression? by Douglas A. Irwin (2010)\n2025-09-22 Rethinking Monetary Sovereignty: The Global Credit Money System and the State by Murau and van’t Klooster (2023)\n2025-10-06 Rethinking currency internationalisation: offshore money creation and the EU’s monetary governance by Murau and van’t Klooster (2025)\n2025-10-27 BIS Bulletin No 114: “Financial channel implications of a weaker dollar for emerging market economies” by Juselius\, Wooldridge and Xia (October 13\, 2025)\n2025-11-24 Bubble or Nothing: Data Center Project Finance by Advait Arun (November 12\, 2025)\n2025-12-08 Discussion of Debate over Whether Money Multiplier Requires Cash Lending\n2026-01-20 Gresham’s Law by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-03 The Law of One Price by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-17 Bank Runs With and Without Bank Failures by Correia\, Luck\, and Verner (2026)\n2026-03-03 Monetary Experience and the Theory of Money by John Hicks (1977)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-10-07/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-10-07/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/lecture2-p4x2-hierarchy-pyramid-dynamics.png
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251008T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251008T110000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040234
CREATED:20240112T203210Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251112T153433Z
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SUMMARY:Monthly Office Hours for (Aspiring) Organizers
DESCRIPTION:Ask any questions about how to run projects in YSI\nThe conversation may cover: \n\nWhat it means to be an organizer in YSi\nHow to think about projects in general\nThe logistics of virtual projects\nThe logistics of in-person projects\nQuestions you have about a specific project\n\nYou can watch recordings from previous calls here: \n\n February 2024
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/monthly-office-hours-for-aspiring-organizers/2025-10-08/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/monthly-office-hours-for-aspiring-organizers/2025-10-08/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251009T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251009T170000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040234
CREATED:20251006T081100Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251006T082541Z
UID:10007921-1759996800-1760029200@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:YSI Social Gathering & Discussion Night
DESCRIPTION:We’re kicking off a new year with a joint social gathering and discussion night for the YSI Local Hub Netherlands at Hoender en Hop in The Hague. First drinks on us! \nWe’ll start by discussing on the topic of fundamental uncertainty with a few pages from Knight (1921)\, Lavoie (2022) and many more. Have a different topic to discuss? Come and share!
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-social-gathering-discussion-night/
LOCATION:Hoender en Hop\, Grote Markt 25\, Den Haag\, 2511 BG\, Netherlands
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/michael-fousert-bNovwnW0RXw-unsplash-scaled.jpg
GEO:52.0758346;4.3093869
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251010
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251011
DTSTAMP:20260410T040234
CREATED:20250606T002448Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250606T002448Z
UID:10007103-1760054400-1760140799@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:YSI Pre-Conference Workshop on the History of Economic Thought @ ISHET 2025
DESCRIPTION:Call for Participants \nYSI Pre-ISHET Conference Workshop on the History of Economic Thought\nJawaharlal Nehru University\, Delhi | 10 October 2025 \nBuilding on the success of the first Indian Society for the History of Economic Thought (ISHET) annual conference and the YSI pre-conference workshop held in October 2024\, the YSI History of Economic Thought Working Group and ISHET organising committee are thrilled to announce the second edition of the pre-conference workshop. The first ISHET conference\, held from 27 to 29 October 2024\, covered a diverse range of topics across themes such as Indian economic thought\, schools of economic thought\, HET pedagogy\, decolonizing economics\, feminist economic thought\, and many more. The accompanying YSI pre-conference workshop provided practical tools to young scholars\, focusing on writing and publishing HET theses and journal articles\, working with archival materials\, and publishing books in HET. \nThe second pre-conference workshop will take place on 10 October 2025 at Jawaharlal Nehru University (Delhi\, India) as a precursor to the ISHET’s second annual conference\, scheduled for 11-12 October 2025 at the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi. \nWorkshop Objective \nThe 2025 workshop aims to provide young scholars with essential tools for engaging with research in the history of economic thought (HET). It will include the following sessions: \n  \n\nIntroduction to the HET workshop – Rohit Azad (JNU)\nHow to Write HET Theses – Alex M. Thomas (Azim Premji University\, Bengaluru)\nPublishing in HET and Heterodox Economics – Louis-Philippe Rochon (Laurentian University\, Canada)\nMethods in HET – Maria Cristina Marcuzzo (Sapienza University of Rome)\nDoing History of Economic Thought– Sharmin Khodaiji (O. P. Jindal Global University)\n\nWho Should Apply? \nYoung scholars (bachelor’s\, master’s\, and doctoral students\, as well as early career researchers) who are pursuing or interested in the history of economic thought are encouraged to apply. \nTo qualify for travel stipends\, participants must meet the following requirements: \n\nBe registered for the ISHET’s conference.\nDemonstrate a strong interest in HET research through their application.\n\nThis workshop is intended as a pre-conference activity\, and participants are required to register for the ISHET conference by paying the appropriate registration fees. \nImportant Dates \n\nDeadline for submitting Statement of Purpose (SoP): 30 June 2025\nNotification of acceptance for workshop participants: 15 July 2025\nDeadline for submitting abstracts for the ISHET conference: 30 June 2025\nNotification of acceptance for abstracts: 15 July 2025\nDeadline for paying the ISHET conference registration fees: 15 August 2025\nDeadline for submitting full papers: 30 September 2025\nYSI Pre-ISHET Conference Workshop: 10 October 2025\nISHET Conference: 11-12 October 2025\n\nHow to Apply \nTo apply for the workshop\, submit a 400-500 word Statement of Purpose (SoP) explaining how the workshop and the ISHET conference will contribute to your academic aspirations. If you are presenting a paper at the ISHET conference\, include your abstract (400-500 words) along with your SoP. \nSubmit your application via the Google Form (Click on ‘Apply here’). \nFinancial Support \nFinancial support will be provided based on the ISHET philosophy of equity. This includes factors such as the applicant’s social identity\, the nature and location of their institution\, and the quality of their application (SoP and abstract). For those selected\, accommodation on a sharing basis will be provided. \nNote: Financial support does not cover the ISHET conference registration fees. \nWe look forward to welcoming you to Delhi for this enriching academic event! \n  \nORGANISING COMMITTEE \nShivani Hasija (YSI) \nHabravysh (YSI) \nThair Ahmad (ISHET) \nRohit Azad (Jawaharlal Nehru University) \nAlex M. Thomas (Azim Premji University\, Bengaluru) \nSCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE \nRohit Azad (Jawaharlal Nehru University) \nIshan Anand (IIT Delhi) \nSharmin Khodaiji (O.P. Jindal Global University) \nThair Ahmad (Sai University\, Chennai) \nAlex M. Thomas (Azim Premji University\, Bengaluru)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-pre-conference-workshop-on-the-history-of-economic-thought-ishet-2025/
LOCATION:Jawaharlal Nehru University\, Mehrauli - Badarpur Road\, New Delhi\, Delhi Division\, 110067\, India
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20251013T080000
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SUMMARY:2nd Edition “YSI COP for the UN Rio Conventions”
DESCRIPTION:Since 1992\, the World Community\, served by the United Nations System\, is fully committed to addressing three key environmental challenges: climate change\, desertification\, and biodiversity loss. Served by the Three Rio Conventions\, as they are now known\, with their respective Secretariats: \n\nUNFCCC: United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change\,\nUNCCD: United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification\,\nUNCBD: Convention on Biological Diversity.\n\nThe purpose of the Conference of the Parties (COPs) is to accelerate\, operationalize\, and advance the implementation of the Conventions. YSI strongly supports the success of the Rio Conventions and actively engages in this process. \nWe continue to be actively involved in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) process. The 21st COP (COP21) led to the Paris Agreement\, which mobilised global collective action to limit the global temperature increase to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels by 2050 and to take action to adapt to the impacts of climate change already occurring. As each year\, the UNFCCC mid-year meeting of the Subsidiary Bodies 62 (SB62) will take place in Bonn\, and this year\, COP30 [Brazilian Government website] will be held in Belem\, Brazil\, from 10 November to 21 November 2025.   \nAs a YSI Community\, we believe in the importance of this process and that we can contribute from our experiences and studies. Last year\, we launched the first edition of the YSI COP for the UNFCCC COP workshop\, which took place in Warsaw\, Poland\, from 4 to 7 November in the run-up to COP29. The workshop had the participation of fifteen scholars and practitioners in a two-day of negotiation simulation\, a farm visit\, and the preparation of a final YSI message that members of the Community brought to the grounds of COP29 in Azerbaijan. \nFollowing the high success and participation of the YSI Community\, we are launching the 2nd Edition of the YSI COP for the UN Rio Conventions in the UN Campus in Bonn\, Germany\, from October 13th to October 16th\, 2025. \nThis Project is a collaboration between the Finance\, Law and Economics Working Group\, the Sustainability Working Group and the Philosophy of Economics Working Group\, and the UN Bonn Campus. By participating in this Workshop\, selected scholars will come to the UN Campus in Bonn\, after all crucial decisions ensuring the success of COP30 were made during SB62 and several weeks before COP30 starts. \nDuring the two-day Workshop\, Participants will deepen their knowledge of the UN Rio Conventions process\, have the opportunity to participate in a simulation of negotiations at the UN Campus\, and meet peer-leading researchers and practitioners in an interdisciplinary environment together with UN Staff. As part of the Workshop\, we will learn from negotiators and talk to experts as we visit several sections of the UN Headquarters. \nThis project is Co-funded by European Carbon Farmers. \n\n[EXTENDED DEADLINE] to submit application by July 4th!! \n  \nApplication and Funding Details: \n\nAccommodation: All participants will receive shared accommodation provided for three (3) days – from 13 October to 16 October (We expect participants to arrive on 13 October and depart on 16 October).\nMeals: We will provide lunch on 14 and 15 October.\nPartial travel stipends: Available based on distance and need of the selected participants.\nAccepted participants will be informed within two weeks after the application extended deadline on July 4th\, 2025.\n\nFor more information contact: fle@youngscholarsinitiative.org and sustainability@youngscholarsinitiative.org.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/2nd-edition-ysi-cop-for-the-un-rio-conventions/
LOCATION:UN Campus\, Platz d. Vereinten Nationen 1\, Bonn\, 53113\, Germany
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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SUMMARY:Third Postgraduate Research Seminar at the Institute of Economics (IE)-UNICAMP
DESCRIPTION:The Postgraduate Research Seminar is an in-person academic event held since 2023. It is an initiative of the Master’s and Doctoral students at the Institute of Economics at the University of Campinas (IE-Unicamp). It is organized annually by the postgraduate students themselves\, in partnership with the coordinators of IE’s Postgraduate Programs in Economics and Economic Development. \nThe event aims to promote the sharing and discussion of the research carried out by postgraduate interested students\, regardless of the stage of their studies and research: ongoing or completed; working projects or fi nal projects. All research is welcomed: it may have already been presented/submitted/published or not\, etc. \nThe idea is for the seminar to be an opportunity for these works to be presented and discussed collectively\, encouraging interaction between IE’s Postgraduate Programs students\, and among professors\, researchers\, and other students from inside and – whenever possible – outside the institute. \nThe seminar will take place on October 14\, 15\, 16 and 17\, 2025 at IE\, located at Rua Pitágoras\, 353\, in Campinas\, SP\, Brazil. In this event’s third edition – supported by the Young Scholars Initiative (YSI) – up to 10 postgraduate students from other institutions will be selected. Their work will have to relate to at least one of the twenty five lines of research of IE’s Postgraduate Programs in Economics and Economic Development. \nIf you are a postgraduate student at IE or from any other institution and want to present your work in Economics or Economic Development at the seminar\, apply by 11:59 p.m (GTM – 3) on August 17\, 2025. Please note that only an abstract of your research project will be needed\, of up to 500 words. \nIf your work is selected\, you will be invited to give a 15-20-minute presentation in-person at one of the Postgraduate Seminar tables. Presentations are all in Portuguese\, but exceptions can be considered if requested. Postgraduates from outside IE may receive a transportation stipend and will have their accommodation covered. All presenters will receive certifi cates of participation.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/third-postgraduate-research-seminar-at-the-institute-of-economics-ie-unicamp/
LOCATION:Institute of Economics at the University of Campinas (IE-Unicamp)\, Rua Pitágoras\, 353\, Campinas\, São Paulo\, 13083857\, Brazil
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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SUMMARY:Money View Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:The Money View Reading Group reads and discusses writings on money\, banking\, and finance. We are a self-directed group. Anyone interested in money and banking can read the readings\, join us for discussions\, or suggest future readings.We meet for 90 minutes via Zoom on Tuesdays at 2 pm Eastern Time US (New York).\n\nCurrent Book\n  \n\n\nBetween Payments and Credit: An Introduction to the IOU Economy by George Pantelopoulos (2025)\n  \n\nhttps://www.amazon.com/Between-Payments-Credit-Introduction-Economy-ebook/dp/B0FF3RR3T4/ \nFrom the description: \nIn unpacking credit relationships and payments over the past 1000 years in addition to how technological innovations are shifting the credit relationships/payments landscape – from barter\, commodity money\, single layered to dual-layered financial money systems and from CBDC to stablecoins – this book systematically explores the various techniques that have been introduced in an attempt to improve the organisation\, efficiency and stability of the IOU economy as a way to mitigate or prevent the universal challenge of the IOU economy from binding. \nPantelopolous says the “universal challenge” of an IOU economy is the scenario in which liquidity dries up. \n\n2026-03-10 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5) (Recording)\n\n\nUpcoming Sessions\n  \n\n\n2026-03-24 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 6–10 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 2\n\n\n\n\nThe Central Bank as the LOLR\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 2\n\n\n\n\n2026-04-07 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 11–13 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCentral Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC)\n\n\n\n\nThe Crypto-Verse: Terminologies and Technologies\n\n\n\n\nUnbacked Crypto-Assets and Stablecoins\n\n\n\n\nFuture Suggested Readings\n  \n\n\nAgainst Money by J.W. Mason and Arjun Jayadev (2026)\nOur Money: Monetary Policy as if Democracy Matters by Leah Downey (2025)\nThe History of Money: A Story of Humanity by David McWilliams (2025)\nAfter the Accord: A History of Federal Reserve Open Market Operations\, the US Government Securities Market\, and Treasury Debt Management from 1951 to 1979 by Kenneth D. Garbade (2021)\nHow a Ledger Became a Central Bank: A Monetary History of the Bank of Amsterdam by Quinn and Roberds (2023)\nA Study of Money Flows in the United States by Morris Copeland (1952)\nA History of the Greenbacks by Wesley Clair Mitchell (1903)\nCalming the Storms: The Carry Trade\, the Banking School and British Financial Crises Since 1825 by Charles Read (2023)\nBenjamin Strong: Central Banker by Lester V. Chandler (1958)\nAn Engine\, Not a Camera: How Financial Models Shape Markets by Donald MacKenzie (2007)\nCurrency and Credit (4e) by Ralph Hawtrey (1950)\nThe Golden Age of the Quantity Theory by David Laidler (1991)\nCapitalizing on Crisis: The Political Origins of the Rise of Finance by Greta Krippner (2011)\nThe Federal Reserve System by Paul Warburg (1930)\nCentral Bank Capitalism: Monetary Policy in Times of Crisis by Joscha Wullweber (2024)\nIntroduction to Central Banking by Ulrich Bindseil and Alessio Fota (2021)\nThe Chairman: John J. McCloy & The Making of the American Establishment by Kai Bird (1992)\nManias\, Panics\, and Crashes (8e) by Robert McCauley (2023)\nThe Bailout State: Why Governments Rescue Banks\, Not People by Martijn Konings (2025)\n\n\nPast Readings with Discussion Recordings\n  \n\n\nMinsky by Daniel H. Neilson (2019)\n2021-03-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-03-31 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-04-07 — Discussion with Daniel Neilson\nThe Art of Central Banking (Chapter IV) by Ralph Hawtrey (1933)\n2021-04-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-05-05 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-05-26 — Discussion with David Glasner\nMaking Money: Coin\, Currency\, and the Coming of Capitalism by Christine Desan (2014)\n2021-06-02 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-06-16 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-06-30 — Discussion Session 3\n2021-07-14 — Discussion with Christine Desan\nMoney in a Theory of Finance by John G. Gurley\, Edward S. Shaw (1960)\n2021-07-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-08-04 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-08-18 — Discussion Session 3\nThe World in Depression\, 1929-1939 by Charles P. Kindleberger (1973)\n2021-09-01 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-09-15 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-09-29 — Discussion Session 3\nThe Rise of Carry by Jamie Lee et al (2019)\n2021-10-13 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-10-27 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Interest and the Public Interest by Perry Mehrling (1998)\n2021-11-10 — Discussion Session 1 | Allyn Young\n2021-11-24 — Discussion Session 2 | Alvin Hanson\n2021-12-08 — Discussion Session 3 | Edward Shaw\nControlling Credit by Eric Monnet (2018)\n2022-01-05 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-01-19 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Menace of Fiscal QE by George Selgin (2020)\n2022-02-02 — Discussion Session\nThe New Lombard Street by Perry Mehrling (2011)\n2022-02-23 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-03-09 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-03-23 — Discussion Session 3\nFighting Financial Crises: Learning from the Past by Gary Gorton\, Ellis Tallman (2021)\n2022-04-20 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-05-11 — Discussion Session 2\nMoney and empire: The international gold standard\, 1890-1914 by Marcello De Cecco (1974)\n2022-05-25 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-06-15 — Discussion Session 2\nCentral Bank Cooperation 1924-31 by Stephen Clarke (1967)\n2022-06-22 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-07-06 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Problem: Rethinking Financial Regulation by Morgan Ricks (2016)\n2022-07-27 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-08-10 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-08-17 — Discussion with Morgan Ricks\nThe Evolution of Central Banking: Theory and History by Stefano Ugolini (2017)\n2022-08-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-09-07 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-09-21 — Discussion Session 3\n2022-10-05 — Discussion with Stefano Ugolini\nA Financial History of Western Europe by Charles P. Kindleberger (1984\, 1993)\n2022-10-19 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Money\n2022-11-02 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: Banking\n2022-11-16 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Finance\n2023-01-11 — Discussion Session 4 | Part 4: The Interwar Period\n2023-01-18 — Discussion Session 5 | Part 5: After World War II\nMoney and Empire: Charles P. Kindleberger and the Dollar System by Perry Mehrling (2022)\n2022-11-30 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Intellectual Formation\, 1910–1948\n2022-12-14 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: International Economist\, 1948–1976\n2022-12-21 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Historical Economist\, 1976–2003\n2022-12-21 — Discussion #1 with Perry Mehrling\n2023-01-04 — Discussion #2 with Perry Mehrling\nBonds without Borders: A History of the Eurobond Market by Chris O’Malley (2015)\n2023-02-15 — Discussion Session 1\n2023-03-01 — Discussion Session 2\nMonetary Policy Operations and the Financial System by Ulrich Bindseil (2014)\n2023-03-15 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-8)\n2023-03-29 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 9-12)\n2023-04-12 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 13-18)\nCapital Wars: The Rise of Global Liquidity by Michael J. Howell (2020)\n2023-04-26 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-05-10 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-14)\nA Market Theory of Money by John Hicks (1989)\n2023-05-24 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-06-07 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-15)\nThe Currency of Politics: The Political Theory of Money from Aristotle to Keynes by Stefan Eich (2022)\n2023-06-28 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2023-07-19 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\n2023-08-02 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 5 & 6)\n2023-08-14 — Discussion with Stefan Eich\nFischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance by Perry Mehrling (2005)\n2023-08-22 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2023-09-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–8)\n2023-09-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 9–11)\n2023-09-26 — Discussion with Perry Mehrling\nThe Evolution of Central Banks by Charles Goodhart (1988)\n2023-10-03 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–6)\n2023-10-17 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–8\, Appendix)\nThe Repo Market: Shorts\, Shortages\, and Squeezes by Scott Skyrm (2023)\n2023-11-07 — Discussion Session 1 (pages 1–92)\n2023-11-21 — Discussion Session 2 (pages 93–186)\n2023-12-05 — Discussion Session 3 (pages 187–310) Part 1 — Part 2\n2023-12-12 — Discussion with Scott Skyrm From 39:20\nThe Volatility Machine: Emerging Economies and the Threat of Financial Collapse by Michael Pettis (2001)\n2023-12-19 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2024-01-02 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–10)\n2024-01-09 — Discussion with Michael Pettis\nInternational Capital Movements by Charles P. Kindleberger (1987)\n2024-01-16 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2024-01-30 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\nA Political Theory of Money by Anush Kapadia (2024)\n2024-02-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–4)\n2024-03-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 5–7)\n2024-03-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–12)\n2024-03-26 — Discussion with Anush Kapadia\nThe Rise of Central Banks: State Power in Financial Capitalism by Leon Wansleben (2023)\n2024-04-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-04-23 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2024-05-07 — Discussion with Leon Wansleben\nThe Money Illusion: Market Monetarism\, the Great Recession\, and the Future of Monetary Policy by Scott Sumner (2021)\n2024-05-14 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 & 2)\n2024-05-28 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 & 4)\n2024-06-18 — Discussion Session 3 (Parts 5 & 6)\n2024-06-25 — Discussion with Scott Sumner\nPrivate Money and Public Currencies: The Sixteenth Century Challenge: The Sixteenth Century Challenge by Boyer-Xambeu\, Deleplace\, and Gillard (1994)\n2024-07-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-07-16 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4 & 5)\n2024-07-30 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6\, 7 & Conclusion)\nThe Arena of International Finance by Charles A. Coombs (1976)\n2024-08-13 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1ー6)\n2024-08-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–12)\nThe Bill on London: or The Finance of Trade by Bills of Exchange by Gillett Brothers (1952/1976)\n2024-09-17 — Discussion Session\nBirth of a Market: The U.S. Treasury Securities Market from the Great War to the Great Depression by Kenneth D. Garbade (2012)\n2024-10-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–10)\n2024-10-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 11–15)\n2024-10-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 16–24)\nA Monetary and Fiscal History of the United States\, 1961–2021 by Alan S. Blinder (2022)\n2024-11-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–7)\n2024-11-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8–13)\n2024-12-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 14–19)\nBuilding a Ruin: The Cold War Politics of Soviet Economic Reform by Yakov Feygin (2024)\n2025-01-07 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2025-01-21 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2025-02-04 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 7 & Afterword)\nA Crash Course on Crises: Macroeconomic Concepts for Run-Ups\, Collapses\, and Recoveries by Markus K. Brunnermeier and Ricardo Reis (2023)\n2025-02-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 and 2)\n2025-03-11 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 and 4)\nThe Empire of Value: A New Foundation for Economics by Andre Orlean (2014)\n2025-03-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Introduction and Part 1) Part 1 — Part 2\n2025-04-08 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 2 and 3)\n2025-04-22 — Discussion Session 3 (Part 4 and Conclusion)\nThe Wheels of Commerce by Fernand Braudel (1979/1982)\n2025-05-06 — Discussion Session 1 (Chapter 1)\n2025-05-13 — Discussion Session 2 (Chapter 2)\n2025-05-20 — Discussion Session 3 (Chapter 3)\n2025-05-27 — Discussion Session 4 (Chapter 4)\n2025-06-03 — Discussion Session 5 (Chapter 5)\nBeyond Banks: Technology\, Regulation\, and the Future of Money by Dan Awrey (2024)\n2025-06-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Intro & Ch 1–3)\n2025-07-01 — Discussion Session 5 (Ch 4–7 & Conclusion)\n2025-07-08 — Discussion with Dan Awrey\nOur Dollar\, Your Problem: An Insider’s View of Seven Turbulent Decades of Global Finance by Kenneth Rogoff (2025)\n2025-08-19— Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1-3)\n2025-08-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 4-6)\nCentral Banking Before 1800: A Rehabilitation by Ulrich Bindseil (2019)\n2025-09-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-09-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3–5)\n2025-09-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6&7)\n2025-10-13 — Discussion with Ulrich Bindseil\nThe Long Twentieth Century: Money\, Power and the Origins of Our Times by Giovanni Arrighi (2010)\n2025-10-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-11-03 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3)\n2025-11-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 4)\nFragile by Design: The Political Origins of Banking Crises and Scarce Credit by Charles W. Calomiris and Stephen Haber (2014)\n2025-11-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2025-12-01 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6-9)\n2025-12-15 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 10–15)\n2026-01-05 — Discussion with Charles Calomiris\nTreatise on Money by Joseph Schumpeter (1970/2014)\n2026-01-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2026-01-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–7)\n2026-02-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–10)\n2026-02-24 — Discussion Session 4 (Ch 11–12)\n\n\nOff-Week Sessions\n  \n\n2021-05-19 BIS Working Paper: Breaking free of the triple coincidence in international finance (2015)\n2021-07-07 Global Domain of the Dollar: 8 Questions by Robert McCauley Author Discussion\n2021-07-28 BIS and Bank of England reports on Central Bank Digital Currencies\n2022-09-28 The Crypto Banking System by Sébastien Derivaux (2022) Author Discussion\n2023-04-05 Discussion of Silicon Valley Bank\n2023-04-19 Institutional Cash Pools by Zoltan Pozsar (2011)\n2023-05-03 BIS Bulletin #73: Stablecoins vs. Tokenized Deposits (May 3\, 2023)\n2023-07-05 The Credit–Money Hierarchy: a Republican \, Egalitarian Appraisal by Aaron James (2023)\n2023-07-26 Public Purpose Finance: The Government’s Role as Lender by Nadav Orian Peer (2020) Author Discussion 2023-10-24 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 1\n2023-10-31 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 2\n2023-11-14 ICMA Repo FAQ by Richard Comotto (2013/2019)\n2023-11-28 Basis Trades and Treasury Market Illiquidity by Daniel Barth & Jay Kahn (2020)\n2024-01-23 Capital flows and the current account by Borio and Disyatat (2015)\n2024-02-13 The dual currency system of Renaissance Europe by Luca Fantacci (2008)\n2024-02-27 BIS: Buy now\, pay later: a cross-country analysis by Cornelli et al. (2023)\n2024-03-12 The non-use of money in the Middle Ages by Bell\, Brooks\, and Moore (2017)\n2024-04-09 The Central Role of Credit Crunches in Recent Financial History by Albert M. Wojnilower (1980)\n2024-04-16 Measuring Equilibrium in the Balance of Payments by Charles P. Kindleberger (1969)\n2024-04-30 The Rise and Risks of Private Credit — GFSR (April\, 2024)\n2024-06-04 BIS Working Paper No 1100: Getting up from the floor by Claudio Borio (May\, 2023)\n2024-06-11 The Offshore Dollar and US Policy by Robert McCauley (May\, 2024)\n2024-07-09 The (impossible) repo trinity: the political economy of repo markets by Daniela Gabor (2016)\n2024-08-07 A Safe Haven for Hidden Risks (May 30\, 2024) and Rate Transformation (November 4\, 2023) by Elham Saeidinezhad\n2024-08-20 The Collateral Supply Effect on Central Bank Policy by Carolyn Sissoko (2020)\n2024-09-10 Monetary Policy Implications of Market Maker of Last Resort Operations by Anil K Kashyap (August 23\, 2024)\n2024-11-05 BIS Bulletin No 90: The market turbulence and carry trade unwind of August 2024 (August 27\, 2024)\n2024-11-19 Yen Carry Trade and the Subprime Crisis by Masazumi Hattori and Hyun Song Shin (2009)\n2024-12-03 After the Allocation: What Role for the Special Drawing Rights System? by Pforr\, Pape\, and Murau (2022)\n2025-01-14 Where Profits Come From by the Levy Forecasting Center by Levy\, Farnham\, & Rajan (2008/1997)\n2025-01-28 The Broad Consequences of Narrow Banking by Matheus R. Grasseli and Alexander Lipton (2019)\n2025-02-11 Failing Banks by Sergio Correia\, Stephen Luck\, and Emil Verner (2024)\n2025-02-18 Odd Lots — The Hidden History of Eurodollars by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (January 2025)\n2025-03-04 Of Last Resort: Evaluating the Treasury-Equity Model of Federal Reserve Emergency Lending by Steven Kelly (2024)\n2025-03-18 Commercial Banking and Capital Formation I–IV by Harold Moulton (1918)\n2025-04-01 Climate Alignment For Banks: The Stories That Numbers Tell by Nadav Orian Peer (2025) Author Discussion\n2025-04-15 Shadow Banking: Why Modern Money Markets are Less Stable Than 19th c. Money Markets But Shouldn’t Be Stabilized by a ‘Dealer of Last Resort’ by Carolyn Sissoko (2014)\n2025-04-29 Treasury Market and the Basis Trade (Adrian et al. 2025; Kashyap et al. 2025)\n2025-06-10 Structural Changes in the Global Financial System lecture by Hyun Song Shin (May 19\, 2025)\n2025-06-24 International Regimes\, Transactions\, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order by John Gerard Ruggie (1982)\n2025-07-15 BIS Annual Report Chapter: Financial conditions in a changing global financial system (2025)\n2025-07-22 Banks Are Intermediaries of Loanable Funds by George Selgin (2024)\n2025-07-29 Theorising non-bank financial intermediation by Jo Michell (2024)\n2025-08-05 Banks are different: why bank-based versus market-based lending is a false dichotomy by Carolyn Sissoko (2024)\n2025-09-08 Did France Cause the Great Depression? by Douglas A. Irwin (2010)\n2025-09-22 Rethinking Monetary Sovereignty: The Global Credit Money System and the State by Murau and van’t Klooster (2023)\n2025-10-06 Rethinking currency internationalisation: offshore money creation and the EU’s monetary governance by Murau and van’t Klooster (2025)\n2025-10-27 BIS Bulletin No 114: “Financial channel implications of a weaker dollar for emerging market economies” by Juselius\, Wooldridge and Xia (October 13\, 2025)\n2025-11-24 Bubble or Nothing: Data Center Project Finance by Advait Arun (November 12\, 2025)\n2025-12-08 Discussion of Debate over Whether Money Multiplier Requires Cash Lending\n2026-01-20 Gresham’s Law by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-03 The Law of One Price by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-17 Bank Runs With and Without Bank Failures by Correia\, Luck\, and Verner (2026)\n2026-03-03 Monetary Experience and the Theory of Money by John Hicks (1977)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-10-14/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-10-14/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/lecture2-p4x2-hierarchy-pyramid-dynamics.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251015T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251015T160000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040234
CREATED:20250624T124125Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251015T150025Z
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SUMMARY:YSI-RSA Webinar Series on Regional Inequalities and Perceived Left-Behindness
DESCRIPTION:The YSI Urban and Regional Economics\, and Behavior and Society Working Groups\, in partnership with the Regional Studies Association (RSA) invite students\, early scholars and all members to join the Webinar Series on Regional Inequalities and Perceived Left-Behindness. \n  \nThe objective is to explore the growing relevance of perceived left-behindness and subjective well-being in economics. Over four sessions\, we will delve into how feelings of relative deprivation\, spatial inequalities\, and socio-economic discontent are reshaping regional trajectories and influencing economic outcomes. By bringing together scholars working at the intersection of perception\, well-being\, and place\, the series aims to foster a deeper understanding of how these dimensions can enrich regional analysis\, inform policy\, and ultimately contribute to more inclusive territorial development. \n  \n4) November 12\, 2025 (15:00-16:00 CEST) – Policy\, Perception and Place: Rethinking Regional Development Strategies (Malin Roiha & Emma Fàbrega – European Social Research Unit & University of Barcelona\, Spain) \nConcluding the series\, this webinar will focus on how subjective indicators and local perceptions can be better integrated into policy-making. We’ll explore innovative approaches and the challenges of designing place-sensitive strategies that address both material and perceived inequalities. \n  \nPrevious sessions: \n  \n1) July 16\, 2025 (15:00-16:00 CEST) – Subjective well-being and spatial inequalities (Paolo Veneri – GSSI\, Italy) \nThe literature from the last decade has highlighted the paradox of urban well-being\, where cities offer economic advantages at a cost to residents’ life satisfaction. However\, this is not true everywhere. This webinar focuses on subjective well-being spatial differences and on the factors driving those differences. After accounting for observable individual characteristics\, evidence on the urban-rural gap in life satisfaction is provided across different world regions\, together with the factors associated with such gaps. Subsequently\, focusing on European cities\, we review how individual and city characteristics drive observed differences in life satisfaction\, drawing on novel empirical analysis and on the most recent contributions in the literature. \n  \n2) September 16\, 2025 (15:00-16:00 CEST) – Spatial imaginaries of ‘left behind places’ in policy discourse (Grete Gansauer – University of Wyoming\, US) \nThe “left behind place” is an emerging spatial imaginary which evokes an idealized set of social\, economic and political conditions assigned to a generalized type of place. This session will untangle how left-behindness is imagined and explore how spatial imaginaries manifest themselves in different regional and political discources. We’ll examine the roots of such perceptions\, their links to territorial inequalities\, and offer empirical insights into how spatial imaginaries of ‘left behind places’ shape regional development trajectories. \n  \n3) October 15\, 2025 (15:00-16:00 CEST) – Electoral outcomes as a form of discontent (Arndt Leininger – Chemnitz University of Technology\, Germany) \nThis session explores how electoral results can reflect underlying socio-economic and territorial discontent. Drawing on recent research\, the discussion will examine how votes for populist\, extremist\, or anti-establishment parties often signal perceived inequalities\, loss of status\, and a sense of being “left behind” among certain groups and regions. \n 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-rsa-webinar-series-on-regional-inequalities-and-perceived-left-behindness/2025-10-15/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-rsa-webinar-series-on-regional-inequalities-and-perceived-left-behindness/2025-10-15/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/YSI-RSA_Promo_2.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251017
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251021
DTSTAMP:20260410T040234
CREATED:20250805T185306Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250805T185306Z
UID:10007540-1760659200-1761004799@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Degrowth Cabaret ft. YSI @ Degrowth Workshop Barcelona
DESCRIPTION:The Degrowth Cabaret is a performative and participatory experiment that invites scholars\, activists\, artists\, and local communities to engage with degrowth imaginaries through humor\, art\, and collective creation. More than a show\, it is a shared stage\, a space where post-growth futures are not just theorized but embodied\, questioned\, and played with. Themes like sufficiency\, care\, decoloniality\, and utopia take center stage\, not as abstract concepts\, but as lived possibilities. \nFollowing its successful premiere at the ISEE Degrowth Conference 2025 in Oslo (which brought together 15 young scholars and artists) the Cabaret has been invited to the Autonomous University of Barcelona’s Degrowth Programme in October 2025. This next iteration will deepen its hybrid format: a blend of theatre\, music\, satire\, storytelling\, and experimental performance-lectures\, designed to challenge the boundaries between academia\, activism\, and art. \nWhy a Cabaret? Why Now? \nThe degrowth movement urgently needs spaces where critique meets creativity\, where analysis dances with emotion. Traditional panels and papers alone cannot capture the depth of socio-ecological transformation\, or reach those already building alternatives outside academia. The Cabaret answers this gap by foregrounding critical joy\, embodiment\, and collaborative imagination as tools for systemic change. \nYSI emerged from the 2008 crisis to amplify critical voices in economics. We take that mission further by bridging theory and artistic expression\, inviting young artivists to contribute not only through research but through performance\, satire\, and collective creation. This project expands YSI’s network into vital but underrepresented territories: artists\, grassroots activists\, and interdisciplinary practitioners who might not see themselves in conventional economics spaces\, yet whose work is essential to pluralizing the field.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/degrowth-cabaret-ft-ysi-degrowth-workshop-barcelona/
LOCATION:BLOC4BCN
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/photo_2025-08-05_19-30-23.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251021
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251022
DTSTAMP:20260410T040234
CREATED:20250806T104615Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251023T093422Z
UID:10007396-1761004800-1761091199@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Global Banking and Global Stability: Geofragmentation\, Climate\, and Intersecting Crises
DESCRIPTION:Global banks remain central to the functioning of the global system\, not only in economic and financial terms\, but also in geopolitical\, legal\, and climate-related domains. While the Global Financial Crisis triggered a wave of regulatory reforms and fundamental changes to these institutions’ business models\, global banks continue to shape international financial stability\, cross-border flows\, and broader structures of global governance and climate finance. \nThe workshop will take place on Tuesday\, 21 October 2025\, at the Baines Wing SR (2.14)\, University Road\, University of Leeds. \nThe event brings together researchers and policy experts to discuss global banking\, financial stability\, and the evolving structure of international monetary relations. It will feature contributions from academics\, central bank researchers\, and BIS economists\, with a hybrid format allowing both in-person and online participation. \nBasel III and other financial regulations strengthened leverage and liquidity requirements for global systemically important banks (G-SIBs). Over the same period\, bond markets and non-bank financial institutions expanded their role in cross-border finance\, overtaking traditional banking channels. These transformations have raised questions about whether global banks have become less central to global economic dynamics and to the functioning of global stability. What are the implications of these changes? Are these institutions still globally systemic? Has regulation succeeded in reducing the global risks associated with global banking? These transformations took place during a period of polycrisis\, in which global banks have remained central to geopolitical stability due to their role in implementing international sanctions\, influencing foreign policy\, and shaping global governance through financial regulations and standards. Their networks facilitate or restrict financial flows\, significantly impacting international relations and diplomatic engagements. Legally\, global banks are key actors in the compliance and enforcement of international financial standards\, anti-money laundering frameworks\, and cross-border financial regulation\, reinforcing international law and accountability mechanisms. In climate finance\, global banks critically influence funding availability\, investments in sustainable infrastructure\, and the global transition to greener economies. \nThis workshop aims to share the latest contributions\, explore key knowledge gaps\, and define the future research agenda on the role of global banks in the international financial system and their impact on global stability. The workshop will feature presentations by both young and senior scholars on the role of these financial institutions from diverse perspectives\, enhance interdisciplinary engagement\, and support the development of collaborative networks. It will provide a platform for critical dialogue\, examining the evolving role of global banks within the intersecting financial\, climate\, and geopolitical crises that define today’s polycrisis context\, as well as the business\, regulatory\, and legal interventions aimed at increasing the system’s resilience to these challenges. \nThe event is organised by the YSI Financial Stability Working Group and the Economics Department of the Leeds University Business School\, with funding from YSI and the Polycrisis Network (https://www.polycrisis.network/). \n???? Programme: \n09:30-11:00hs | Session 1. Moderator: Ivan Weigandi \n\nFestus Ededjo  (Arden University) & Imko Meyenburg [Online] – Practitioners perception of the impact of regulations on banks performance before and after the financial crisis of 2007-2009. \n\n\nJohn Hogan Morris (University of Nottingham) – The performative power of bank balance sheets within climate scenario analyses.\n\n11:15-13:00hs | Session 2. Moderator: Nitin Nair \n\nRichard Senner (Swiss National Bank) & Ulrich Bindseil [Online] – Destabilisation of Bank Deposits Across Destinations\n\n\nKhawlah Aljunidel (University of Leeds) – Structural Oil Price Shocks\, Productivity and Efficiency of the Banking Sector\nClement Berthou (Univ. Grenoble Alpes) [Online] – Dollarization in Cambodia – from Paper to Pixels\, What does it change?\n\n14:00-15:30hs  | Session 3. Moderator: Verena Gradinger \n\nRudy Bouguelli (Université Paris Cité) – Unpacking the Black Box of Global Banking: Eurodollars and the LDC Debt Crisis\n\n\nCarolyn Sissoko (UWE Bristol) – The collapse of small business lending in the US: why general access to bank financing matters\n\n\nIñaki Aldasoro (Bank for International Settlements)\, Sebastian Doerr & Haonan Zhou – Monetary policy and bank wholesale funding: evidence from money market funds\n\n16:00-17:30hs \nRound table: Interdisciplinary research on global banking.  Moderator: Toby Swales \n\nGary Dymski  (Applied Institute for Research in Economics  – University of Leeds)\nVirág Blazsek (Centre for Business Law and Practice – University of Leeds)\n\n 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/global-banking-and-global-stability-geofragmentation-climate-and-intersecting-crises/
LOCATION:Baines Wing SR (2.14)\, University Road\, University of Leeds\, Leeds\, West Yorkshire\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251021T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251021T153000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040234
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
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SUMMARY:Money View Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:The Money View Reading Group reads and discusses writings on money\, banking\, and finance. We are a self-directed group. Anyone interested in money and banking can read the readings\, join us for discussions\, or suggest future readings.We meet for 90 minutes via Zoom on Tuesdays at 2 pm Eastern Time US (New York).\n\nCurrent Book\n  \n\n\nBetween Payments and Credit: An Introduction to the IOU Economy by George Pantelopoulos (2025)\n  \n\nhttps://www.amazon.com/Between-Payments-Credit-Introduction-Economy-ebook/dp/B0FF3RR3T4/ \nFrom the description: \nIn unpacking credit relationships and payments over the past 1000 years in addition to how technological innovations are shifting the credit relationships/payments landscape – from barter\, commodity money\, single layered to dual-layered financial money systems and from CBDC to stablecoins – this book systematically explores the various techniques that have been introduced in an attempt to improve the organisation\, efficiency and stability of the IOU economy as a way to mitigate or prevent the universal challenge of the IOU economy from binding. \nPantelopolous says the “universal challenge” of an IOU economy is the scenario in which liquidity dries up. \n\n2026-03-10 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5) (Recording)\n\n\nUpcoming Sessions\n  \n\n\n2026-03-24 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 6–10 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 2\n\n\n\n\nThe Central Bank as the LOLR\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 2\n\n\n\n\n2026-04-07 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 11–13 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCentral Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC)\n\n\n\n\nThe Crypto-Verse: Terminologies and Technologies\n\n\n\n\nUnbacked Crypto-Assets and Stablecoins\n\n\n\n\nFuture Suggested Readings\n  \n\n\nAgainst Money by J.W. Mason and Arjun Jayadev (2026)\nOur Money: Monetary Policy as if Democracy Matters by Leah Downey (2025)\nThe History of Money: A Story of Humanity by David McWilliams (2025)\nAfter the Accord: A History of Federal Reserve Open Market Operations\, the US Government Securities Market\, and Treasury Debt Management from 1951 to 1979 by Kenneth D. Garbade (2021)\nHow a Ledger Became a Central Bank: A Monetary History of the Bank of Amsterdam by Quinn and Roberds (2023)\nA Study of Money Flows in the United States by Morris Copeland (1952)\nA History of the Greenbacks by Wesley Clair Mitchell (1903)\nCalming the Storms: The Carry Trade\, the Banking School and British Financial Crises Since 1825 by Charles Read (2023)\nBenjamin Strong: Central Banker by Lester V. Chandler (1958)\nAn Engine\, Not a Camera: How Financial Models Shape Markets by Donald MacKenzie (2007)\nCurrency and Credit (4e) by Ralph Hawtrey (1950)\nThe Golden Age of the Quantity Theory by David Laidler (1991)\nCapitalizing on Crisis: The Political Origins of the Rise of Finance by Greta Krippner (2011)\nThe Federal Reserve System by Paul Warburg (1930)\nCentral Bank Capitalism: Monetary Policy in Times of Crisis by Joscha Wullweber (2024)\nIntroduction to Central Banking by Ulrich Bindseil and Alessio Fota (2021)\nThe Chairman: John J. McCloy & The Making of the American Establishment by Kai Bird (1992)\nManias\, Panics\, and Crashes (8e) by Robert McCauley (2023)\nThe Bailout State: Why Governments Rescue Banks\, Not People by Martijn Konings (2025)\n\n\nPast Readings with Discussion Recordings\n  \n\n\nMinsky by Daniel H. Neilson (2019)\n2021-03-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-03-31 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-04-07 — Discussion with Daniel Neilson\nThe Art of Central Banking (Chapter IV) by Ralph Hawtrey (1933)\n2021-04-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-05-05 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-05-26 — Discussion with David Glasner\nMaking Money: Coin\, Currency\, and the Coming of Capitalism by Christine Desan (2014)\n2021-06-02 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-06-16 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-06-30 — Discussion Session 3\n2021-07-14 — Discussion with Christine Desan\nMoney in a Theory of Finance by John G. Gurley\, Edward S. Shaw (1960)\n2021-07-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-08-04 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-08-18 — Discussion Session 3\nThe World in Depression\, 1929-1939 by Charles P. Kindleberger (1973)\n2021-09-01 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-09-15 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-09-29 — Discussion Session 3\nThe Rise of Carry by Jamie Lee et al (2019)\n2021-10-13 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-10-27 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Interest and the Public Interest by Perry Mehrling (1998)\n2021-11-10 — Discussion Session 1 | Allyn Young\n2021-11-24 — Discussion Session 2 | Alvin Hanson\n2021-12-08 — Discussion Session 3 | Edward Shaw\nControlling Credit by Eric Monnet (2018)\n2022-01-05 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-01-19 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Menace of Fiscal QE by George Selgin (2020)\n2022-02-02 — Discussion Session\nThe New Lombard Street by Perry Mehrling (2011)\n2022-02-23 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-03-09 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-03-23 — Discussion Session 3\nFighting Financial Crises: Learning from the Past by Gary Gorton\, Ellis Tallman (2021)\n2022-04-20 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-05-11 — Discussion Session 2\nMoney and empire: The international gold standard\, 1890-1914 by Marcello De Cecco (1974)\n2022-05-25 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-06-15 — Discussion Session 2\nCentral Bank Cooperation 1924-31 by Stephen Clarke (1967)\n2022-06-22 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-07-06 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Problem: Rethinking Financial Regulation by Morgan Ricks (2016)\n2022-07-27 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-08-10 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-08-17 — Discussion with Morgan Ricks\nThe Evolution of Central Banking: Theory and History by Stefano Ugolini (2017)\n2022-08-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-09-07 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-09-21 — Discussion Session 3\n2022-10-05 — Discussion with Stefano Ugolini\nA Financial History of Western Europe by Charles P. Kindleberger (1984\, 1993)\n2022-10-19 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Money\n2022-11-02 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: Banking\n2022-11-16 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Finance\n2023-01-11 — Discussion Session 4 | Part 4: The Interwar Period\n2023-01-18 — Discussion Session 5 | Part 5: After World War II\nMoney and Empire: Charles P. Kindleberger and the Dollar System by Perry Mehrling (2022)\n2022-11-30 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Intellectual Formation\, 1910–1948\n2022-12-14 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: International Economist\, 1948–1976\n2022-12-21 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Historical Economist\, 1976–2003\n2022-12-21 — Discussion #1 with Perry Mehrling\n2023-01-04 — Discussion #2 with Perry Mehrling\nBonds without Borders: A History of the Eurobond Market by Chris O’Malley (2015)\n2023-02-15 — Discussion Session 1\n2023-03-01 — Discussion Session 2\nMonetary Policy Operations and the Financial System by Ulrich Bindseil (2014)\n2023-03-15 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-8)\n2023-03-29 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 9-12)\n2023-04-12 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 13-18)\nCapital Wars: The Rise of Global Liquidity by Michael J. Howell (2020)\n2023-04-26 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-05-10 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-14)\nA Market Theory of Money by John Hicks (1989)\n2023-05-24 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-06-07 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-15)\nThe Currency of Politics: The Political Theory of Money from Aristotle to Keynes by Stefan Eich (2022)\n2023-06-28 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2023-07-19 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\n2023-08-02 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 5 & 6)\n2023-08-14 — Discussion with Stefan Eich\nFischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance by Perry Mehrling (2005)\n2023-08-22 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2023-09-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–8)\n2023-09-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 9–11)\n2023-09-26 — Discussion with Perry Mehrling\nThe Evolution of Central Banks by Charles Goodhart (1988)\n2023-10-03 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–6)\n2023-10-17 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–8\, Appendix)\nThe Repo Market: Shorts\, Shortages\, and Squeezes by Scott Skyrm (2023)\n2023-11-07 — Discussion Session 1 (pages 1–92)\n2023-11-21 — Discussion Session 2 (pages 93–186)\n2023-12-05 — Discussion Session 3 (pages 187–310) Part 1 — Part 2\n2023-12-12 — Discussion with Scott Skyrm From 39:20\nThe Volatility Machine: Emerging Economies and the Threat of Financial Collapse by Michael Pettis (2001)\n2023-12-19 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2024-01-02 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–10)\n2024-01-09 — Discussion with Michael Pettis\nInternational Capital Movements by Charles P. Kindleberger (1987)\n2024-01-16 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2024-01-30 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\nA Political Theory of Money by Anush Kapadia (2024)\n2024-02-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–4)\n2024-03-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 5–7)\n2024-03-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–12)\n2024-03-26 — Discussion with Anush Kapadia\nThe Rise of Central Banks: State Power in Financial Capitalism by Leon Wansleben (2023)\n2024-04-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-04-23 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2024-05-07 — Discussion with Leon Wansleben\nThe Money Illusion: Market Monetarism\, the Great Recession\, and the Future of Monetary Policy by Scott Sumner (2021)\n2024-05-14 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 & 2)\n2024-05-28 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 & 4)\n2024-06-18 — Discussion Session 3 (Parts 5 & 6)\n2024-06-25 — Discussion with Scott Sumner\nPrivate Money and Public Currencies: The Sixteenth Century Challenge: The Sixteenth Century Challenge by Boyer-Xambeu\, Deleplace\, and Gillard (1994)\n2024-07-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-07-16 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4 & 5)\n2024-07-30 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6\, 7 & Conclusion)\nThe Arena of International Finance by Charles A. Coombs (1976)\n2024-08-13 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1ー6)\n2024-08-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–12)\nThe Bill on London: or The Finance of Trade by Bills of Exchange by Gillett Brothers (1952/1976)\n2024-09-17 — Discussion Session\nBirth of a Market: The U.S. Treasury Securities Market from the Great War to the Great Depression by Kenneth D. Garbade (2012)\n2024-10-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–10)\n2024-10-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 11–15)\n2024-10-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 16–24)\nA Monetary and Fiscal History of the United States\, 1961–2021 by Alan S. Blinder (2022)\n2024-11-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–7)\n2024-11-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8–13)\n2024-12-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 14–19)\nBuilding a Ruin: The Cold War Politics of Soviet Economic Reform by Yakov Feygin (2024)\n2025-01-07 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2025-01-21 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2025-02-04 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 7 & Afterword)\nA Crash Course on Crises: Macroeconomic Concepts for Run-Ups\, Collapses\, and Recoveries by Markus K. Brunnermeier and Ricardo Reis (2023)\n2025-02-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 and 2)\n2025-03-11 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 and 4)\nThe Empire of Value: A New Foundation for Economics by Andre Orlean (2014)\n2025-03-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Introduction and Part 1) Part 1 — Part 2\n2025-04-08 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 2 and 3)\n2025-04-22 — Discussion Session 3 (Part 4 and Conclusion)\nThe Wheels of Commerce by Fernand Braudel (1979/1982)\n2025-05-06 — Discussion Session 1 (Chapter 1)\n2025-05-13 — Discussion Session 2 (Chapter 2)\n2025-05-20 — Discussion Session 3 (Chapter 3)\n2025-05-27 — Discussion Session 4 (Chapter 4)\n2025-06-03 — Discussion Session 5 (Chapter 5)\nBeyond Banks: Technology\, Regulation\, and the Future of Money by Dan Awrey (2024)\n2025-06-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Intro & Ch 1–3)\n2025-07-01 — Discussion Session 5 (Ch 4–7 & Conclusion)\n2025-07-08 — Discussion with Dan Awrey\nOur Dollar\, Your Problem: An Insider’s View of Seven Turbulent Decades of Global Finance by Kenneth Rogoff (2025)\n2025-08-19— Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1-3)\n2025-08-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 4-6)\nCentral Banking Before 1800: A Rehabilitation by Ulrich Bindseil (2019)\n2025-09-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-09-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3–5)\n2025-09-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6&7)\n2025-10-13 — Discussion with Ulrich Bindseil\nThe Long Twentieth Century: Money\, Power and the Origins of Our Times by Giovanni Arrighi (2010)\n2025-10-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-11-03 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3)\n2025-11-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 4)\nFragile by Design: The Political Origins of Banking Crises and Scarce Credit by Charles W. Calomiris and Stephen Haber (2014)\n2025-11-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2025-12-01 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6-9)\n2025-12-15 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 10–15)\n2026-01-05 — Discussion with Charles Calomiris\nTreatise on Money by Joseph Schumpeter (1970/2014)\n2026-01-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2026-01-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–7)\n2026-02-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–10)\n2026-02-24 — Discussion Session 4 (Ch 11–12)\n\n\nOff-Week Sessions\n  \n\n2021-05-19 BIS Working Paper: Breaking free of the triple coincidence in international finance (2015)\n2021-07-07 Global Domain of the Dollar: 8 Questions by Robert McCauley Author Discussion\n2021-07-28 BIS and Bank of England reports on Central Bank Digital Currencies\n2022-09-28 The Crypto Banking System by Sébastien Derivaux (2022) Author Discussion\n2023-04-05 Discussion of Silicon Valley Bank\n2023-04-19 Institutional Cash Pools by Zoltan Pozsar (2011)\n2023-05-03 BIS Bulletin #73: Stablecoins vs. Tokenized Deposits (May 3\, 2023)\n2023-07-05 The Credit–Money Hierarchy: a Republican \, Egalitarian Appraisal by Aaron James (2023)\n2023-07-26 Public Purpose Finance: The Government’s Role as Lender by Nadav Orian Peer (2020) Author Discussion 2023-10-24 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 1\n2023-10-31 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 2\n2023-11-14 ICMA Repo FAQ by Richard Comotto (2013/2019)\n2023-11-28 Basis Trades and Treasury Market Illiquidity by Daniel Barth & Jay Kahn (2020)\n2024-01-23 Capital flows and the current account by Borio and Disyatat (2015)\n2024-02-13 The dual currency system of Renaissance Europe by Luca Fantacci (2008)\n2024-02-27 BIS: Buy now\, pay later: a cross-country analysis by Cornelli et al. (2023)\n2024-03-12 The non-use of money in the Middle Ages by Bell\, Brooks\, and Moore (2017)\n2024-04-09 The Central Role of Credit Crunches in Recent Financial History by Albert M. Wojnilower (1980)\n2024-04-16 Measuring Equilibrium in the Balance of Payments by Charles P. Kindleberger (1969)\n2024-04-30 The Rise and Risks of Private Credit — GFSR (April\, 2024)\n2024-06-04 BIS Working Paper No 1100: Getting up from the floor by Claudio Borio (May\, 2023)\n2024-06-11 The Offshore Dollar and US Policy by Robert McCauley (May\, 2024)\n2024-07-09 The (impossible) repo trinity: the political economy of repo markets by Daniela Gabor (2016)\n2024-08-07 A Safe Haven for Hidden Risks (May 30\, 2024) and Rate Transformation (November 4\, 2023) by Elham Saeidinezhad\n2024-08-20 The Collateral Supply Effect on Central Bank Policy by Carolyn Sissoko (2020)\n2024-09-10 Monetary Policy Implications of Market Maker of Last Resort Operations by Anil K Kashyap (August 23\, 2024)\n2024-11-05 BIS Bulletin No 90: The market turbulence and carry trade unwind of August 2024 (August 27\, 2024)\n2024-11-19 Yen Carry Trade and the Subprime Crisis by Masazumi Hattori and Hyun Song Shin (2009)\n2024-12-03 After the Allocation: What Role for the Special Drawing Rights System? by Pforr\, Pape\, and Murau (2022)\n2025-01-14 Where Profits Come From by the Levy Forecasting Center by Levy\, Farnham\, & Rajan (2008/1997)\n2025-01-28 The Broad Consequences of Narrow Banking by Matheus R. Grasseli and Alexander Lipton (2019)\n2025-02-11 Failing Banks by Sergio Correia\, Stephen Luck\, and Emil Verner (2024)\n2025-02-18 Odd Lots — The Hidden History of Eurodollars by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (January 2025)\n2025-03-04 Of Last Resort: Evaluating the Treasury-Equity Model of Federal Reserve Emergency Lending by Steven Kelly (2024)\n2025-03-18 Commercial Banking and Capital Formation I–IV by Harold Moulton (1918)\n2025-04-01 Climate Alignment For Banks: The Stories That Numbers Tell by Nadav Orian Peer (2025) Author Discussion\n2025-04-15 Shadow Banking: Why Modern Money Markets are Less Stable Than 19th c. Money Markets But Shouldn’t Be Stabilized by a ‘Dealer of Last Resort’ by Carolyn Sissoko (2014)\n2025-04-29 Treasury Market and the Basis Trade (Adrian et al. 2025; Kashyap et al. 2025)\n2025-06-10 Structural Changes in the Global Financial System lecture by Hyun Song Shin (May 19\, 2025)\n2025-06-24 International Regimes\, Transactions\, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order by John Gerard Ruggie (1982)\n2025-07-15 BIS Annual Report Chapter: Financial conditions in a changing global financial system (2025)\n2025-07-22 Banks Are Intermediaries of Loanable Funds by George Selgin (2024)\n2025-07-29 Theorising non-bank financial intermediation by Jo Michell (2024)\n2025-08-05 Banks are different: why bank-based versus market-based lending is a false dichotomy by Carolyn Sissoko (2024)\n2025-09-08 Did France Cause the Great Depression? by Douglas A. Irwin (2010)\n2025-09-22 Rethinking Monetary Sovereignty: The Global Credit Money System and the State by Murau and van’t Klooster (2023)\n2025-10-06 Rethinking currency internationalisation: offshore money creation and the EU’s monetary governance by Murau and van’t Klooster (2025)\n2025-10-27 BIS Bulletin No 114: “Financial channel implications of a weaker dollar for emerging market economies” by Juselius\, Wooldridge and Xia (October 13\, 2025)\n2025-11-24 Bubble or Nothing: Data Center Project Finance by Advait Arun (November 12\, 2025)\n2025-12-08 Discussion of Debate over Whether Money Multiplier Requires Cash Lending\n2026-01-20 Gresham’s Law by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-03 The Law of One Price by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-17 Bank Runs With and Without Bank Failures by Correia\, Luck\, and Verner (2026)\n2026-03-03 Monetary Experience and the Theory of Money by John Hicks (1977)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-10-21/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-10-21/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/lecture2-p4x2-hierarchy-pyramid-dynamics.png
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DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251026
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SUMMARY:YSI @ 29th FMM Conference 2025
DESCRIPTION:In partnership with the Forum for Macroeconomics and Macroeconomics Policy (FMM)\, the Keynesian Economics Working Group of YSI is glad to open a call to offer partial travel stipends and accommodation to young scholars who will present at the 29th FMM Conference. The conference will take place from 23 to 25 October 2025 in Berlin. \nHow to Apply\nYoung scholars can apply until September 7th in the following link: https://forms.gle/zikiMyMuUCFhcP7SA. The students selected for the YSI stipend will be notified by September 10th. \n 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-29th-fmm-conference-2025/
LOCATION:Forum for Macroeconomics and Macroeconomic Policy\, Berlin\, Germany
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251023T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251026T170000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040235
CREATED:20250807T191548Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250808T105342Z
UID:10007464-1761206400-1761498000@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:III SIE – YSI Pre-Conference
DESCRIPTION:The Italian Economic Society is organizing its 66th Annual Scientific Meeting (RSA) at the University of Naples Parthenope from the 23rd to the 25th of October. This year\, YSI will continue its collaboration and is pleased to present the III YSI-SIE Pre-Conference\, to be held at the University of Naples Parthenope on the 23rd of October. \nThe structure for the pre-conference will feature presentations by young scholars (i.e.\, Ph.D. students and postdocs) that will be commented on and discussed by their peers and experts in the field. After the pre-conference\, participants are required to attend the main conference\, where they will have the chance to engage with the discussions held in the conference sessions. \nThis year’s pre-conference will focus on technology\, international trade\, and industrial policy. We invite all young scholars to submit their abstract proposals to be part of the pre-conference on the following topics (but not limited to): \n– Technology\, AI\, labor markets and digital platforms \n– FDI\, Global Value Chains\, and international technology transmission \n– International trade and unequal south-north trade \n– Industrial policy \nSelected participants will have the chance to receive accommodation and a travel stipend that aims to cover part of the travel expenses to Naples. \nSubmit your Abstracts (300 words maximum) clicking on the button above until September 7\, 2025.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/iii-sie-ysi-pre-conference/
LOCATION:University of Naples Parthenope\, Via Ammiraglio Ferdinando Acton\, Napoli\, Città Metropolitana di Napoli\, 80133\, Italy
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20251023T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20251023T180000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040235
CREATED:20251016T092552Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251016T112642Z
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SUMMARY:Deconstruction of Economy\, Economics and Deconstruction (Conference)
DESCRIPTION:Zoom link \nhttps://univ-amu-fr.zoom.us/j/88045482054?pwd=V0hNbGpzMURCVUxrNE4vZnRGUjJ5UT09 \n  \nThis conference aims to foster an original and interdisciplinary ground for discussing the connection of philosophy\, the humanities\, and economics\, and to engage members of the Philosophy of Economics working group who are interested in contemporary critical thought. \nThe reference to economic terminology is a massive and determining feature of a deconstructive approach. Since it describes a structure of reality based on a postulate of the non-conservation of any principle—whether energy\, value\, life\, or meaning—deconstruction entails a critique of every law (nomos) of property and proximity (oikos). At the same time\, Jacques Derrida was able to define the hallmark of his work\, différance\, as “the concept of economy\,” provided\, of course\, “that one understands by this term something other than the classical economy of metaphysics or the classical metaphysics of economy” (Positions\, 1972). \nEconomic metaphors and concepts thus shape the deconstructive theorization of perception\, meaning\, epistemology\, ethics\, and politics\, as well as the very structure of experience. Of Grammatology (1967) highlights the empirical link between this approach and the historical connection between the rise of writing and the emergence of a “monetary and pre-monetary economy.” Later\, the consideration of the relationship between gift\, exchange\, and money would shape all deconstructive reflection on ethics\, politics\, and law (particularly regarding the issue of hospitality)\, in the form of an open dialectic between the calculable and the incalculable\, negotiation and the unconditional. \nYet this line of thought has rarely ever interrogated the discipline known as economics: neither economic phenomena\, nor economists’ texts\, nor documents marking economic history. Jacques Derrida himself authored only one article devoted to money and took part in a roundtable on the subject\, published in the collective volume L’argent (ed. M. Drach\, 2004). Among his readers\, exceptions are few but significant (J.-J. Goux\, N. Gernalzick\, E. Berns). \nThe gap between the programmatic use of the economy motif and the absence of a positive thematization suggests a refusal to accredit the independence of this discipline—that is\, also a refusal to consider economics as a regional science. But then\, it’s as if deconstruction retains in reserve an alternative thinking of the economic\, while deconstruction itself unfolds as an economic\, rather than a nomic or “hyper-legal” undertaking (Du droit à la philosophie\, 1990). In this gap\, we must also read Derrida’s reticence toward contemporary perspectives parallel to his own: above all\, the various Marxisms\, as well as the constellation of what has been called post-structuralism—even if he shared its critique of liberal axiomatic thinking. \nDespite this avoidance\, the articulation between deconstruction and economy promises to be effective for addressing contemporary debates as well as key moments in the history of economic thought. It allows us to examine both the strengths and limits of orthodox and heterodox approaches\, of theoretical as well as technical developments within the discipline. The invitation to interpret this conjunction can be heard in several ways\, opening a broad field of investigation. \nAs an invitation to explore the implications of deconstructive thought for economic discourses and the history of economic thought. \nIf one seeks to deconstruct a “classical metaphysics” of economy\, how might the concepts of labor or production\, value or money\, exchange or consumption be reworked anew? What are the theoretical\, epistemological\, rhetorical consequences of such a gesture? \nAs an invitation to pluralize the understanding of the signifier “economy.” \nIf we can speak of psychic economy\, aesthetic economy\, the economy of thought\, of nature\, or of salvation—what are the histories\, topologies\, genealogies\, and structures of these figures? How can we think the relations between political economy and psychic economy\, or between political and aesthetic economy\, without reducing one to the other? If we can disturb the “narrow” synonymy between economy and stewardship\, management\, or commercial administration\, how can we measure the (critical\, deconstructive\, or hegemonic) effects of a “general” meaning of economy? In this context\, what becomes of the human (and the animal)\, nature\, rationality and capital\, matter and value? \nAs an invitation to think the relationships between economy and its others—its outsides or margins. \nWhat are the relations between economy and ecology? Economy and sovereignty? Economy and revolution? The economic and the anthropological\, or the economic and the social? How can we address the relationship between economy and justice without opposing them or reducing justice to mere calculation? How can we resist the primitive accumulation undertaken by contemporary techno-financial oligarchies without hoping for the overcoming of the very conditions of all alienation? How can we think the reversals of capitalism without reducing them to the forgetting of a “common sense\,” an original sense of oikonomia that must be reactivated? \nAs an invitation to reread the text of deconstruction through economic discourses. \nIf deconstruction enables the reinterpretation of economy\, why couldn’t economic discourses\, in turn\, offer a new interpretation of différance? If deconstructive thought calibrates its movement to the text of what is\, do economic phenomena not describe a deconstruction at work? Doesn’t the economy expose phenomena that exceed any metaphysics of economy and that dominant discourses repress or ignore? \nIf the text of deconstruction pushes us to dismantle the conventional meaning of what we call economy\, conversely\, the text of economy should allow us to open the text of deconstruction to unexplored perspectives\, to put it to the test\, and to push its limits further. \n  \nGiustino De Michele (Postdoctoral Researcher\, CIELAM\, Aix-Marseille University)\nThibault Mercier (PhD Candidate\, IrePH\, Université Paris Nanterre) \n  \nParticipants: \n\n\n\nIsabelle Alfandary\, professor of American literature and critical theory at Sorbonne Nouvelle University\n\n\nAnne Alombert\, associate professor of Philosophy at Paris 8 University\n\n\nMarie Cuillerai\, professor of Philosophy at Paris Cité University\n\n\nGiustino De Michele\, postdoctoral researcher at Aix-Marseille University\n\n\nAnne-Laure Delatte\, CNRS tenured researcher at Paris Dauphine University\n\n\nAlain Deneault\, professor of Philosophy at the University of Moncton\n\n\nLudovic Desmedt\, professor of Economics at the Université de Bourgogne Franche-Comté.\n\n\nFausto Fraisopi\, professor of Philosophy at Aix-Marseille University\n\n\nNadja Gernalzick\, professor of English and American Studies at the University of Vienna\n\n\nSimon Glendinning\, professor of Philosophy at the London School of Economics\n\n\nJan Horst Keppler\, professor of economics at the Université Paris Dauphine University\n\n\nApostolos Lampropoulos\, professor of Comparative Literature at the University Bordeaux-Montaigne\n\n\nGiuseppe Longo\, CNRS research director emeritus at the Ecole Normale Supérieure de Paris\n\n\nSolange Manche\, independent Researcher\n\n\nFrancesca Manzari\, professor in Comparative Literature at Aix-Marseille University\n\n\nPatrick Mardellat\, professor of Economics at Sciences Po Lille\n\n\nThibault Mercier\, PhD candidate in philosophy at Paris Nanterre University\n\n\nBertrand Ogilvie\, professor emeritus in Philosophy at Paris 8 University\n\n\nLuca Paltrinieri\, associate professor of Political Philosophy at Rennes 1 University\n\n\nPeter Szendy\, professor of Comparative Literature and Humanities at Brown University\n\n\nCarlo Vercellone\, professor of Economics at Paris 8 University\n\n\nFrancesco Vitale\, professor of Philosophy at the University of Salerno\n\n\nSimon Morgan Wortham\, professor in Humanities at Kingston University London\n\n\n\n  \nThis project receives funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Grant Agreement No 101034324\, and from the French government under the France 2030 investment plan\, as part of the Initiative d’Excellence d’Aix-Marseille Université – A*MIDEX\, ref. AMX-22-COF-412. \n 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/deconstruction-of-economy-economics-and-deconstruction-conference/
LOCATION:Maison de la Recherche\, Aix-Marseille Université\, Avenue Robert Schuman\, Aix-en-Provence\, Bouches-du-Rhône\, 13100\, France
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20251023T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20251023T193000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040235
CREATED:20240117T145948Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260306T170413Z
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SUMMARY:Money and Finance Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:This reading group has been created to amplify and deep our knowledge on money and finance from a wide perspective that can embrace the complexity of money’s nature\, thus\, the complexity of the financial system and its dynamics. Moreover\, as it was cleverly unveiled by Émile Zola in his book L’Argent\, the first book discussed in this reading group\, money and finance are rooted in every sphere of human beings (social\, political\, religious\, personal\, etc.)\, therefore\, their inquiring and comprehension cannot neglect this this reality. \nThe reading group started with an initial selection of books proposed by Professor Jan Toporowski\, however\, the path we will walk together will be opened and determined by the interests and tastes of the group members. \nList of Readings: \nZola Émile\, L’Argent\, 1891      Discussed \nSchumpeter\, J.A.S. History of Economic Analysis\, Chapter 8 on ‘Money\, Credit and Cycles’.  This chapter will be divided in two sessions. The first session will be on 25/01/24 and include sections 1 – 5 (From page 1040 to page 1074)\, the second will be on 29/02/2024 and include sections 6 – 9 (From page 1074 to page 1101). Discussed \nDiscussion of Schumpeter’s Chapter with the contribution of Professor Jan Toporowski. Discussed \nChick\, V. ‘The Evolution of the Banking System and the Theory of Saving\, Investment and Interest’ Économies et Sociétés Série MP no. 3 1986 and Arestis and Dow (eds.) On Money\, Method and Keynes\, Selected Essays of Victoria Chick 1992. Discussed on 11/04/2024 \nFor the last session on Chick’s Paper we will have Sheila Dow. Discussed on 3 May 2023. \nToporowski\, J. Interest and Capital The Monetary Economics of Michał Kalecki Oxford 2022\, Part 1. Discussed on 30/05/2024 \nToporowski\, J. Interest and Capital The Monetary Economics of Michał Kalecki Oxford 2022. Discussed on 05/07/2024 \n\n\n\nToporowski\, J. ‘Marx’s Critical Notes on the Classical Theory of Interest’ in J. Dellheim and F.O. Wolf (eds.) The Unfinished System of Karl Marx Critically Reading Capital as a Challenge to our Times London: Palgrave Macmillan 2018. Discussed on 01/08/2024 \n\n\n\nMarx\, K.H. Grundrisse Chapter 1\, on Money . Discussed on Discussed on 24/10/2024 \nPaper presentation ““Kalecki-Levy Profit Equation and Money View Angles on Chinese Economy and Markets”\, by Shengbei Guo\, on 21/11/2024. \n\n\n\nMarx\, K.H. Capital Volume II Part 1\, Ch 1 and 2\, will be discussed on 26/12/2024. \n\nMarx\, K.H. Capital Volume II Part 1\, Ch 3 to 6\, discussed on 30/01/2025. \nOn Marx’s monetary theory talk given by Riccardo Bellofiore\, retired Professor of Economics at the University of Bergamo\, Italy\, who has authored and co-authored “Theory of Plus-Value”\, “Marx on Money”\, “Production\, Circulation and Money”\, within others. Discussed on 06/03/2025. \nBellofiore\, R.\, ‘The monetary aspects of the capitalist process in the Marxian system: an investigation from the point of view of the theory of the monetary circuit’ in Marx’s Theory of Money: Modern Appraisals 2005. Discussed on 27/03/2025 \nBellofiore\, R. ‘Money and development in Schumpeter’ 1985. Discussed on 24/04/2025 \n\nTalk with Riccardo Bellofiore about the monetary theories of Marx\, the Theory of the Monetary Circuit\, Schumpeter and a bit of Wicksell. To be discussed on 29/05/2025 \nHayek\, F.A. Monetary Theory and the Trade Cycle 1929 Ch 1 and 2. Discussed on 26/06/2025 \nHayek\, F.A. Monetary Theory and the Trade Cycle 1929 Ch 3\, 4 and 5. Discussed on 24/07/2025 \nHawtrey\, R. G. Good and Bad Trade or Currency and Credit 1919. From Ch 1 to  7\, inclusive. To be discussed on 04/09/2025 \nHawtrey\, R. G. Currency and Credit 1930. Ch 3 and 4. To be discussed on 25/09/2025 \nHawtrey\, R. G. Currency and Credit 1930. Ch 5\, 6\, 7 and 8. To be discussed on 30/10/2025 \nHawtrey\, R. G. Currency and Credit 1930. Ch 9\, 10\, 11. To be discussed on 04/12/2025 \nWicksell\, K. Interest and Prices 1936\, Introduction by Bertil Ohlin\, Preface and Introduction (Ch 1) \nWicksell\, K. Interest and Prices 1936\, Ch 2\, 3\, 4\, 5\, 6.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-and-finance-reading-group/2025-10-23/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-and-finance-reading-group/2025-10-23/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Largent.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251024
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251025
DTSTAMP:20260410T040235
CREATED:20250604T204955Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250703T030303Z
UID:10007480-1761292800-1761325200@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Perspectivas Críticas de las Cadenas Globales de Valor
DESCRIPTION:El Seminario “Perspectivas Críticas de las Cadenas Globales de Valor” es una iniciativa académica consolidada desde 2019. Originalmente impulsado por la División de Estudios Profesionales de la Facultad de Economía de la UNAM y\, posteriormente\, por su División de Estudios de Posgrado\, ha estado bajo la coordinación académica de la Dra. Seyka Sandoval y la Dra. Paty Montiel. A partir de 2024\, se integró el Dr. Iván Cortés\, de la Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana–Iztapalapa\, y recientemente a través del apoyo de la Dra. Julia Juárez García\, hemos abierto el proyecto a través de la plataforma del Young Scholars Initiative (YSI). \nEn sus últimas tres ediciones\, el Seminario ha reunido anualmente a más de 100 participantes\, entre académicos y estudiantes de licenciatura y posgrado provenientes de distintos países de América Latina\, consolidando un amplio reconocimiento institucional. A lo largo de este lustro\, el seminario ha dado lugar a colaboraciones académicas en el marco de grupos de trabajo de redes como ESOCITE y 4S\, así como a diversas publicaciones y direcciones de tesis de posgrado. \n\nINSCRIBIRSE EN:\nhttps://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeYbEzhXJHtTx5SCiiYRdKFwIA3fwsLaBm3NFQfTRwKHyrQcw/viewform?usp=header\n  \nEn esta edición\, extendemos una cordial invitación a la comunidad académica en general —estudiantes de posgrado\, investigadores jóvenes y docentes— a participar en las distintas mesas y talleres que conforman el programa. Para ello\, deberán registrarse a través del formulario indicado en la convocatoria. \nEs importante señalar que se trata de una actividad híbrida\, por lo que quienes deseen asistir presencialmente serán bienvenidos. No obstante\, aclaramos que el evento no cuenta con financiamiento para transporte o alojamiento. \nIdioma oficial del seminario: Español.Todos los horarios del programa están en Tiempo del Centro de México (CDMX). \nPara más información contactar: julia.juarez.garcia@comunidad.unam.mx \nPrograma\nMesa 1: Reconfiguraciones del Estado y nuevas estrategias de desarrollo en América Latina\nEsta sesión introduce la discusión a partir de la configuración actual del Estado latinoamericano en un contexto marcado por crisis sucesivas (económica\, sanitaria y tecnológica)\, abordando cómo distintas corrientes de pensamiento económico representan y analizan la configuración estatal frente a desafíos estructurales: crecimiento\, digitalización\, innovación y desigualdad social. Preguntas ejes para la discusión: ¿qué perspectivas teóricas permiten problematizar las configuraciones del Estado en el capitalismo actual y periférico?\, ¿cuáles son las características del Estado? y ¿cuáles son las estrategias de desarrollo para América Latina? \nPonentes: \n\nCarolina Lauxmann (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento\, Argentina).\nPaty Montiel (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México).\nEmilia Ormaechea (confirmada) (Universidad de Hamburgo).\n\nFecha: viernes 29 de agosto de 2025 (híbrida) \nHorario: 9:00 – 11:30 horas \nLugar: División de Estudios de Posgrado\, FE-UNAM (por definir) \nMesa 2: Políticas de desarrollo comparadas: aprendizajes de Brasil\, Colombia\, Asia y Europa\nEsta sesión busca identificar experiencias recientes de políticas que busquen inspirar respuestas estratégicas en América Latina frente a los desafíos de la desaceleración económica\, las tensiones comerciales\, los retos del cambio climático y la desigualdad persistente. Preguntas eje para la discusión: ¿cuáles son las características de las políticas de desarrollo estratégicas actuales?\, ¿qué características del Estado permiten el impulso de políticas de desarrollo? \nPonentes: \n\nValeria Lopes Ribeiro (confirmada) (Universidade Federal do ABC\, Brasil)\nJulia Juárez (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México\, México)\nMónica Simanca- Sotelo (confirmada) (Universidad de Córdoba\, Colombia).\n\n  \nFecha: viernes 26 de septiembre de 2025 (híbrida) \nHorario: 9:00-11:30 \nLugar: División de Estudios de Posgrado\, FE-UNAM (por definir) \nTaller 1: Medición sobre valor agregado y evaluación de políticas en los encadenamientos productivos. Experiencias para México\, América Latina y China\nInstructoras:  \n\nLesbia Pérez-Santillan y Rosalinda Arriaga Navarrete (por confirmar) (Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Iztapalapa) [24 de septiembre]\nRosa Gómez (conformada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México) [25 de septiembre]\n\nFecha: miércoles 24 y jueves 25 de septiembre (en línea) \nHorario: Por definir \nMesa 3: Desafíos del Estado y las políticas ante la reorganización productiva global y la economía digital en México\nEsta sesión profundiza en los retos particulares que México enfrenta hoy en día en términos de política industrial\, digitalización y soberanía tecnológica\, en el marco de las presiones comerciales derivadas del T-MEC y las estrategias nacionales frente al dominio creciente de plataformas digitales. Preguntas eje para la discusión: ¿cuáles son las determinaciones geopolíticas y económicas de México? y ¿cuáles son las características de las políticas de desarrollo ante esas determinaciones? \nPonentes: \n\nSeyka Sandoval (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)\nMonika Meireles (confirmada) (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)\n\nFecha: viernes 24 de octubre de 2025 (híbrida) \nHorario: 9:00 – 11:30 horas \nLugar: División de Estudios de Posgrado\, FE-UNAM (por definir)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/perspectivas-criticas-de-las-cadenas-globales-de-valor/2025-10-24/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/perspectivas-criticas-de-las-cadenas-globales-de-valor/2025-10-24/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/CVG-SEM.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20251027T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20251027T170000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040235
CREATED:20250625T163659Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250626T222651Z
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SUMMARY:YSI @ AI in Finance and Central Banking – Post-conference of Banque de France AI Methods 2025
DESCRIPTION:Artificial Intelligence has recently made significant inroads into the financial sector and within financial and monetary authorities. Reports from the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) and the Financial Stability Board have identified various ways in which AI introduces new challenges\, including risks of financial instability and biases. At the same time\, AI holds the potential to enhance the daily operations of central banks and financial supervisors by improving forecasting\, monitoring\, and risk assessment. \n  \nFor investigating these themes\, we invite the submission of papers for a Workshop on Artificial Intelligence in Finance and Central Banking\, with the following research questions: \n\nHow is artificial intelligence transforming financial markets?\nAnd how can monetary and financial authorities leverage AI tools to tackle emerging financial stability challenges?\n\nThe Workshop on Artificial Intelligence in Finance and Central Banking will be held in person at Sciences Po\, Paris\, on Wednesday\, 29 October 2025.  \nThe workshop is a post-conference workshop for young scholars\, following the Banque de France AI Methods Conference 2025\, which will take place on the 27-28 October 2025.  Selected participants will be able to attend the Banque de France conference\, while presenting at the Young Scholars post-conference. \nThis workshop is part of a CIVICA initiative jointly executed by EUI\, Sciences Po\, SSE and IE\, counting also on the support of the Young Scholars Initiative (YSI). The workshop will welcome submissions from early career researchers. \n Possible topics of Paper Submission: \n\n Use-Cases of AI in Central Banking and financial supervision.\nThe use of AI and GenAI in banking\, asset management and payments.\nRegulatory challenges and ethical considerations of AI in central banking and finance.\nLLM-based analysis of financial authorities and markets data.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-ai-in-finance-and-central-banking-post-conference-of-banque-de-france-ai-methods-2025/
LOCATION:Sciences Po\, Rue Saint-Guillaume\, Paris\, Paris\, 75007\, France
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251028T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251028T153000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040235
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
UID:10008155-1761660000-1761665400@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Money View Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:The Money View Reading Group reads and discusses writings on money\, banking\, and finance. We are a self-directed group. Anyone interested in money and banking can read the readings\, join us for discussions\, or suggest future readings.We meet for 90 minutes via Zoom on Tuesdays at 2 pm Eastern Time US (New York).\n\nCurrent Book\n  \n\n\nBetween Payments and Credit: An Introduction to the IOU Economy by George Pantelopoulos (2025)\n  \n\nhttps://www.amazon.com/Between-Payments-Credit-Introduction-Economy-ebook/dp/B0FF3RR3T4/ \nFrom the description: \nIn unpacking credit relationships and payments over the past 1000 years in addition to how technological innovations are shifting the credit relationships/payments landscape – from barter\, commodity money\, single layered to dual-layered financial money systems and from CBDC to stablecoins – this book systematically explores the various techniques that have been introduced in an attempt to improve the organisation\, efficiency and stability of the IOU economy as a way to mitigate or prevent the universal challenge of the IOU economy from binding. \nPantelopolous says the “universal challenge” of an IOU economy is the scenario in which liquidity dries up. \n\n2026-03-10 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5) (Recording)\n\n\nUpcoming Sessions\n  \n\n\n2026-03-24 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 6–10 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 2\n\n\n\n\nThe Central Bank as the LOLR\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 2\n\n\n\n\n2026-04-07 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 11–13 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCentral Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC)\n\n\n\n\nThe Crypto-Verse: Terminologies and Technologies\n\n\n\n\nUnbacked Crypto-Assets and Stablecoins\n\n\n\n\nFuture Suggested Readings\n  \n\n\nAgainst Money by J.W. Mason and Arjun Jayadev (2026)\nOur Money: Monetary Policy as if Democracy Matters by Leah Downey (2025)\nThe History of Money: A Story of Humanity by David McWilliams (2025)\nAfter the Accord: A History of Federal Reserve Open Market Operations\, the US Government Securities Market\, and Treasury Debt Management from 1951 to 1979 by Kenneth D. Garbade (2021)\nHow a Ledger Became a Central Bank: A Monetary History of the Bank of Amsterdam by Quinn and Roberds (2023)\nA Study of Money Flows in the United States by Morris Copeland (1952)\nA History of the Greenbacks by Wesley Clair Mitchell (1903)\nCalming the Storms: The Carry Trade\, the Banking School and British Financial Crises Since 1825 by Charles Read (2023)\nBenjamin Strong: Central Banker by Lester V. Chandler (1958)\nAn Engine\, Not a Camera: How Financial Models Shape Markets by Donald MacKenzie (2007)\nCurrency and Credit (4e) by Ralph Hawtrey (1950)\nThe Golden Age of the Quantity Theory by David Laidler (1991)\nCapitalizing on Crisis: The Political Origins of the Rise of Finance by Greta Krippner (2011)\nThe Federal Reserve System by Paul Warburg (1930)\nCentral Bank Capitalism: Monetary Policy in Times of Crisis by Joscha Wullweber (2024)\nIntroduction to Central Banking by Ulrich Bindseil and Alessio Fota (2021)\nThe Chairman: John J. McCloy & The Making of the American Establishment by Kai Bird (1992)\nManias\, Panics\, and Crashes (8e) by Robert McCauley (2023)\nThe Bailout State: Why Governments Rescue Banks\, Not People by Martijn Konings (2025)\n\n\nPast Readings with Discussion Recordings\n  \n\n\nMinsky by Daniel H. Neilson (2019)\n2021-03-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-03-31 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-04-07 — Discussion with Daniel Neilson\nThe Art of Central Banking (Chapter IV) by Ralph Hawtrey (1933)\n2021-04-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-05-05 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-05-26 — Discussion with David Glasner\nMaking Money: Coin\, Currency\, and the Coming of Capitalism by Christine Desan (2014)\n2021-06-02 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-06-16 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-06-30 — Discussion Session 3\n2021-07-14 — Discussion with Christine Desan\nMoney in a Theory of Finance by John G. Gurley\, Edward S. Shaw (1960)\n2021-07-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-08-04 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-08-18 — Discussion Session 3\nThe World in Depression\, 1929-1939 by Charles P. Kindleberger (1973)\n2021-09-01 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-09-15 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-09-29 — Discussion Session 3\nThe Rise of Carry by Jamie Lee et al (2019)\n2021-10-13 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-10-27 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Interest and the Public Interest by Perry Mehrling (1998)\n2021-11-10 — Discussion Session 1 | Allyn Young\n2021-11-24 — Discussion Session 2 | Alvin Hanson\n2021-12-08 — Discussion Session 3 | Edward Shaw\nControlling Credit by Eric Monnet (2018)\n2022-01-05 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-01-19 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Menace of Fiscal QE by George Selgin (2020)\n2022-02-02 — Discussion Session\nThe New Lombard Street by Perry Mehrling (2011)\n2022-02-23 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-03-09 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-03-23 — Discussion Session 3\nFighting Financial Crises: Learning from the Past by Gary Gorton\, Ellis Tallman (2021)\n2022-04-20 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-05-11 — Discussion Session 2\nMoney and empire: The international gold standard\, 1890-1914 by Marcello De Cecco (1974)\n2022-05-25 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-06-15 — Discussion Session 2\nCentral Bank Cooperation 1924-31 by Stephen Clarke (1967)\n2022-06-22 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-07-06 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Problem: Rethinking Financial Regulation by Morgan Ricks (2016)\n2022-07-27 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-08-10 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-08-17 — Discussion with Morgan Ricks\nThe Evolution of Central Banking: Theory and History by Stefano Ugolini (2017)\n2022-08-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-09-07 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-09-21 — Discussion Session 3\n2022-10-05 — Discussion with Stefano Ugolini\nA Financial History of Western Europe by Charles P. Kindleberger (1984\, 1993)\n2022-10-19 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Money\n2022-11-02 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: Banking\n2022-11-16 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Finance\n2023-01-11 — Discussion Session 4 | Part 4: The Interwar Period\n2023-01-18 — Discussion Session 5 | Part 5: After World War II\nMoney and Empire: Charles P. Kindleberger and the Dollar System by Perry Mehrling (2022)\n2022-11-30 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Intellectual Formation\, 1910–1948\n2022-12-14 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: International Economist\, 1948–1976\n2022-12-21 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Historical Economist\, 1976–2003\n2022-12-21 — Discussion #1 with Perry Mehrling\n2023-01-04 — Discussion #2 with Perry Mehrling\nBonds without Borders: A History of the Eurobond Market by Chris O’Malley (2015)\n2023-02-15 — Discussion Session 1\n2023-03-01 — Discussion Session 2\nMonetary Policy Operations and the Financial System by Ulrich Bindseil (2014)\n2023-03-15 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-8)\n2023-03-29 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 9-12)\n2023-04-12 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 13-18)\nCapital Wars: The Rise of Global Liquidity by Michael J. Howell (2020)\n2023-04-26 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-05-10 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-14)\nA Market Theory of Money by John Hicks (1989)\n2023-05-24 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-06-07 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-15)\nThe Currency of Politics: The Political Theory of Money from Aristotle to Keynes by Stefan Eich (2022)\n2023-06-28 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2023-07-19 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\n2023-08-02 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 5 & 6)\n2023-08-14 — Discussion with Stefan Eich\nFischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance by Perry Mehrling (2005)\n2023-08-22 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2023-09-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–8)\n2023-09-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 9–11)\n2023-09-26 — Discussion with Perry Mehrling\nThe Evolution of Central Banks by Charles Goodhart (1988)\n2023-10-03 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–6)\n2023-10-17 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–8\, Appendix)\nThe Repo Market: Shorts\, Shortages\, and Squeezes by Scott Skyrm (2023)\n2023-11-07 — Discussion Session 1 (pages 1–92)\n2023-11-21 — Discussion Session 2 (pages 93–186)\n2023-12-05 — Discussion Session 3 (pages 187–310) Part 1 — Part 2\n2023-12-12 — Discussion with Scott Skyrm From 39:20\nThe Volatility Machine: Emerging Economies and the Threat of Financial Collapse by Michael Pettis (2001)\n2023-12-19 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2024-01-02 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–10)\n2024-01-09 — Discussion with Michael Pettis\nInternational Capital Movements by Charles P. Kindleberger (1987)\n2024-01-16 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2024-01-30 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\nA Political Theory of Money by Anush Kapadia (2024)\n2024-02-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–4)\n2024-03-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 5–7)\n2024-03-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–12)\n2024-03-26 — Discussion with Anush Kapadia\nThe Rise of Central Banks: State Power in Financial Capitalism by Leon Wansleben (2023)\n2024-04-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-04-23 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2024-05-07 — Discussion with Leon Wansleben\nThe Money Illusion: Market Monetarism\, the Great Recession\, and the Future of Monetary Policy by Scott Sumner (2021)\n2024-05-14 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 & 2)\n2024-05-28 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 & 4)\n2024-06-18 — Discussion Session 3 (Parts 5 & 6)\n2024-06-25 — Discussion with Scott Sumner\nPrivate Money and Public Currencies: The Sixteenth Century Challenge: The Sixteenth Century Challenge by Boyer-Xambeu\, Deleplace\, and Gillard (1994)\n2024-07-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-07-16 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4 & 5)\n2024-07-30 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6\, 7 & Conclusion)\nThe Arena of International Finance by Charles A. Coombs (1976)\n2024-08-13 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1ー6)\n2024-08-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–12)\nThe Bill on London: or The Finance of Trade by Bills of Exchange by Gillett Brothers (1952/1976)\n2024-09-17 — Discussion Session\nBirth of a Market: The U.S. Treasury Securities Market from the Great War to the Great Depression by Kenneth D. Garbade (2012)\n2024-10-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–10)\n2024-10-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 11–15)\n2024-10-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 16–24)\nA Monetary and Fiscal History of the United States\, 1961–2021 by Alan S. Blinder (2022)\n2024-11-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–7)\n2024-11-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8–13)\n2024-12-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 14–19)\nBuilding a Ruin: The Cold War Politics of Soviet Economic Reform by Yakov Feygin (2024)\n2025-01-07 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2025-01-21 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2025-02-04 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 7 & Afterword)\nA Crash Course on Crises: Macroeconomic Concepts for Run-Ups\, Collapses\, and Recoveries by Markus K. Brunnermeier and Ricardo Reis (2023)\n2025-02-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 and 2)\n2025-03-11 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 and 4)\nThe Empire of Value: A New Foundation for Economics by Andre Orlean (2014)\n2025-03-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Introduction and Part 1) Part 1 — Part 2\n2025-04-08 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 2 and 3)\n2025-04-22 — Discussion Session 3 (Part 4 and Conclusion)\nThe Wheels of Commerce by Fernand Braudel (1979/1982)\n2025-05-06 — Discussion Session 1 (Chapter 1)\n2025-05-13 — Discussion Session 2 (Chapter 2)\n2025-05-20 — Discussion Session 3 (Chapter 3)\n2025-05-27 — Discussion Session 4 (Chapter 4)\n2025-06-03 — Discussion Session 5 (Chapter 5)\nBeyond Banks: Technology\, Regulation\, and the Future of Money by Dan Awrey (2024)\n2025-06-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Intro & Ch 1–3)\n2025-07-01 — Discussion Session 5 (Ch 4–7 & Conclusion)\n2025-07-08 — Discussion with Dan Awrey\nOur Dollar\, Your Problem: An Insider’s View of Seven Turbulent Decades of Global Finance by Kenneth Rogoff (2025)\n2025-08-19— Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1-3)\n2025-08-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 4-6)\nCentral Banking Before 1800: A Rehabilitation by Ulrich Bindseil (2019)\n2025-09-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-09-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3–5)\n2025-09-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6&7)\n2025-10-13 — Discussion with Ulrich Bindseil\nThe Long Twentieth Century: Money\, Power and the Origins of Our Times by Giovanni Arrighi (2010)\n2025-10-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-11-03 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3)\n2025-11-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 4)\nFragile by Design: The Political Origins of Banking Crises and Scarce Credit by Charles W. Calomiris and Stephen Haber (2014)\n2025-11-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2025-12-01 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6-9)\n2025-12-15 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 10–15)\n2026-01-05 — Discussion with Charles Calomiris\nTreatise on Money by Joseph Schumpeter (1970/2014)\n2026-01-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2026-01-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–7)\n2026-02-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–10)\n2026-02-24 — Discussion Session 4 (Ch 11–12)\n\n\nOff-Week Sessions\n  \n\n2021-05-19 BIS Working Paper: Breaking free of the triple coincidence in international finance (2015)\n2021-07-07 Global Domain of the Dollar: 8 Questions by Robert McCauley Author Discussion\n2021-07-28 BIS and Bank of England reports on Central Bank Digital Currencies\n2022-09-28 The Crypto Banking System by Sébastien Derivaux (2022) Author Discussion\n2023-04-05 Discussion of Silicon Valley Bank\n2023-04-19 Institutional Cash Pools by Zoltan Pozsar (2011)\n2023-05-03 BIS Bulletin #73: Stablecoins vs. Tokenized Deposits (May 3\, 2023)\n2023-07-05 The Credit–Money Hierarchy: a Republican \, Egalitarian Appraisal by Aaron James (2023)\n2023-07-26 Public Purpose Finance: The Government’s Role as Lender by Nadav Orian Peer (2020) Author Discussion 2023-10-24 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 1\n2023-10-31 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 2\n2023-11-14 ICMA Repo FAQ by Richard Comotto (2013/2019)\n2023-11-28 Basis Trades and Treasury Market Illiquidity by Daniel Barth & Jay Kahn (2020)\n2024-01-23 Capital flows and the current account by Borio and Disyatat (2015)\n2024-02-13 The dual currency system of Renaissance Europe by Luca Fantacci (2008)\n2024-02-27 BIS: Buy now\, pay later: a cross-country analysis by Cornelli et al. (2023)\n2024-03-12 The non-use of money in the Middle Ages by Bell\, Brooks\, and Moore (2017)\n2024-04-09 The Central Role of Credit Crunches in Recent Financial History by Albert M. Wojnilower (1980)\n2024-04-16 Measuring Equilibrium in the Balance of Payments by Charles P. Kindleberger (1969)\n2024-04-30 The Rise and Risks of Private Credit — GFSR (April\, 2024)\n2024-06-04 BIS Working Paper No 1100: Getting up from the floor by Claudio Borio (May\, 2023)\n2024-06-11 The Offshore Dollar and US Policy by Robert McCauley (May\, 2024)\n2024-07-09 The (impossible) repo trinity: the political economy of repo markets by Daniela Gabor (2016)\n2024-08-07 A Safe Haven for Hidden Risks (May 30\, 2024) and Rate Transformation (November 4\, 2023) by Elham Saeidinezhad\n2024-08-20 The Collateral Supply Effect on Central Bank Policy by Carolyn Sissoko (2020)\n2024-09-10 Monetary Policy Implications of Market Maker of Last Resort Operations by Anil K Kashyap (August 23\, 2024)\n2024-11-05 BIS Bulletin No 90: The market turbulence and carry trade unwind of August 2024 (August 27\, 2024)\n2024-11-19 Yen Carry Trade and the Subprime Crisis by Masazumi Hattori and Hyun Song Shin (2009)\n2024-12-03 After the Allocation: What Role for the Special Drawing Rights System? by Pforr\, Pape\, and Murau (2022)\n2025-01-14 Where Profits Come From by the Levy Forecasting Center by Levy\, Farnham\, & Rajan (2008/1997)\n2025-01-28 The Broad Consequences of Narrow Banking by Matheus R. Grasseli and Alexander Lipton (2019)\n2025-02-11 Failing Banks by Sergio Correia\, Stephen Luck\, and Emil Verner (2024)\n2025-02-18 Odd Lots — The Hidden History of Eurodollars by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (January 2025)\n2025-03-04 Of Last Resort: Evaluating the Treasury-Equity Model of Federal Reserve Emergency Lending by Steven Kelly (2024)\n2025-03-18 Commercial Banking and Capital Formation I–IV by Harold Moulton (1918)\n2025-04-01 Climate Alignment For Banks: The Stories That Numbers Tell by Nadav Orian Peer (2025) Author Discussion\n2025-04-15 Shadow Banking: Why Modern Money Markets are Less Stable Than 19th c. Money Markets But Shouldn’t Be Stabilized by a ‘Dealer of Last Resort’ by Carolyn Sissoko (2014)\n2025-04-29 Treasury Market and the Basis Trade (Adrian et al. 2025; Kashyap et al. 2025)\n2025-06-10 Structural Changes in the Global Financial System lecture by Hyun Song Shin (May 19\, 2025)\n2025-06-24 International Regimes\, Transactions\, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order by John Gerard Ruggie (1982)\n2025-07-15 BIS Annual Report Chapter: Financial conditions in a changing global financial system (2025)\n2025-07-22 Banks Are Intermediaries of Loanable Funds by George Selgin (2024)\n2025-07-29 Theorising non-bank financial intermediation by Jo Michell (2024)\n2025-08-05 Banks are different: why bank-based versus market-based lending is a false dichotomy by Carolyn Sissoko (2024)\n2025-09-08 Did France Cause the Great Depression? by Douglas A. Irwin (2010)\n2025-09-22 Rethinking Monetary Sovereignty: The Global Credit Money System and the State by Murau and van’t Klooster (2023)\n2025-10-06 Rethinking currency internationalisation: offshore money creation and the EU’s monetary governance by Murau and van’t Klooster (2025)\n2025-10-27 BIS Bulletin No 114: “Financial channel implications of a weaker dollar for emerging market economies” by Juselius\, Wooldridge and Xia (October 13\, 2025)\n2025-11-24 Bubble or Nothing: Data Center Project Finance by Advait Arun (November 12\, 2025)\n2025-12-08 Discussion of Debate over Whether Money Multiplier Requires Cash Lending\n2026-01-20 Gresham’s Law by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-03 The Law of One Price by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-17 Bank Runs With and Without Bank Failures by Correia\, Luck\, and Verner (2026)\n2026-03-03 Monetary Experience and the Theory of Money by John Hicks (1977)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-10-28/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-10-28/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Africa/Maseru:20251029T080000
DTEND;TZID=Africa/Maseru:20251029T170000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040235
CREATED:20250821T181453Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250826T060938Z
UID:10007471-1761724800-1761757200@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:18th Annual Meeting of the African Economic History Network – Young Scholars Initiative Pre- conference
DESCRIPTION:Submission deadline: 31 August 2025 \n  \nThe Young Scholars Initiative\, in partnership with the African Economic History Network (AEHN)\, invites submissions for its 2025 annual meeting. This year’s pre-conference will focus socio-economic historical factors that have shaped Africa’s developmental trajectory. We invite will papers that explore historical landmarks that have influenced change in Africa’s economic development. Hence preference will be given to papers that speak to the main conference’s theme\, “Disruptions and Resilience in African Economic Transformations“. For more information on this please visit the following website: https://www.aehnetwork.org/conference/. \n  \nThis year’s pre-conference strongly anchors on the mentorship of young scholars by seniors scholars availed by the AEHN. Therefore\, submissions are welcome from those with written draft papers that are yet to be fully developed. \n  \nPapers within these broad themes (and beyond) are welcome: \n• Pandemics and Epidemics in Africa \n• Labor and Migration \n• Natural resource and development \n• Women\, Sexuality and Gender \n• Agricultural production and sustainability \n• Environmental policies and climate change \n• Wars\, Politics and Protest \n• Trade and Economic Cooperation \n• Land disputes and conflict resolution \n  \nSubmission Guidelines \n1. Young Scholars are invited to send their paper abstracts of maximum 300 words. Abstract should be concise\, outlining the main argument\, methodology\, and key findings. \n2. Accepted participants will be replied before the end September. \n3. Draft papers will be requested upon selection. \n  \n 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/18th-annual-meeting-of-the-african-economic-history-network-young-scholars-initiative-pre-conference/
LOCATION:National University of Lesotho\, P.O. Roma 180. Roma\, Lesotho\, Roma\, Roma\, 100\, Lesotho
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Africa/Harare:20251029T080000
DTEND;TZID=Africa/Harare:20251030T170000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040235
CREATED:20250814T133813Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250814T134013Z
UID:10007483-1761724800-1761843600@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Early Career Workshop on Post-colonial African Transportation and Mobility Research
DESCRIPTION:Post-colonial African transport and mobility is characterised by significant road infrastructure  development and technological innovation\, on one hand\, and historical chronic dysfunction on  the other. Africa has experienced complex challenges in urban planning\, infrastructure\, and  service provision which are apparent in public passenger transportation and mobility  experiences within and between cities. Across southern Africa\, urban public transportation is  generally characterised by unreliability\, uncertain waiting and traveling times\, overcrowded  vehicles and pick-up points\, unique transport operators\, and traffic congestion. The region has  also seen significant growth in informal public transportation from the boda-bodas and matatus  of West and East Africa and the mushika-shika and pirate taxis of Southern Africa which now  co-exist with increasing smart mobility and ride sharing technologies.   \nThe relationship between the urban transport sector\, commuters\, the broader economy\, law  enforcement\, and policymakers has created complex networks which are yet to be fully  studied. Therefore\, the recent growth in the study of African urban transportation prompts the  need to foster scholarly connections in the growing field. To fill this gap\, we invite researchers  in the Humanities and Social Sciences (history\, geography\, urban and development studies\,  policy\, post-colonial\, mobility studies and literary-cultural studies) among other fields to a  workshop on Transport and Mobility in Southern Africa. The workshop will provide a dedicated  platform for early career researchers to present\, discuss and refine their work as well as  opportunities for networking\, collaborative and multidisciplinary interaction in pursuit of  sustainable and context-relevant innovative research and solutions to postcolonial  transportation in Southern Africa.  \n  \nIdeally\, the workshop targets masters students\, doctoral students and post-doctoral  researchers focusing on different aspects of post-colonial urban transportation and mobility in  Southern Africa. The target group will be given a platform for interaction with seasoned  scholars for mentorship opportunities and to strengthen professional connections.   \nWe invite abstracts focusing on\, but not limited to the following research areas:  \n\nThe political economy of public transportation \n The relationships between state\, private sector (including formal and informal  transportation)\, and commuters \n Social dynamics in commuting and urban mobility  \n Gender and urban mobility  \n Commuter resilience and resilience and resistance \n STS Approaches to understanding postcolonial urban mobility \n Expertise\, ingenuity and knowledge production surrounding postcolonial urban mobility \n Historiographical and theoretical approaches to understanding mobility \n Dilemmas of sustainability issues vs informal transportation in Africa \n Contemporary experiences of public transportation and the practices of reading\,  writing\, narration and literary imagination in Africa \n\nImportant information  \nThe workshop has limited funding for travel and accommodation. In your application\, kindly highlight if you need to be considered for travel and accommodation assistance. However\, priority will be given to graduate students from institutions that do not provide funding. \nSubmit your abstract to: ysiworkshop@ufs.ac.za  \nAbstract length – 200 words  \nAbstract submission deadline – 30 August 2025  \nAbstract outcome – 10 September 2025 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/early-career-workshop-on-post-colonial-african-transportation-and-mobility-research-in-africa/
LOCATION:University of the Free State\, 201 Nelson Mandela Drive\, Park West\, Bloemfontein\, Free State\, 9301\, South Africa
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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GEO:-29.08521399999999;26.1595761
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251030
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251031
DTSTAMP:20260410T040235
CREATED:20250712T153552Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250807T110619Z
UID:10007522-1761782400-1761868799@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Second YSI – Cedeplar Workshop in History of Economic Thought
DESCRIPTION:A Iniciativa Jovens Acadêmicos e o Cedeplar (Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais) têm o prazer de anunciar a realização do II Workshop YSI-Cedeplar em História do Pensamento Econômico \, a ser realizado em 30 de outubro de 2025 \, na Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais\, em Belo Horizonte\, Brasil. O evento\, com duração de um dia\, terá como tema “Ideias\, Teoria e Prática em Economia do Desenvolvimento” \, explorado a partir da perspectiva da História das Ideias Econômicas\, com ênfase na dinâmica centro-periferia. \nOs mentores confirmados para esta edição incluem Michele Alacevich (Universidade de Bolonha) e Mauricio Coutinho (UNICAMP) \, que discutiram Economia do Desenvolvimento por meio das obras de Albert Hirschman e Celso Furtado \, respectivamente. A sessão da manhã será dedicada à discussão coletiva dos trabalhos submetidos pelos participantes\, com feedback e comentários tanto dos mentores quanto dos pares. À tarde\, os alunos apresentarão brevemente seus temas de pesquisa e uma dificuldade metodológica ou conceitual específica que você enfrentará. \nAceitamos inscrições de alunos de graduação\, mestrado e doutorado de todo o Brasil\, que trabalham com temas relacionados à Economia do Desenvolvimento e à História do Pensamento Econômico. As discussões serão realizadas em português e inglês\, com tradução disponível conforme necessário para garantir ampla acessibilidade. \nOs candidatos são convidados a enviar uma breve descrição (de até 500 palavras) do seu tema de pesquisa\, juntamente com uma pergunta ou dificuldade que gostariam de discutir. Essas submissões orientarão os debates da manhã. Para se inscrever\, clique no botão “Inscrever-se” acima e formulário [https://forms.gle/NCWHmhG6g69WLsnRA]. \nOs critérios de seleção priorizarão: \n\nEnvolvimento ativo na pesquisa de História do Pensamento Econômico\nAlunos em estágios iniciais de pesquisa\nEquilíbrio de gênero\n\nUm número limitado de bolsas de viagem estará disponível para estudantes de fora de Belo Horizonte. O  prazo de inscrição é 2 de setembro e os resultados serão divulgados até 5 de setembro. Caso houver vagas remanescentes\, o prazo será estendido para 22 de setembro e os demais resultados serão divulgados até 25 de setembro.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/second-ysi-cedeplar-workshop-in-history-of-economic-thought/
LOCATION:Cedeplar – Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais.\, Av. Presidente Antônio Carlos\, 6627. Faculdade de Ciências Econômicas da Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais.\, Belo Horizonte\, Minas Gerais\, 31270-901\, Brazil
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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GEO:-19.8680584;-43.9666715
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Phnom_Penh:20251030T080000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Phnom_Penh:20251031T170000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040235
CREATED:20250418T161750Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250714T064622Z
UID:10007174-1761811200-1761930000@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:3rd Southeast Asia Economic Research and Development Conference
DESCRIPTION:Southeast Asia stands at the crossroads of dynamic economic progress and significant socio-economic challenges. As one of the most vibrant and diverse regions globally\, it has achieved remarkable strides in economic growth\, regional integration\, and poverty reduction. However\, this growth has been accompanied by rising inequality\, environmental degradation\, technological disruptions\, and increasing vulnerabilities to global uncertainties and climate change. This raises critical questions: How can Southeast Asia balance its rapid economic growth with inequality\, ecological change\, and digital transformation? Furthermore\, how does research on Southeast Asia help us to understand the socio-economic rules that govern the world? \nAddressing these polycrises requires innovative\, multidimensional solutions that transcend traditional economic paradigms. The 3rd Southeast Asia Economic Research and Development Conference serves as a platform for young scholars\, researchers\, policymakers\, and practitioners to convene\, exchange perspectives\, and propose actionable solutions tailored to the region’s unique context.  \nAdopting an interdisciplinary and pluralist approach\, the conference aims to foster dialogue that integrates economic theory\, empirical analysis\, and practical policy interventions. By leveraging insights from various disciplines and methodologies\, participants will contribute to a deeper understanding of the complex interactions shaping Southeast Asia’s socio-economic landscape. \nThe conference seeks to inspire bold and collaborative research that rethinks growth\, sustainability\, and equity within the region. The papers presented will not only enrich academic discourse but also provide a foundation for evidence-based policymaking to support inclusive and sustainable development in Southeast Asia. We welcome submissions that explore\, but are not limited to\, the following themes: \n\nEconomic growth\, inequality\, and inclusion\nDevelopment and sustenance of the social protection and social security system\nHealth and demographic transition\nUrban and regional economics \nSustainability\, ecology\, natural resource management and climate resilience\nFood security and agrarian transformation\nDigital transformation\, automation\,  and innovation\nRegional integration and trade\nGovernance\, institutions\, and economic policy\nLabour economics and gender\nHistory of economic thought\, economic history and path-dependency\nInterdisciplinary and pluralist approaches in economic analysis\n\nAccepted papers may be considered for publication in a journal special issue (Scopas) or as part of an edited book in an internationally established publication house. \nConference Format \nThe conference will feature plenary sessions followed by parallel sessions. All papers presented in the parallel sessions will undergo a refereeing process before being accepted for presentation. In addition\, case studies focusing on any of the conference’s sub-themes will be considered for inclusion in panel discussions\, facilitating interactive engagement. Esteemed scholars will be invited to participate in the panel discussions\, offering insightful perspectives on economic thought\, structural change\, and macroeconomics. \nParticipation\, Travel\, and Accommodation Expenses \nParticipation in the conference is free for authors of selected papers. We are pleased to offer a limited number of travel and accommodation support grants to PhD students and early career scholars within 5 years of their PhD. To be considered for such grants\, please indicate your interest and eligibility in your application. \nImportant Dates \n\nDeadline for abstract submission: July 15\, 2025.\nNotifications of acceptance will be sent out in the fourth week of July.\nDeadline for submission of full papers: September 30\, 2025.\nConference dates: October 30-31\, 2025.\n\nContact \nAll communication regarding the conference should be directed to saerdconf@gmail.com or check the updated information online at https://saerdconf.github.io/.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/3rd-southeast-asia-economic-research-and-development-conference/
LOCATION:Pannasastra University of Cambodia Siem Reap Campus\, Street 27\, Krong Siem Reap\, Siem Reap\, Cambodia
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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GEO:13.3520368;103.8615289
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Pannasastra University of Cambodia Siem Reap Campus Street 27 Krong Siem Reap Siem Reap Cambodia;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=Street 27:geo:103.8615289,13.3520368
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20251030T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20251030T193000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040235
CREATED:20240117T145948Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260306T170413Z
UID:10007926-1761847200-1761852600@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Money and Finance Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:This reading group has been created to amplify and deep our knowledge on money and finance from a wide perspective that can embrace the complexity of money’s nature\, thus\, the complexity of the financial system and its dynamics. Moreover\, as it was cleverly unveiled by Émile Zola in his book L’Argent\, the first book discussed in this reading group\, money and finance are rooted in every sphere of human beings (social\, political\, religious\, personal\, etc.)\, therefore\, their inquiring and comprehension cannot neglect this this reality. \nThe reading group started with an initial selection of books proposed by Professor Jan Toporowski\, however\, the path we will walk together will be opened and determined by the interests and tastes of the group members. \nList of Readings: \nZola Émile\, L’Argent\, 1891      Discussed \nSchumpeter\, J.A.S. History of Economic Analysis\, Chapter 8 on ‘Money\, Credit and Cycles’.  This chapter will be divided in two sessions. The first session will be on 25/01/24 and include sections 1 – 5 (From page 1040 to page 1074)\, the second will be on 29/02/2024 and include sections 6 – 9 (From page 1074 to page 1101). Discussed \nDiscussion of Schumpeter’s Chapter with the contribution of Professor Jan Toporowski. Discussed \nChick\, V. ‘The Evolution of the Banking System and the Theory of Saving\, Investment and Interest’ Économies et Sociétés Série MP no. 3 1986 and Arestis and Dow (eds.) On Money\, Method and Keynes\, Selected Essays of Victoria Chick 1992. Discussed on 11/04/2024 \nFor the last session on Chick’s Paper we will have Sheila Dow. Discussed on 3 May 2023. \nToporowski\, J. Interest and Capital The Monetary Economics of Michał Kalecki Oxford 2022\, Part 1. Discussed on 30/05/2024 \nToporowski\, J. Interest and Capital The Monetary Economics of Michał Kalecki Oxford 2022. Discussed on 05/07/2024 \n\n\n\nToporowski\, J. ‘Marx’s Critical Notes on the Classical Theory of Interest’ in J. Dellheim and F.O. Wolf (eds.) The Unfinished System of Karl Marx Critically Reading Capital as a Challenge to our Times London: Palgrave Macmillan 2018. Discussed on 01/08/2024 \n\n\n\nMarx\, K.H. Grundrisse Chapter 1\, on Money . Discussed on Discussed on 24/10/2024 \nPaper presentation ““Kalecki-Levy Profit Equation and Money View Angles on Chinese Economy and Markets”\, by Shengbei Guo\, on 21/11/2024. \n\n\n\nMarx\, K.H. Capital Volume II Part 1\, Ch 1 and 2\, will be discussed on 26/12/2024. \n\nMarx\, K.H. Capital Volume II Part 1\, Ch 3 to 6\, discussed on 30/01/2025. \nOn Marx’s monetary theory talk given by Riccardo Bellofiore\, retired Professor of Economics at the University of Bergamo\, Italy\, who has authored and co-authored “Theory of Plus-Value”\, “Marx on Money”\, “Production\, Circulation and Money”\, within others. Discussed on 06/03/2025. \nBellofiore\, R.\, ‘The monetary aspects of the capitalist process in the Marxian system: an investigation from the point of view of the theory of the monetary circuit’ in Marx’s Theory of Money: Modern Appraisals 2005. Discussed on 27/03/2025 \nBellofiore\, R. ‘Money and development in Schumpeter’ 1985. Discussed on 24/04/2025 \n\nTalk with Riccardo Bellofiore about the monetary theories of Marx\, the Theory of the Monetary Circuit\, Schumpeter and a bit of Wicksell. To be discussed on 29/05/2025 \nHayek\, F.A. Monetary Theory and the Trade Cycle 1929 Ch 1 and 2. Discussed on 26/06/2025 \nHayek\, F.A. Monetary Theory and the Trade Cycle 1929 Ch 3\, 4 and 5. Discussed on 24/07/2025 \nHawtrey\, R. G. Good and Bad Trade or Currency and Credit 1919. From Ch 1 to  7\, inclusive. To be discussed on 04/09/2025 \nHawtrey\, R. G. Currency and Credit 1930. Ch 3 and 4. To be discussed on 25/09/2025 \nHawtrey\, R. G. Currency and Credit 1930. Ch 5\, 6\, 7 and 8. To be discussed on 30/10/2025 \nHawtrey\, R. G. Currency and Credit 1930. Ch 9\, 10\, 11. To be discussed on 04/12/2025 \nWicksell\, K. Interest and Prices 1936\, Introduction by Bertil Ohlin\, Preface and Introduction (Ch 1) \nWicksell\, K. Interest and Prices 1936\, Ch 2\, 3\, 4\, 5\, 6.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-and-finance-reading-group/2025-10-30/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-and-finance-reading-group/2025-10-30/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Largent.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251104T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251104T153000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040235
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
UID:10008156-1762264800-1762270200@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Money View Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:The Money View Reading Group reads and discusses writings on money\, banking\, and finance. We are a self-directed group. Anyone interested in money and banking can read the readings\, join us for discussions\, or suggest future readings.We meet for 90 minutes via Zoom on Tuesdays at 2 pm Eastern Time US (New York).\n\nCurrent Book\n  \n\n\nBetween Payments and Credit: An Introduction to the IOU Economy by George Pantelopoulos (2025)\n  \n\nhttps://www.amazon.com/Between-Payments-Credit-Introduction-Economy-ebook/dp/B0FF3RR3T4/ \nFrom the description: \nIn unpacking credit relationships and payments over the past 1000 years in addition to how technological innovations are shifting the credit relationships/payments landscape – from barter\, commodity money\, single layered to dual-layered financial money systems and from CBDC to stablecoins – this book systematically explores the various techniques that have been introduced in an attempt to improve the organisation\, efficiency and stability of the IOU economy as a way to mitigate or prevent the universal challenge of the IOU economy from binding. \nPantelopolous says the “universal challenge” of an IOU economy is the scenario in which liquidity dries up. \n\n2026-03-10 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5) (Recording)\n\n\nUpcoming Sessions\n  \n\n\n2026-03-24 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 6–10 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nCorrespondent Banking: Part 2\n\n\n\n\nThe Central Bank as the LOLR\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 1\n\n\n\n\nThe International Monetary System: Part 2\n\n\n\n\n2026-04-07 — 2:00pm EDT\n  \n\nWe discuss Chapters 11–13 of Pantelopoulos’s Between Payments and Credit. \n\n\n\nCentral Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC)\n\n\n\n\nThe Crypto-Verse: Terminologies and Technologies\n\n\n\n\nUnbacked Crypto-Assets and Stablecoins\n\n\n\n\nFuture Suggested Readings\n  \n\n\nAgainst Money by J.W. Mason and Arjun Jayadev (2026)\nOur Money: Monetary Policy as if Democracy Matters by Leah Downey (2025)\nThe History of Money: A Story of Humanity by David McWilliams (2025)\nAfter the Accord: A History of Federal Reserve Open Market Operations\, the US Government Securities Market\, and Treasury Debt Management from 1951 to 1979 by Kenneth D. Garbade (2021)\nHow a Ledger Became a Central Bank: A Monetary History of the Bank of Amsterdam by Quinn and Roberds (2023)\nA Study of Money Flows in the United States by Morris Copeland (1952)\nA History of the Greenbacks by Wesley Clair Mitchell (1903)\nCalming the Storms: The Carry Trade\, the Banking School and British Financial Crises Since 1825 by Charles Read (2023)\nBenjamin Strong: Central Banker by Lester V. Chandler (1958)\nAn Engine\, Not a Camera: How Financial Models Shape Markets by Donald MacKenzie (2007)\nCurrency and Credit (4e) by Ralph Hawtrey (1950)\nThe Golden Age of the Quantity Theory by David Laidler (1991)\nCapitalizing on Crisis: The Political Origins of the Rise of Finance by Greta Krippner (2011)\nThe Federal Reserve System by Paul Warburg (1930)\nCentral Bank Capitalism: Monetary Policy in Times of Crisis by Joscha Wullweber (2024)\nIntroduction to Central Banking by Ulrich Bindseil and Alessio Fota (2021)\nThe Chairman: John J. McCloy & The Making of the American Establishment by Kai Bird (1992)\nManias\, Panics\, and Crashes (8e) by Robert McCauley (2023)\nThe Bailout State: Why Governments Rescue Banks\, Not People by Martijn Konings (2025)\n\n\nPast Readings with Discussion Recordings\n  \n\n\nMinsky by Daniel H. Neilson (2019)\n2021-03-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-03-31 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-04-07 — Discussion with Daniel Neilson\nThe Art of Central Banking (Chapter IV) by Ralph Hawtrey (1933)\n2021-04-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-05-05 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-05-26 — Discussion with David Glasner\nMaking Money: Coin\, Currency\, and the Coming of Capitalism by Christine Desan (2014)\n2021-06-02 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-06-16 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-06-30 — Discussion Session 3\n2021-07-14 — Discussion with Christine Desan\nMoney in a Theory of Finance by John G. Gurley\, Edward S. Shaw (1960)\n2021-07-21 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-08-04 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-08-18 — Discussion Session 3\nThe World in Depression\, 1929-1939 by Charles P. Kindleberger (1973)\n2021-09-01 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-09-15 — Discussion Session 2\n2021-09-29 — Discussion Session 3\nThe Rise of Carry by Jamie Lee et al (2019)\n2021-10-13 — Discussion Session 1\n2021-10-27 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Interest and the Public Interest by Perry Mehrling (1998)\n2021-11-10 — Discussion Session 1 | Allyn Young\n2021-11-24 — Discussion Session 2 | Alvin Hanson\n2021-12-08 — Discussion Session 3 | Edward Shaw\nControlling Credit by Eric Monnet (2018)\n2022-01-05 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-01-19 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Menace of Fiscal QE by George Selgin (2020)\n2022-02-02 — Discussion Session\nThe New Lombard Street by Perry Mehrling (2011)\n2022-02-23 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-03-09 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-03-23 — Discussion Session 3\nFighting Financial Crises: Learning from the Past by Gary Gorton\, Ellis Tallman (2021)\n2022-04-20 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-05-11 — Discussion Session 2\nMoney and empire: The international gold standard\, 1890-1914 by Marcello De Cecco (1974)\n2022-05-25 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-06-15 — Discussion Session 2\nCentral Bank Cooperation 1924-31 by Stephen Clarke (1967)\n2022-06-22 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-07-06 — Discussion Session 2\nThe Money Problem: Rethinking Financial Regulation by Morgan Ricks (2016)\n2022-07-27 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-08-10 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-08-17 — Discussion with Morgan Ricks\nThe Evolution of Central Banking: Theory and History by Stefano Ugolini (2017)\n2022-08-24 — Discussion Session 1\n2022-09-07 — Discussion Session 2\n2022-09-21 — Discussion Session 3\n2022-10-05 — Discussion with Stefano Ugolini\nA Financial History of Western Europe by Charles P. Kindleberger (1984\, 1993)\n2022-10-19 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Money\n2022-11-02 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: Banking\n2022-11-16 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Finance\n2023-01-11 — Discussion Session 4 | Part 4: The Interwar Period\n2023-01-18 — Discussion Session 5 | Part 5: After World War II\nMoney and Empire: Charles P. Kindleberger and the Dollar System by Perry Mehrling (2022)\n2022-11-30 — Discussion Session 1 | Part 1: Intellectual Formation\, 1910–1948\n2022-12-14 — Discussion Session 2 | Part 2: International Economist\, 1948–1976\n2022-12-21 — Discussion Session 3 | Part 3: Historical Economist\, 1976–2003\n2022-12-21 — Discussion #1 with Perry Mehrling\n2023-01-04 — Discussion #2 with Perry Mehrling\nBonds without Borders: A History of the Eurobond Market by Chris O’Malley (2015)\n2023-02-15 — Discussion Session 1\n2023-03-01 — Discussion Session 2\nMonetary Policy Operations and the Financial System by Ulrich Bindseil (2014)\n2023-03-15 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-8)\n2023-03-29 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 9-12)\n2023-04-12 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 13-18)\nCapital Wars: The Rise of Global Liquidity by Michael J. Howell (2020)\n2023-04-26 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-05-10 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-14)\nA Market Theory of Money by John Hicks (1989)\n2023-05-24 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1-7)\n2023-06-07 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8-15)\nThe Currency of Politics: The Political Theory of Money from Aristotle to Keynes by Stefan Eich (2022)\n2023-06-28 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2023-07-19 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\n2023-08-02 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 5 & 6)\n2023-08-14 — Discussion with Stefan Eich\nFischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance by Perry Mehrling (2005)\n2023-08-22 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2023-09-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–8)\n2023-09-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 9–11)\n2023-09-26 — Discussion with Perry Mehrling\nThe Evolution of Central Banks by Charles Goodhart (1988)\n2023-10-03 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–6)\n2023-10-17 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–8\, Appendix)\nThe Repo Market: Shorts\, Shortages\, and Squeezes by Scott Skyrm (2023)\n2023-11-07 — Discussion Session 1 (pages 1–92)\n2023-11-21 — Discussion Session 2 (pages 93–186)\n2023-12-05 — Discussion Session 3 (pages 187–310) Part 1 — Part 2\n2023-12-12 — Discussion with Scott Skyrm From 39:20\nThe Volatility Machine: Emerging Economies and the Threat of Financial Collapse by Michael Pettis (2001)\n2023-12-19 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2024-01-02 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6–10)\n2024-01-09 — Discussion with Michael Pettis\nInternational Capital Movements by Charles P. Kindleberger (1987)\n2024-01-16 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1 & 2)\n2024-01-30 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3 & 4)\nA Political Theory of Money by Anush Kapadia (2024)\n2024-02-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–4)\n2024-03-05 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 5–7)\n2024-03-19 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–12)\n2024-03-26 — Discussion with Anush Kapadia\nThe Rise of Central Banks: State Power in Financial Capitalism by Leon Wansleben (2023)\n2024-04-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-04-23 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2024-05-07 — Discussion with Leon Wansleben\nThe Money Illusion: Market Monetarism\, the Great Recession\, and the Future of Monetary Policy by Scott Sumner (2021)\n2024-05-14 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 & 2)\n2024-05-28 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 & 4)\n2024-06-18 — Discussion Session 3 (Parts 5 & 6)\n2024-06-25 — Discussion with Scott Sumner\nPrivate Money and Public Currencies: The Sixteenth Century Challenge: The Sixteenth Century Challenge by Boyer-Xambeu\, Deleplace\, and Gillard (1994)\n2024-07-02 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2024-07-16 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4 & 5)\n2024-07-30 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6\, 7 & Conclusion)\nThe Arena of International Finance by Charles A. Coombs (1976)\n2024-08-13 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1ー6)\n2024-08-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 7–12)\nThe Bill on London: or The Finance of Trade by Bills of Exchange by Gillett Brothers (1952/1976)\n2024-09-17 — Discussion Session\nBirth of a Market: The U.S. Treasury Securities Market from the Great War to the Great Depression by Kenneth D. Garbade (2012)\n2024-10-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–10)\n2024-10-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 11–15)\n2024-10-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 16–24)\nA Monetary and Fiscal History of the United States\, 1961–2021 by Alan S. Blinder (2022)\n2024-11-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–7)\n2024-11-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 8–13)\n2024-12-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 14–19)\nBuilding a Ruin: The Cold War Politics of Soviet Economic Reform by Yakov Feygin (2024)\n2025-01-07 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2025-01-21 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–6)\n2025-02-04 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 7 & Afterword)\nA Crash Course on Crises: Macroeconomic Concepts for Run-Ups\, Collapses\, and Recoveries by Markus K. Brunnermeier and Ricardo Reis (2023)\n2025-02-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1 and 2)\n2025-03-11 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 3 and 4)\nThe Empire of Value: A New Foundation for Economics by Andre Orlean (2014)\n2025-03-25 — Discussion Session 1 (Introduction and Part 1) Part 1 — Part 2\n2025-04-08 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 2 and 3)\n2025-04-22 — Discussion Session 3 (Part 4 and Conclusion)\nThe Wheels of Commerce by Fernand Braudel (1979/1982)\n2025-05-06 — Discussion Session 1 (Chapter 1)\n2025-05-13 — Discussion Session 2 (Chapter 2)\n2025-05-20 — Discussion Session 3 (Chapter 3)\n2025-05-27 — Discussion Session 4 (Chapter 4)\n2025-06-03 — Discussion Session 5 (Chapter 5)\nBeyond Banks: Technology\, Regulation\, and the Future of Money by Dan Awrey (2024)\n2025-06-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Intro & Ch 1–3)\n2025-07-01 — Discussion Session 5 (Ch 4–7 & Conclusion)\n2025-07-08 — Discussion with Dan Awrey\nOur Dollar\, Your Problem: An Insider’s View of Seven Turbulent Decades of Global Finance by Kenneth Rogoff (2025)\n2025-08-19— Discussion Session 1 (Parts 1-3)\n2025-08-26 — Discussion Session 2 (Parts 4-6)\nCentral Banking Before 1800: A Rehabilitation by Ulrich Bindseil (2019)\n2025-09-01 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-09-15 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3–5)\n2025-09-29 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 6&7)\n2025-10-13 — Discussion with Ulrich Bindseil\nThe Long Twentieth Century: Money\, Power and the Origins of Our Times by Giovanni Arrighi (2010)\n2025-10-20 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1&2)\n2025-11-03 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 3)\n2025-11-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 4)\nFragile by Design: The Political Origins of Banking Crises and Scarce Credit by Charles W. Calomiris and Stephen Haber (2014)\n2025-11-17 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–5)\n2025-12-01 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 6-9)\n2025-12-15 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 10–15)\n2026-01-05 — Discussion with Charles Calomiris\nTreatise on Money by Joseph Schumpeter (1970/2014)\n2026-01-12 — Discussion Session 1 (Ch 1–3)\n2026-01-27 — Discussion Session 2 (Ch 4–7)\n2026-02-10 — Discussion Session 3 (Ch 8–10)\n2026-02-24 — Discussion Session 4 (Ch 11–12)\n\n\nOff-Week Sessions\n  \n\n2021-05-19 BIS Working Paper: Breaking free of the triple coincidence in international finance (2015)\n2021-07-07 Global Domain of the Dollar: 8 Questions by Robert McCauley Author Discussion\n2021-07-28 BIS and Bank of England reports on Central Bank Digital Currencies\n2022-09-28 The Crypto Banking System by Sébastien Derivaux (2022) Author Discussion\n2023-04-05 Discussion of Silicon Valley Bank\n2023-04-19 Institutional Cash Pools by Zoltan Pozsar (2011)\n2023-05-03 BIS Bulletin #73: Stablecoins vs. Tokenized Deposits (May 3\, 2023)\n2023-07-05 The Credit–Money Hierarchy: a Republican \, Egalitarian Appraisal by Aaron James (2023)\n2023-07-26 Public Purpose Finance: The Government’s Role as Lender by Nadav Orian Peer (2020) Author Discussion 2023-10-24 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 1\n2023-10-31 Money and the Public Debt by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (2023) | 2\n2023-11-14 ICMA Repo FAQ by Richard Comotto (2013/2019)\n2023-11-28 Basis Trades and Treasury Market Illiquidity by Daniel Barth & Jay Kahn (2020)\n2024-01-23 Capital flows and the current account by Borio and Disyatat (2015)\n2024-02-13 The dual currency system of Renaissance Europe by Luca Fantacci (2008)\n2024-02-27 BIS: Buy now\, pay later: a cross-country analysis by Cornelli et al. (2023)\n2024-03-12 The non-use of money in the Middle Ages by Bell\, Brooks\, and Moore (2017)\n2024-04-09 The Central Role of Credit Crunches in Recent Financial History by Albert M. Wojnilower (1980)\n2024-04-16 Measuring Equilibrium in the Balance of Payments by Charles P. Kindleberger (1969)\n2024-04-30 The Rise and Risks of Private Credit — GFSR (April\, 2024)\n2024-06-04 BIS Working Paper No 1100: Getting up from the floor by Claudio Borio (May\, 2023)\n2024-06-11 The Offshore Dollar and US Policy by Robert McCauley (May\, 2024)\n2024-07-09 The (impossible) repo trinity: the political economy of repo markets by Daniela Gabor (2016)\n2024-08-07 A Safe Haven for Hidden Risks (May 30\, 2024) and Rate Transformation (November 4\, 2023) by Elham Saeidinezhad\n2024-08-20 The Collateral Supply Effect on Central Bank Policy by Carolyn Sissoko (2020)\n2024-09-10 Monetary Policy Implications of Market Maker of Last Resort Operations by Anil K Kashyap (August 23\, 2024)\n2024-11-05 BIS Bulletin No 90: The market turbulence and carry trade unwind of August 2024 (August 27\, 2024)\n2024-11-19 Yen Carry Trade and the Subprime Crisis by Masazumi Hattori and Hyun Song Shin (2009)\n2024-12-03 After the Allocation: What Role for the Special Drawing Rights System? by Pforr\, Pape\, and Murau (2022)\n2025-01-14 Where Profits Come From by the Levy Forecasting Center by Levy\, Farnham\, & Rajan (2008/1997)\n2025-01-28 The Broad Consequences of Narrow Banking by Matheus R. Grasseli and Alexander Lipton (2019)\n2025-02-11 Failing Banks by Sergio Correia\, Stephen Luck\, and Emil Verner (2024)\n2025-02-18 Odd Lots — The Hidden History of Eurodollars by Lev Menand and Joshua Younger (January 2025)\n2025-03-04 Of Last Resort: Evaluating the Treasury-Equity Model of Federal Reserve Emergency Lending by Steven Kelly (2024)\n2025-03-18 Commercial Banking and Capital Formation I–IV by Harold Moulton (1918)\n2025-04-01 Climate Alignment For Banks: The Stories That Numbers Tell by Nadav Orian Peer (2025) Author Discussion\n2025-04-15 Shadow Banking: Why Modern Money Markets are Less Stable Than 19th c. Money Markets But Shouldn’t Be Stabilized by a ‘Dealer of Last Resort’ by Carolyn Sissoko (2014)\n2025-04-29 Treasury Market and the Basis Trade (Adrian et al. 2025; Kashyap et al. 2025)\n2025-06-10 Structural Changes in the Global Financial System lecture by Hyun Song Shin (May 19\, 2025)\n2025-06-24 International Regimes\, Transactions\, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order by John Gerard Ruggie (1982)\n2025-07-15 BIS Annual Report Chapter: Financial conditions in a changing global financial system (2025)\n2025-07-22 Banks Are Intermediaries of Loanable Funds by George Selgin (2024)\n2025-07-29 Theorising non-bank financial intermediation by Jo Michell (2024)\n2025-08-05 Banks are different: why bank-based versus market-based lending is a false dichotomy by Carolyn Sissoko (2024)\n2025-09-08 Did France Cause the Great Depression? by Douglas A. Irwin (2010)\n2025-09-22 Rethinking Monetary Sovereignty: The Global Credit Money System and the State by Murau and van’t Klooster (2023)\n2025-10-06 Rethinking currency internationalisation: offshore money creation and the EU’s monetary governance by Murau and van’t Klooster (2025)\n2025-10-27 BIS Bulletin No 114: “Financial channel implications of a weaker dollar for emerging market economies” by Juselius\, Wooldridge and Xia (October 13\, 2025)\n2025-11-24 Bubble or Nothing: Data Center Project Finance by Advait Arun (November 12\, 2025)\n2025-12-08 Discussion of Debate over Whether Money Multiplier Requires Cash Lending\n2026-01-20 Gresham’s Law by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-03 The Law of One Price by Charles P. Kindleberger (1989)\n2026-02-17 Bank Runs With and Without Bank Failures by Correia\, Luck\, and Verner (2026)\n2026-03-03 Monetary Experience and the Theory of Money by John Hicks (1977)
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-11-04/
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-11-04/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/lecture2-p4x2-hierarchy-pyramid-dynamics.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251105T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251105T103000
DTSTAMP:20260410T040235
CREATED:20251002T013921Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251014T062025Z
UID:10007912-1762333200-1762338600@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Rethinking Capitalism and Economic Order I
DESCRIPTION:The History of Economic Thought Working Group and East Asia Working Group of the Young Scholars Initiative is launching a webinar series that brings critical attention to the idea\, practice\, and evolution of capitalism. This project aims to reconnect the history of economic ideas with the world they sought to describe\, reform\, or transform. Capitalism is not just an economic system; it is a lived experience\, a political project\, and an ideological battleground. \n  \nWe seek to open a conversation about capitalism as it has been theorised\, imagined\, and contested across historical periods and geographies. From early critiques of enclosures and slavery\, to colonial accumulation and contemporary platform economies\, capitalism’s forms have shifted\, but its underlying logics—commodification\, accumulation\, exclusion—continue to shape our worlds. \n  \nThis series will invite senior scholars who work across traditions—Marxist\, classical\, feminist\, ecological\, decolonial—to speak to these shifting realities. Our goal is not to arrive at a unified definition of capitalism\, but to stay with its plurality. What is the nature of capitalism in our time? What kind of capitalism is being debated in different contexts? What kind of resistance does it provoke? How do economic theories shape their justification or critique? \n  \nOur approach to history foregrounds tension\, silence\, and the politics of knowledge. The HET WG places special emphasis on themes like decolonisation\, pluralism\, epistemic difference\, and the often under-acknowledged intellectual contributions from the Global South. We invite our participants to think about histories of caste\, race\, gender\, and land\, alongside more familiar categories such as markets\, property\, and the state. \nKey areas of focus include: \n\nHistories of capitalism across continents: not just as diffusion from Europe\, but as co-productions and frictions and histories of capitalism have their centres spreading across the globe\, not only in the WEST but in the EAST too\, from Malacca\, Hugli\, Calicut\, Macao\, Nagasaki\, Pegu to Batavia\, to name a few.\nCapitalism’s relationship with colonialism\, racialisation\, and dispossession\nProperty regimes\, financial architectures\, and state-market entanglements\nTrade\, Tariffs and Wars\nDebates on crisis: inflation\, debt\, austerity\, climate collapse\nIntellectual genealogies: from Marx and Gandhi to Du Bois\, Luxemburg\, Fanon\, and Polanyi\nThe metabolism of capital and planetary boundaries\nThe role of economics as a discipline in naturalising or resisting capitalist logics\n\nThis series is not an attempt to replace critique with nostalgia or celebration. Instead\, we want to create a space where histories of capitalism can inform strategies for its transformation or transcendence. Theories of capitalism are not just descriptions; they are interventions. We hope to create a space where critique and imagination work in tandem. \n  \nProf. Katharina Pistor\n  \nThe Law of Capitalism and How to Transform It\, Wednesday\, 5 November 2025\, 9.00 am EST\nCapitalism seems unstoppable. Laws and regulation that are meant to contain its excesses can slow its expansion but are unable to contain it. How is it that a system that relies to extensively on the law to code assets as capital is so resistant to legal constraints is the question this book addresses. The answer lies in the fact that capitalist law is Janus-faced: Its private law side empowers actors to use law as a tool to build private wealth and power over others; the public law side seeks to rein in some actions\, but it also protects private actors against state interreference. This is how private actors rule over others with impunity\, shift the risk of their actions on society at large and the environment. I conclude that private law needs a reset to ground it in principles of mutual respect and support among private actors rather than exploitation and power. \n\nKatharina Pistor is researcher and writer on capitalism and capitalist law\, the law of money and finance\, comparative law and law and development. \n  \nShe is the (co-) author and editor of nine books. Her most recent book\, The Code of Capital: How the Law Creates Wealth and Inequality (Princeton UP 2019)\, explains how\, behind closed doors in the offices of private attorneys\, capital is created—and why this little-known activity is one of the biggest reasons for the widening wealth gap between the holders of capital and everybody else. The Code of Capital explores the various ways that debt\, complex financial products\, and other assets are selectively coded to protect and reproduce private wealth. The Code of Capital was named one of the best books of 2019 by the Financial Times and Business Insider. \n  \nKatharina Pistor has currently two books under contract: “Capitalist Law and How to Transform It” (Yale UP). This book explores how capitalism reconstitute itself through law and what it would take to transform it. She is also working with Co-Pierre Georg on “Coded Power” (Princeton UP)\, a book aims to show how control over the formal means by which societies organize themselves — the legal and digital codes – can empower a few at the expense of the many\, lest control is firmly vested in the latter. \n  \nPistor regularly publishes in legal and social science journals. In her paper “Rule by Data: The End of Markets” in The Journal of Law and Contemporary Problems (2020)\, she suggested that the harvesting of consumer data at scale creates new asymmetries of information and power that renders illusionary the idea of voluntary contracting in a free market. And in her essay “From Territorial to Monetary Sovereignty” in the Journal on Theoretical Inquiries in Law (2017)\, she argued that the rise of a global money system means a new definition of sovereignty — the control of money — which might eventually be de-coupled from territory. She is a regular contributor to Project Syndicate\, has published opinion pieces\, among others\, in The Guardian\, and The New York Times. \n  \nKatharina Pistor serves as the Edwin B. Parker Professor of Comparative Law at Columbia Law School\, which she joined in 2001. Previously she held teaching and research positions at Harvard Law School\, the Harvard Kennedy School\, and the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Law in Hamburg. She has also been visiting professor at the University of Harvard Law School\, New York University School of Law\, Pennsylvania Carey Law School\, the London School of Economics\, Oxford\, and Tel Aviv University. She is an elected member of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (2015)\, the European Academy of Sciences (2021)\, and The Club of Rome (2024). In 2012 she received (with Martin Hellwig) the Max Planck Research Award on international financial regulation. In addition\, she has received research grants by the Institute for New Economic Thinking and the US National Science Foundation. She is one of the three co-directors of Columbia University’s Center for Political Economy\, funded by a major grant by the Hewlett Foundation. \n  \nKatharina Pistor loves the arts. She is an avid concert goer and visitor of galleries and museums. She also and enjoys playing the harpsichord alone and in chamber ensembles together with her husband Carsten Bonnemann on the viol. \n\n  \nRelated Sessions\n\nS02: A Different Approach to Informality with Prof. Barbara Harriss-White\nS03: Slavery and Capitalism: A New Marxist History with Prof. David McNally
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/rethinking-capitalism-and-economic-order-i/
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CATEGORIES:A one-time zoom
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