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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250806
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250809
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250415T190333Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250430T193734Z
UID:10007434-1754438400-1754697599@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:The 17th National Conference on Labor Studies (ASET 2025) – Young Scholars Call
DESCRIPTION:DESCRIPTION\nTOPIC\nThe world of labor is undergoing profound transformations due to technological change\, globalization\, and shifts in economic structures. Understanding these changes requires interdisciplinary approaches that integrate economic\, sociological\, and political perspectives. The 17th National Conference on Labor Studies (ASET 2025) will provide a platform for researchers to discuss key labor issues such as labor market dynamics\, the relationship between economic development and employment quality\, income distribution\, technological impacts\, gender and labor relations\, social protection policies\, and collective bargaining. \nHistorically\, this Conference brings together young scholars\, experienced researchers and different actors from the “world of work”\, such as union leaders or policy makers\, to engage in discussions on labor transformations in Latin America. The event will cover a wide range of topics\, including: \n\nLabor markets and wage dynamics\nIncome distribution and poverty\nJob quality\, precarious work\, and labor market integration\nGender\, labor markets\, and care work\nTechnological change and labor flexibilization\nWorking conditions\, environment\, and workers’ well-being\nLabor relations\, collective bargaining\, and trade unions\nMigration and labor mobility\n\nParticipation in this event will provide young scholars with the opportunity to present their research\, receive feedback from leading experts\, and establish networks with peers and professionals in the field. \nPURPOSE\nThe goal of this Conference is to encourage a critical and plural discussion on labor-related issues\, considering theoretical\, empirical\, and policy-oriented perspectives. By facilitating an exchange between young scholars and senior researchers\, the event aims to enhance the visibility of new research and contribute to the advancement of labor studies. Participants will have the opportunity to share their findings\, discuss methodological approaches\, and explore the implications of their research for shaping labor policies and social transformations. \nFORMAT\nThis Conference is sponsored primarily by the Asociación Argentina de Especialistas en Estudios del Trabajo (ASET). Prospective Young Scholar participants are invited to submit an abstract explaining how their research topic is related to the topics listed above and how participating will enhance their research. The event will feature four round tables in which renowned specialists from both the country and abroad will discuss in-depth relevant topics on the world of work. The presentations of papers will be organized through 20 Thematic Groups led by specialists from ASET\, who will coordinate the presentation sessions and give constructive feedback to the speakers. \nSubmissions may address the topics listed above but are not limited to them. We welcome contributions from diverse disciplines\, including: \n\nLabor economics\nSociology of work\nCollective bargaining\nSocial policies and labor protection\nTechnological change and labour quality\nEconomic history of labor\nGender and labor studies\nMigration and labor mobility\n\nAbstracts will be evaluated based on clarity\, research methodology\, and contribution to the field. Additionally\, the selection committee will consider geographical diversity and gender representation. \nAcademic Commitee: \nEliana Aspiazu (UNMdP)\, Pablo Barbetti (UNNE)\, María Noel Bulloni (CONICET)\, Ricardo Donaire (CONICET)\, Lucila D’Urso (UNGS)\, Francisco Favieri (CONICET)\, Ana Laura Fernández (UNGS)\, Mariana Fernandez Massi (CONICET)\, Mariana González (CONICET)\, Gaspar Herrero (UBA)\, Malena Hopp (CONICET)\, Damián Kennedy (CONICET)\, Verónica Maceira (UNGS)\, Johanna Maldovan (CONICET)\, Clara Marticorena (CONICET)\, María Eugenia Martín (CONICET)\, Victoria Matozo (CONICET)\, Agustina Miguel (CONICET)\, Agustín Nieto (CONICET)\, Santiago Poy (CONICET) \nKEY DATES\n\nAbstract submission deadline: May 30\, 2025\nNotification of acceptance: To be announced\nFull paper submission deadline: June 20\, 2025\nConference dates: August 6-8\, 2025\n\nCLICK HERE TO SUBMIT\n 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/the-17th-national-conference-on-labor-studies-aset-2025-young-scholars-call/2025-08-06/1/
LOCATION:Faculty of Economic Sciences\, University of Buenos Aires\, Avenida Córdoba\, Buenos Aires\, Comuna 3\, C1113\, Argentina
CATEGORIES:A series of in-person events
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250805T140000
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DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
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UID:10008143-1754402400-1754407800@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/2025-08-05/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/lecture2-p4x2-hierarchy-pyramid-dynamics.png
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-08-05/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Africa/Lagos:20250802T170000
DTEND;TZID=Africa/Lagos:20250802T180000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250702T152230Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250724T110528Z
UID:10007501-1754154000-1754157600@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:The Impact and Future of Cooperatives: A Commemoration of The International Day of Cooperatives 2025
DESCRIPTION:As the world gather to celebrate the International Day of Cooperatives which coincides with the flagship event of International Year of Cooperatives 2025 proclaimed by the United Nations in recognition of the crucial importance of the cooperatives to the advancement of economic development\, social inclusion\, and sustainable livelihoods\, it is pertinent to lend a voice showcasing our unique contributions to more sustainable solutions for a better world\, which is in alignment with this year’s theme. Importantly\, young people stand at the heart of a growing global movement that is reshaping economies\, communities\, and the future of work. In a time marked by economic uncertainty\, climate change\, and social inequality\, cooperatives offer young people a platform to lead\, innovate\, and build a more just and sustainable world. Rooted in values of mutual aid\, democratic participation\, and shared ownership\, cooperatives offer an economic model that prioritizes people over profit and ensures that economic benefits are equitably distributed among members\, which ultimately promotes inclusion and accountability. As engines of economic and social development\, cooperatives are uniquely positioned to address global challenges and contribute to a more equitable and just world\, particularly as it aligns closely with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals in areas such as poverty eradication\, zero hunger\, gender equality\, decent work and economic growth\, reduced inequalities and sustainable communities. As such\, it is essential to recognize cooperatives not only as economic actors but as holistic institutions that place people\, community\, and sustainability at their core. \nThe International Day of Cooperatives 2025 transcends celebration; it is a call to action. This webinar will examine the achievements of the cooperatives model and discuss mechanisms geared towards the renewal of commitment to their continued growth. The engagement which this webinar seeks is also crucial for the future of cooperatives- to give a platform for the exchange of fresh ideas and to rejuvenate the cooperative movement.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/the-impact-and-future-of-cooperatives-a-commemoration-of-the-international-day-of-cooperatives-2025/
CATEGORIES:A one-time zoom
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/YSIGeneric29-scaled.jpg
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/the-impact-and-future-of-cooperatives-a-commemoration-of-the-international-day-of-cooperatives-2025/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250729T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250729T153000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
UID:10008142-1753797600-1753803000@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/2025-07-29/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-07-29/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250726
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250730
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250428T212947Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250428T212947Z
UID:10007237-1753488000-1753833599@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Alternative Macroeconomic Theories: Developing Countries and Türkiye
DESCRIPTION:The Economic Development WG and Keynesian Economics WG is pleased to invite you to a four-day workshop on Alternative Macroeconomic Theories: Developing Countries and Türkiye\, held at the Middle East Technical University (Ankara\, Türkiye). \nContext: \nThis event aims to bring together graduate students and early-career researchers interested in analysing macroeconomic issues in developing countries from alternative perspectives. In recent years\, Turkish policymakers have pursued an unconventional strategy of lowering interest rates when central banks in major Global North countries were tightening their monetary policy amidst a high-inflationary environment. This policy experiment has brought “heterodox economic policies” to the forefront of public and academic debates in Türkiye. \nRecent global disruptions\, from the post-pandemic recovery to geopolitical tensions\, have made the shortcomings of mainstream macroeconomic frameworks increasingly apparent.  Growing instability in developing economies underscores their failure to deliver the desired outcomes. The standard approach\, rooted in the New Macroeconomic Consensus (NMC)\, relies heavily on inflation targeting\, independent central banking\, and fiscal restraint as primary policy tools. It assumes that monetary policy alone can stabilize economies while downplaying the role of structural factors\, exchange rate volatility\, capital flows\, and income distribution.  \nTürkiye’s recent policy experiments\, alongside experiences from other Global South economies\, underscore the urgent need for alternative approaches to macroeconomic management. While the rising interest in alternative macroeconomic perspectives in Türkiye is a promising development\, there remains a strong need for intellectually rich\, theoretically informed discussions that are better integrated with academic debates in other Global South countries.  \nThe aim of this workshop is to create a productive space for meaningful discussions while fostering a community of young researchers working on macroeconomic issues from alternative perspectives. \nTo this end\, our event will feature three key components: \n(1) Mini lectures on macroeconomic issues from alternative approaches including post-Keynesian\, Structuralist\, Institutionalist and Feminist perspectives\, \n(2) Poster sessions and paper presentations to provide feedback to young scholars on their ongoing research\, \n(3) Social events to encourage community and capacity building. \nEvent Details \nLocation: Middle East Technical University (METU)\, Ankara\, Türkiye \nDates: 26-29 July 2025 \nApplication Deadline: 1 June 2025  \nStructure: The event will be held over four days. The first two days will consist of interactive lectures\, while the last two days will be dedicated to poster sessions and presentations. The event will conclude with a brainstorming session on strengthening the engagement of young scholars from Türkiye in the YSI community. Voluntary social activities will be organised in the evenings. \nConfirmed Speakers: Seven Ağır (METU)\, Ahmet Benlialper (Cornivus University)\, Serdar Bahçe (Ankara University)\, Hasan Cömert (Trinity College\, Hartford)\, Nazım Ekinci (Harran University)\, Erkan Erdil (METU)\, Emel Memiş (Ankara University)\, Betül Mutlugün (Trinity College\, Hartford)\, Cem Oyvat (University of Greenwich)\, İlhan Can Özen (METU)\, Kağan Parmaksız (METU)\, Erol Saymaz (METU)\, Esra Uğurlu (University of Leeds).  \nWho Should Apply? \nThis call is open to graduate students and early-career researchers who are engaged in research on macroeconomics from alternative perspectives. We welcome both theoretical and empirical submissions. \nSuggested Themes for Submissions: \n\nMonetary and fiscal policy in developing countries\nCentral banking and inflation targeting\nExchange rate policy\nPost-Keynesian and Structuralist formal macroeconomic models\nAgent-based models\nStock-flow Consistent Models\nHeterodox theories of income and distribution\n\nHow to Apply: All applications must be submitted through the application form here: https://forms.gle/5e1LzEwo4CHnSybeA  \nInterested participants should submit a brief paragraph (max 300 words) explaining their motivation. Notifications of acceptance will be sent by 5 June 2025. Participants who are interested in presenting a paper should submit their papers by 15 July 2025 to the e-mail address below. \nCommunication: For any inquiries\, please contact odtueconworkshop@gmail.com \nFinancial Support: Accommodation support will be provided for selected young scholars. Priority will be given to participants travelling within Türkiye. \nLanguage: Turkish (mostly) and English \nTurkish Version  \nAlternatif Makroiktisadi Teoriler: Gelişmekte Olan Ülkeler ve Türkiye \nEkonomik Kalkınma Çalışma Grubu ve Keynesyen Ekonomi Çalışma Grubu olarak\, 26-30 Temmuz 2025 tarihleri arasında Orta Doğu Teknik Üniversitesi’nde (Ankara\, Türkiye) düzenlenecek olan Alternatif Makroiktisadi Teoriler: Gelişmekte Olan Ülkeler ve Türkiye başlıklı dört günlük atölye çalışmamıza sizleri davet etmekten mutluluk duyuyoruz. \nBağlam:\nBu etkinlik\, gelişmekte olan ülkelerdeki makroiktisadi meseleleri alternatif perspektiflerden incelemek isteyen lisansüstü öğrencileri ve kariyerinin başındaki araştırmacıları bir araya getirmeyi amaçlamaktadır. \nGeçtiğimiz yıllarda Türkiye’de politika yapıcılar\, küresel yüksek enflasyon ortamında büyük Küresel Kuzey ülkelerinin merkez bankaları para politikasını sıkılaştırırken\, alışılmışın dışında bir strateji izleyerek faiz oranlarını düşürme yoluna gitmiştir. Bu politika deneyi\, Türkiye’de “heterodoks ekonomi politikalarını” kamu ve akademik tartışmaların merkezine taşımıştır. \nPandemi sonrası dönemden jeopolitik gerilimlere kadar uzanan küresel çalkantılar\, ana akım makroekonomik çerçevenin yetersizliklerini giderek daha belirgin hale getirmiştir. Gelişmekte olan ekonomilerde artan istikrarsızlık\, bu politikaların istenilen sonuçları sağlamadaki başarısızlığını gözler önüne sermektedir. Yeni Uzlaşı Makroiktisadına dayanan standart yaklaşım\, birincil politika araçları olarak enflasyon hedeflemesi\, bağımsız merkez bankacılığı ve mali disiplini benimsemektedir. Bu yaklaşım\, para politikasının tek başına ekonomileri istikrara kavuşturabileceğini varsayarken yapısal faktörlerin\, döviz kuru dalgalanmalarının\, sermaye akımlarının ve gelir dağılımının rolünü göz ardı etmektedir. \nTürkiye’deki son politika deneyimleri ve diğer Küresel Güney ülkelerinde yaşanan iktisadi gelişmeler\, makroekonomik yönetimde alternatif yaklaşımların gerekliliğini ortaya koymaktadır. Türkiye’de alternatif iktisadi yaklaşımlara yönelik artan ilgi olumlu bir gelişme olmakla birlikte\, bu tartışmaların daha entelektüel\, teorik olarak güçlü ve Küresel Güney’deki akademik tartışmalarla daha iyi entegre olmuş bir zeminde yürütülmesine ihtiyaç bulunmaktadır. \nBu etkinliğin amacı\, bir yandan anlamlı tartışmalar yürütebilmek adına verimli bir akademik diyalog ortamı oluştururken\, diğer yandan alternatif perspektiflerden makroekonomik konular üzerine çalışan genç araştırmacılar arasında dinamik bir topluluk oluşturmaktır. \nBu doğrultuda etkinliğimiz üç ana bileşenden oluşacaktır: \n\nPost-Keynesyen\, Yapısalcı\, Kurumsalcı ve Feminist perspektifler de dahil olmak üzere makroekonomik konulara alternatif yaklaşımlar üzerine mini dersler\,\nGenç akademisyenlerin devam eden araştırmalarına geri bildirim sağlamak amacıyla poster ve makale sunumları\,\nTopluluk oluşturmayı ve kapasite geliştirmeyi teşvik eden sosyal etkinlikler.\n\nEtkinlik Detayları \nYer: Middle East Technical University (METU)\, Ankara\, Türkiye \nTarih: 26-29 Temmuz 2025 \nSon Başvuru Tarihi: 1 Haziran 2025  \nEtkinlik Yapısı: Etkinlik dört gün sürecektir. İlk iki gün interaktif derslerden oluşacak\, son iki gün ise poster ve makale sunumlarına ayrılacaktır. Etkinlik\, Türkiye’deki genç akademisyenlerin YSI topluluğuyla etkileşimini güçlendirmeye yönelik bir beyin fırtınası oturumuyla sona erecektir. Akşamları katılımı isteğe bağlı sosyal etkinlikler düzenlenecektir. \nKesinleşmiş Konuşmacılar: Seven Ağır (ODTÜ)\, Ahmet Benlialper (Cornivus University)\, Serdar Bahçe (Ankara Üniversitesi)\, Hasan Cömert (Trinity College\, Hartford)\, Nazım Ekinci (Harran Üniversitesi)\, Erkan Erdil (ODTÜ)\, Emel Memiş (Ankara Üniversitesi)\, Betül Mutlugün (Trinity College\, Hartford)\, Cem Oyvat (University of Greenwich)\, İlhan Can Özen (ODTÜ)\, Kağan Parmaksız (ODTÜ)\, Erol Saymaz (ODTÜ)\, Esra Uğurlu (University of Leeds).  \nKimler Başvurabilir? \nBu çağrı\, makroekonomiyi alternatif perspektiflerden araştıran lisansüstü öğrenciler ve kariyerinin başındaki araştırmacılara açıktır. Etkinliğe hem teorik hem de ampirik çalışmalarda bulunan katılımcılar başvurabilir. \nÖnerilen Temalar: \n\nGelişmekte olan ülkelerde para ve maliye politikası\nMerkez bankacılığı ve enflasyon hedeflemesi\nDöviz kuru politikaları\nPost-Keynesyen ve Yapısalcı makroiktisadi modeller\nAjan bazlı modeller (agent-based models)\nStok-akım tutarlı modeller (stock-flow consistent models)\nHeterodoks gelir ve dağılım teorileri\n\nNasıl Başvurulur?  \nTüm başvurular\, aşağıdaki başvuru formu üzerinden yapılmalıdır: https://forms.gle/5e1LzEwo4CHnSybeA \nİlgilenen katılımcılar\, motivasyonlarını açıklayan en fazla 300 kelimelik kısa bir paragraf göndermelidir. Kabul bildirimleri 5 Haziran 2025 tarihine kadar gönderilecektir. Makale sunumu yapmak isteyen katılımcıların\, makalelerini 15 Temmuz 2025 tarihine kadar aşağıdaki e-posta adresine iletmeleri gerekmektedir. \nİletişim: Etkinlik ile ilgili sorular için odtueconworkshop@gmail.com adresinden bize ulaşabilirsiniz. \nKonaklama: Seçilen genç araştırmacılar için kısmi konaklama desteği sağlanacaktır. Türkiye içinden seyahat eden katılımcılara öncelik verilecektir. \nEtkinlik Dili: Türkçe ve İngilizce
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/alternative-macroeconomic-theories-developing-countries-and-turkiye/
LOCATION:Middle East Technical University\, Ankara\, Turkey
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250724T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250724T133000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250630T195039Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250923T024257Z
UID:10007526-1753360200-1753363800@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Stablecoins Uncovered: Regulation\, Innovation\, Evidence\, and the Future of Digital Money
DESCRIPTION:An exclusive interview series dedicated to exploring the dynamic world of stablecoins and their transformative impact on finance. This series delves deep into the latest policy changes\, groundbreaking innovations\, and evidence shaping the future of digital money. Discussions center on stablecoins—what they are\, how they work\, and why they matter for the evolving financial landscape. \nThe series is thrilled to bring audiences conversations with leading experts\, forward-thinking developers\, influential policymakers\, and insightful academicians—all at the forefront of stablecoin technology and regulation. Each episode uncovers truths\, challenges assumptions\, and presents real-world evidence as it charts the way forward for stablecoins and related financial innovations. \nWhether listeners are professionals in the field\, curious observers\, or passionate about the future of finance\, this series is designed to be engaging\, informative\, and welcoming. Audiences are invited to join as the series connects with visionaries shaping the future of digital money\, and to discover the opportunities and challenges that lie ahead in this exciting sector.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/stablecoins-uncovered-regulation-innovation-evidence-and-the-future-of-digital-money/2025-07-24/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/stablecoins-uncovered-regulation-innovation-evidence-and-the-future-of-digital-money/2025-07-24/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250724T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250726T170000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250224T145020Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250710T044058Z
UID:10007186-1753344000-1753549200@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Monsoon School on Inequality 2025
DESCRIPTION:Overview\nThe Monsoon School on Inequality\, set to be one of the highlight events of the Inequality Working Group (IWG) of the Young Scholars Initiative (YSI) for 2025\, is a gathering designed to address discussions and research on socio-economic and educational disparities in India through a series of engaging and insightful activities. The first edition of the school was held from July 20 to July 22\, 2024\, at the green and beautiful campus of the Centre for Development Studies\, Trivandrum. The Monsoon School 2024 provided a platform for young scholars\, particularly undergraduates\, masters\, and beginner-level PhD students\, to engage with and understand the complexities of economic inequality from various academic perspectives and real-world applications. \nMonsoon School on Inequality 2025\nThe Inequality Working Group (IWG) at YSI invites applications for the second edition of the Monsoon School on Inequality\, an event that aims at fostering dialogue and collaboration among scholars engaged in the study of socio-economic and educational disparities in India. \nThe focus of this year’s monsoon school is on pluralistic approaches to research on inequality\, bringing together perspectives from varied streams of economic thought. It will provide an interactive platform for advanced-level PhD students\, postdoctoral researchers\, and scholars affiliated with Indian research institutes to engage with diverse concepts\, debates\, and methodologies related to inequality. \nThemes and Sessions \nMajor themes covered\, but not limited to: \n1. Economic Inequality and its measures \n\nIncome and wealth disparities.\nLabor market inequality and wage gaps.\nDiverse measures to estimate inequality: Data Sources and Indices\nMeasures of intergroup and intragroup inequality.\nLinkages between governance\, institutions\, and economic inequality.\n\n2. Social Mobility and equal opportunities \n\nDisparities in access to education and healthcare.\nInequality of opportunity and its economic impact.\nSocial determinants of health and educational inequality.\nSocial mobility and intergenerational inequality.\nAffirmative action and its impact on intergenerational mobility.\nSocial mobility across caste\, gender\, and religion.\n\n3. Environment\, Climate Change and Inequality \n\nDistributional impacts of climate change on vulnerable groups.\nEnergy markets\, carbon pricing\, and taxation.\nInequality in contributions to and consequences of environmental degradation.\nFinancing climate adaptation and inequality.\n\n4. Economic Growth\, Government Policy and Inequality \n\nTaxation\, redistribution\, and fiscal policies addressing inequality.\nTrade\, investment\, and their implications for inequality and poverty.\nRole of global supply chains in wage disparities.\nStructural change and unequal effects in development.\nMigration and its effect on sending and receiving economies.\n\nAdditional Activities: \n\nMentorship Session: Young scholars will have the opportunity to present their research with allocated mentoring groups.\nYSI Session: An introduction to the activities and opportunities provided by the Young Scholars Initiative (YSI).\n\nEligibility Criteria \nTarget Audience: \n\nAdvanced PhD students (those completed with academic coursework) or early career researchers affiliated with Indian universities or research institutes.\nScholars enrolled in advanced graduate programs or working as research associates.\nWe welcome applicants from all fields in the social sciences; however\, preference will be given to those with some background in economics\n\nApplication Requirements: \n\nSubmission of an extended abstract showcasing original and high-quality research on inequality.\nActive interest in pluralistic and interdisciplinary approaches to studying inequality.\n\nApplication Process\nApplication Package: \n\nCurriculum Vitae (CV): Include academic qualifications\, research experience\, and key publications (if any).\nExtended Abstract: Up to 1\,000 words providing a detailed overview\, including research objectives\, theoretical framework\, methodology\, preliminary results\, and implications.\nStatement of Interest (500 words): Explain your motivation for participating\, the relevance of your research to inequality\, and how you would contribute to discussions at the school.\n\nSubmission Instructions:\nA. Extended Abstract\nLength: 500 to 1000 words\nContent: A concise summary of the research\, including the objective\, methodology\, key findings\, and relevance to inequality research. \nB. Full Paper\nLength: Maximum of 4\,000 to 6\,000 words (excluding references and tables). \nThe paper should provide detailed information on: \n\nBackground of the study.\nTheoretical considerations/assumptions.\nResearch questions.\nMethodology.\nNature of evidence.\nConclusions and implications.\nKeywords: Include 4-5 keywords.\n\nOriginality: Papers must be the original work of the scholars. All submissions will be checked for originality using one of the plagiarism detection tools. \nC. Formatting Guidelines \n\nFont: Times New Roman\, size 12 for regular text and bold for headings.\nSpacing: 1.15 line spacing.\nAlignment: Justified.\nFile Format: All submissions must be in PDF format.\nFile Naming: Use the title of the paper as the filename. The author’s name or affiliation must not be mentioned anywhere in the paper to ensure anonymity during the review process.\n\nD. Extended Working Paper Submission and Final Selection \n\nShortlisted applicants will be invited to submit a full working paper (4\,000 to 6\,000 words) ahead of the school.\nFinal selection will be based on the quality of the extended working paper. Only those whose papers meet the required standards will be selected to attend the school.\nThe decision of the organizing committee will be final and binding.\n\nFinancial Support:\nSelected scholars will be provided accommodation on a sharing basis and a travel stipend equivalent to a III-tier AC train (excluding Rajadhani\, Duronto\, Vande Bharat\, and other premium or dynamic pricing trains). Tickets and proof of travel should be shared with us for reimbursement. Scholars who can cover the travel cost of their own are also encouraged to apply (accommodation will be covered). \nTentative Deadlines:\nCall for Applications Open: February 25\, 2025\nDeadline for Submission of Abstract/Extended Abstract and Application Materials: March 20\, 2025\nExtended Deadline for submission: March 31\, 2025\nInitial Decisions made between: April 21 and 25\, 2025\nDeadline for Submission of Full Working Papers (for Shortlisted Applicants): May 15\, 2025\nFinal Selection Announcement: June 1\, 2025\nMonsoon School: July 24–26\, 2025 \nHost and Collaboration \nThis special event organized by IWG-YSI will be hosted at the Centre for Development Studies (CDS)\, Thiruvananthapuram Campus\, with the institution providing logistical support\, accommodation for attendees\, and other support. Jointly supported by the Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) and Economiga (the local organizer) in organizing this event.   \nOrganizing Team \n\nProf C Veeramani                                                                 Director\, CDS\, Thiruvananthapuram\nSunanda Nair-Bidkar                                                          Director\, South Asia\, INET\nProf Thiagu Ranganathan                                                   Professor\, CDS\, Thiruvananthapuram\nNandu Sasidharan                                                               Coordinator\,  YSI-INET\nNaveen Hari                                                                          Organiser\, YSI-INET\nDr. Arun Balachandran                                                        Organiser\, YSI-INET\nAlan Seemon                                                                         Co-founder\, Economiga\nGayathri P                                                                              Research Scholar\, CDS Thiruvananthapuram\n\n 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/monsoon-school-on-inequality-2025/
LOCATION:Centre for Development Studies (CDS)\, Centre for Development Studies\, Thiruvananthapuram\, Kerala\,\, Thiruvananthapuram\, Kerala\, 695011\, India
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250722T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250722T153000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
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/2025-07-22/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-07-22/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250722T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250724T170000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250604T145450Z
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SUMMARY:7th Africa Young Scholars Workshop 2025
DESCRIPTION:The YSI Cooperative WG in collaboration with the Urban and Regional Economics WG are pleased to announce the 7th Africa Young Scholars Workshop on Co-operatives 2025\, which will be held alongside The Co-operative University of Kenya’s (CUK) 8th Annual International Conference organized in collaboration with the Moshi Co-operative University (MoCu). The workshop will take place from 22nd – 24th July 2025 in Naivasha town\, Kenya. \nWe anticipate the participation of approximately 10 Young Scholars\, partially sponsored by the Young Scholars Initiative to attend the workshop physically in Naivasha\, Kenya. To enrich the workshop experience\, we plan to invite two (2) local mentors from the CUK and MoCu  fraternity to the physical event. \nWe encourage young scholars to submit their research papers and abstracts aligned with workshop theme\, “Re-Imagining the Role of Cooperatives in Sustainable Development in Africa” \nThe following are the subthemes; \n\nThe Cooperative Business Model for a Sustainable Regional Economy: We are looking for abstracts and presentations on topics including the economic sustainability of various cooperative models\, social inclusivity\, environmental stewardship\, regional specificity\, and the sharing of innovations and best practices in member engagement\, service delivery\, and technology adoption to foster resilient urban and regional economies.\nThe Role of Housing Cooperatives in Shaping Sustainable and Inclusive Cities: We are looking for abstracts and presentations on topics including affordable housing access through cooperative frameworks\, social inclusion via resident participation\, building social capital\, integrating green building practices\, addressing housing crises\, enhancing resilience to economic and environmental shocks through cooperative structures and mutual aid\, and identifying enabling policies for scaling successful cooperative housing models.\nHarnessing Innovation and Technology in Cooperative Sectors for Urban and Regional Economic Growth: We are looking for abstracts and presentations on topics including digital transformation via platforms for member management\, mobile technology\, data analytics\, and cybersecurity; innovative business models such as new cooperative structures\, social entrepreneurship\, and hybrid organizational forms; and technological advancements in sectors like agriculture\, transport\, energy\, and finance (FinTech) within cooperative frameworks to drive sustainable development.\nPolicy\, Partnerships\, and Governance for Promoting Sustainable Cooperative-led Urban and Regional Development: We are looking for abstracts and presentations on topics including evaluating the effectiveness of existing policy and legal frameworks\, fostering partnerships among cooperatives\, governments\, NGOs\, the private sector\, and international organizations; establishing effective governance practices; integrating sustainability principles into cooperative policies; and creating an enabling environment through access to finance\, capacity building\, and public awareness campaigns.\nEmpowering Youth and Future Generations through Cooperative Entrepreneurship for Urban and Regional Sustainability: We are looking for abstracts and presentations on topics including strategies to attract and engage youth in cooperative initiatives\, support for youth-led cooperative ventures\, fostering intergenerational collaboration and knowledge transfer\, positioning youth as drivers of innovation within the cooperative movement\, and exploring future trends and opportunities for youth within urban and regional economic development.\nCooperative Finance as a Catalyst for Sustainable and Equitable Economic Growth: We are looking for abstracts and presentations on topics including financial inclusion via savings and credit cooperatives (SACCOs) and other financial cooperatives\, innovative financing models beyond traditional loans\, impact investing by cooperative financial institutions in sustainable projects\, the role of cooperative banking in funding green initiatives\, and expanding access to finance for underserved urban and regional communities.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/7th-africa-young-scholars-workshop-2025/
LOCATION:Sawela Lodge\, Naivasha\, Kenya\, Naivasha\, Kenya
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20250716T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20250716T160000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250624T124125Z
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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/2025-07-16/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/YSI-RSA_Promo_2.jpg
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-rsa-webinar-series-on-regional-inequalities-and-perceived-left-behindness/2025-07-16/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250715T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250715T153000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
UID:10008140-1752588000-1752593400@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/2025-07-15/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/lecture2-p4x2-hierarchy-pyramid-dynamics.png
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-07-15/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250714T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250717T170000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250316T183429Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250317T212509Z
UID:10007152-1752480000-1752771600@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:YSI @ 6th International Workshop On Demand-Led Growth: The green and demographic transitions
DESCRIPTION:The Keynesian and Latin America Working groups are happy to invite you to submit papers for the 6th International Workshop on Demand-Led Growth\, which will take place between July 14th and 17th 2025 in Rio de Janeiro\, Brazil. \nThis year’s theme\, “The green and demographic transitions”\, is particularly relevant since sustainable development and the environmental implications of economic development have attracted increasing attention in the economic and policy debate. Particularly in relation to issues such as climate change\, resource depletion\, renewable energy\, and loss of biodiversity. \nThere is growing recognition that economic development must address environmental damage in order to achieve long-term sustainability by reducing carbon footprints\, promoting renewable energy and the responsible use of natural resources. In response\, governments and institutions are increasingly adopting green economic practices. At the same time\, there have been major demographic shifts in both advanced and developing countries. \nConventional economics frequently associates the green transition with market-driven policies\, incentives\, and the removal of so-called “interventionist distortions\,” while addressing the demographic transition through austerity measures. In contrast\, alternative approaches seek to integrate green and demographic transitions with demand-led growth\, emphasizing the development and coordination of public policies and the provision of public goods. \nTo explore these alternative perspectives\, we invite articles broadly addressing the following topics: \n • Demand-led growth and sustainable development;\n• Fiscal policy for the green transition;\n• Green finance and the role of central banks;\n• Climate change and the analysis of the decarbonization of the economy;\n• Input-output analysis of the green transition and structural change;\n• Carbon markets and taxation in demand-led growth models;\n• Demographic transition from a demand-led growth perspective. \nAll papers must be in English and include a title\, concise abstract (maximum 200 words)\, author’s name\, institutional affiliation\, and email address. We suggest that submitted papers adhere to a maximum word limit of 8000 words. \nIf your work is selected\, you will be invited to present at the event which is scheduled to occur from July 14 to 17. Selections will be based on merit\, and those chosen can expect to receive accommodation and a partial travel stipend. \n\n\n\n\nApply here for YSI support \nDeadline: 15th April 2025 \nAnd don’t forget to submit the paper to the conference’s website.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-6th-international-workshop-on-demand-led-growth-the-green-and-demographic-transitions/
LOCATION:Instituto de Economia – UFRJ\, Avenida Pasteur\, Rio de Janeiro\, Rio de Janeiro\, 22290-250\, Brazil
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250714T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250716T170000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250514T164402Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250520T184424Z
UID:10007482-1752480000-1752685200@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:2nd Edition of The Political Economy of Ecological Change and Economic Security in the Global South
DESCRIPTION:2nd Edition of The Political Economy of Ecological Change and Economic Security in the Global South \nThe urgency of the climate crisis cannot be overstated\, particularly given its disproportionate impact on vulnerable communities in the Global South. As climate change accelerates\, these communities face extraordinary challenges threatening their ecological stability\, economic security\, and fundamental human rights. Understanding these issues requires a nuanced exploration of the intricate political economy within these countries. Contrary to the misconception of uniformity in production conditions and development trajectories\, regional and local ecological specificities across the Global South have shaped distinct forms of livelihoods and resource management systems\, particularly in South and Southeast Asia. \nThe ongoing climate crisis has wreaked havoc on these livelihoods\, exacerbating vulnerabilities and deepening existing inequalities. The most disadvantaged communities are facing the gravest impacts\, which pose a threat not only to ecological balance and economic stability but also to human security. The paradox facing the Global South is that\, despite following different path-dependencies and minimal historical responsibility for ecological change\, they find themselves disproportionately affected and often less equipped to mitigate its impacts. This paradox heightens concerns over economic security\, as nations must divert limited resources from essential sectors towards adaptation and mitigation efforts. \nEven though global actions to restrict warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels have been inadequate\, the Global South has become a centre for creative and cooperative efforts\, both among its nations and in collaboration with the Global North. Often backed by state actors\, grassroots movements\, and indigenous methodologies\, these initiatives seek to address the complexities of ecological change and economic security. This is particularly true for South and Southeast Asia\, where local ecological practices\, democratic urban planning\, gender empowerment\, and land governance are shaping the way forward. \nThe solutions to these challenges may involve a blend of diverse approaches that ensure equitable resource distribution\, resilience building\, financial instruments and sustainable economic development\, all while focusing on regional specificities. \nAgainst this backdrop\, we invite advanced doctoral students\, postdoctoral scholars\, and early career researchers to a three-day interdisciplinary conference\, with particular attention to South Asia and Southeast Asia\, to explore the following themes: \n\nSustainability and Resilience: Analyse the interconnectedness of ecological\, economic\, and demographic resilience\, focusing on how communities in South and Southeast Asia navigate ecological change and respond to its differential impacts\, including\, but not limited to\, the food production and consumption system\, urban and rural planning system\, disaster management\, management of flora and fauna\, and economic security.\nHuman-Environmental Interactions: Investigate the complex relationships between humans and their environments\, emphasising innovative approaches that incorporate indigenous and local knowledge to address ecological and economic security. Examples may involve but not restricted to practices such as community-led reforestation\, traditional water conservation\, sustainable fishing techniques\, and habitat restoration.\nLabour\, Climate Refugees\, and Ecological Change: Examine the linkages between ecological change and migration patterns\, particularly the implications for labour markets\, livelihoods\, and economic adaptation in the Global South. This could involve understanding climate-induced displacement\, shifts in labour market dynamics\, challenges within the informal sector\, and the redistribution of economic activities due to environmental changes.\nAI\, Economic Security\, and Ecological Change: Explore the role of artificial intelligence in predicting\, mitigating\, and managing the effects of ecological change\, particularly in the context of ecological resilience and economic security. Applications might include AI-driven early warning systems\, advanced climate modelling\, agriculture management\, and optimising energy use in rural and urban areas.\nEcological Change\, Social Security\, and Social Protection: Examine the impacts of ecological change on social security\, social protection and insurance systems\, focusing on the development of social protection and insurance mechanisms to address vulnerabilities and inequalities. This can be seen in initiatives like climate-related insurance\, healthcare schemes\, welfare programs for climate refugees\, disaster relief systems\, and social safety nets designed to protect at-risk communities.\nEcological Change and Legal Reform: Assess the legal reforms required to meet new demands for social security\, individual rights\, responsibilities\, and regulations in response to climate-related challenges. Potential areas of reform include land tenure adjustments\, environmental justice frameworks\, legal provisions for climate compensation\, and regulatory changes aimed at fostering climate adaptation.\nEcological Change and Financial Instruments: Examine financial instruments\, such as bonds or climate funds\, that are essential for supporting resilient initiatives and long-term sustainability efforts. Submissions under this theme may include green bonds\, carbon pricing strategies\, climate adaptation funding\, and investment in renewable energy infrastructure.\n\nWe encourage submissions that critically engage with theoretical frameworks\, offer new methodological approaches\, or present novel empirical findings relevant to these themes. \nAbstract Submission Guidelines: \nSubmit an extended abstract of up to 1\,000 words. The extended abstract should clearly align with one of the above themes and include theoretical considerations\, research questions\, methodology\, and preliminary findings. \nEligible participants include PhD scholars in the final stages of their research\, postdoctoral fellows\, and those within seven years of completing their PhD. \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. \nImportant Dates: \n\nCall for abstract closed: January 31st\, 2025\nNotification to the selection abstracts: February 15th\, 2025\nFull Paper Submission Deadline: May 15\, 2025\nNotification of Final Acceptance: May 25\, 2025\nConference Dates: July 14-16\, 2025\n\nFor any further information\, please contact us at southasia@youngscholarsinitiative.org \nOrganising Team \n\nSunanda Nair-Bidkar\, INET\nRekha Bhangaonkar and Shailaja Fennell\, University of Cambridge
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/2nd-edition-of-the-political-economy-of-ecological-change-and-economic-security-in-the-global-south-2/
LOCATION:Centre of South Asian Studies\, Cambridge\, Cambridgeshire\, CB3\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250714
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250719
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250411T145806Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250425T202313Z
UID:10007382-1752451200-1752883199@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Global Law and Political Economy Summer Academy
DESCRIPTION:The Summer School offers an interactive\, non-hierarchical\, and focused mentorship and skill-building experience for students and faculty. It engages critically with the diverse considerations of political-economy-law while fostering democratic dialogue with local cultures. \nThe program spans three days: \n\nDay 1: Roundtable and writing workshop sessions (workshops modelled on IGLP format);\nDay 2: Case study focused on interactive\, problem-based group learning\, a focused master class\, and a cultural excursion exploring local custom and history; and\nDay 3: Lectures from high-profile judges at the intersection of policy\, power and law as well as a career mentorship session.\n\nThe Summer Academy is a collaboration between the INET YSI FLE Working Group\, the Law and Political Economy Collective (LPE-C)\, the Initiative for Global Law and Political Economy at the University of Manchester (iGLPE)\, the European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy (EAEPE)\, and the City of Roccella\, Italy. \nApplication Details: \nWe invite graduate students (Masters or Ph.D. students or within three years of completing Ph.D.) interested in exploring questions of law and political economy to apply. \n\nFunding: Partial travel stipends and shared accommodation provided.\nHow to Apply: Submit a 200-word abstract on a theme related to law and political economy; and CV (including any references) by 25 April 2025.\nAccepted participants will be requested to submit a working paper for the writing workshop between 3000-8000 words no later than 1 June 2025.\n\nFor more information contact: christina@youngscholarsinitiative.org.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/global-law-and-political-economy-summer-academy/
LOCATION:Roccella Ionica\, Roccella\, Reggio Calabria\, Italy
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250710T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250710T170000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250125T092720Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250220T054913Z
UID:10007181-1752134400-1752166800@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Transformative Cooperative Law Research: Early Career Researchers Agenda and Priorities for and Post 2025
DESCRIPTION:The problems of restrictive\, non-conducive and fragmented cooperative policies and legal frameworks have\, for a long time\, been reported in most developing countries. These have\, in one way or the other\, affected cooperative enterprises operations and ultimately sustainability. Laws\, in some countries\, have existed for a long time without any substantive changes. Besides\, the role of cooperative law research as a driving force for solutions for these problems has not been sufficiently explored. Significantly\, the nexus between cooperative law studies and human socio-economic needs pointed out in the United Nations Agenda for Sustainable Development 2030 is unsatisfactorily underlined. It is hard\, today\, for example in some Anglophone African countries\, because of existing restrictive and static cooperative laws\, to establish cooperatives that can engage into clean energy harnessing\, natural resources preservation\, online service provision (platform cooperatives)\, as well as professional services. This is notwithstanding the two times specific reference to cooperatives as important private sector actors in realisation of UN Sustainable Development Goals. The Globe has neither been into a serious discussion on role of cooperative law research for sustainable cooperative operations and ultimately members’ livelihood nor has it set agenda for cooperative law research and priority areas. It is on the basis of the issues aforementioned that the Panel is thought of and considered timely and imperative. The Panel seeks to deliberate on cooperative law research agenda and priorities for 2025 and beyond. It targets agenda and priorities that can be utilised by\, inter alia\, early career researchers in pursuit of cooperative enterprises transformative change for justice\, sustainability\, and prosperity. It is a forum where cooperative law researchers can dwell into the identification of cooperative law research agenda for developed and developing countries and respective priority areas. The discussion will uniquely focus on transformative cooperative law research divulging priority areas for 2025 and after. Discussions will include cooperative law research issues and priorities\, areas for transformation and priorities\, implementation and monitoring strategies. The Panel will ultimately come up with transformative cooperative law research agenda and their priorities. These will be used as means to strengthening existing legal environment and creating conducive ones. It is proposed to be held in the year 2025 which has been declared by the United Nations as the International Year of Cooperatives alongside the ICA Global Research Conference scheduled to take place in Montreal\, Canada between 8-11 July 2025. The ICA Global Research Conference is an important avenue for early career researchers to harness best practices and emerging areas for cooperative research from deliberations with prominent cooperative researchers and practitioners. The ICA Global Research Conference emphasise on the importance of inter-cooperation in driving transformative change for justice\, sustainability\, and prosperity. The diverse and pervasive research themes selected offers vast opportunity for early career researchers to learn and subsequently join hands and minds in addressing common issues generally against mankind and specifically against all types of cooperatives and their members. \n  \n 
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/transformative-cooperative-law-research-early-career-researchers-agenda-and-priorities-for-and-post-2025/
LOCATION:HEC University of Montreal\, Rue De la Gauchetière Ouest\, Montréal\, Montréal\, H2Z 1C1\, Canada
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250709T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250709T110000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20240112T203210Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251112T153433Z
UID:10005639-1752055200-1752058800@heske.wisdmlabs.net
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/2025-07-09/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/monthly-office-hours-for-aspiring-organizers/2025-07-09/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250708T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250708T153000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
UID:10008139-1751983200-1751988600@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/2025-07-08/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-07-08/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250708T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250710T170000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250428T034504Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251110T201230Z
UID:10007456-1751961600-1752166800@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Money as if Finance Mattered 2
DESCRIPTION:Approaches to money and finance in economics typically discount core dynamics: monetary models often abstract from finance (e.g.\, monetarist or new Keynesian)\, while financial models tend to ignore the temporal and structural role of money (e.g.\, Wicksellian traditions). When money is addressed\, it is frequently framed in narrowly domestic terms that privilege fiat authority while overlooking international constraints—or\, conversely\, in global terms that neglect the institutional capacities of governments and banking systems. \nIn this context\, Money as if Finance Mattered workshop series focuses on developing a credit money approach that moves away from representative agent models and sectoral aggregates toward modeling a liquidity based hierarchy of dynamic\, time-indexed balance sheets\, positioned within interlocking relations dominated by settlement constraint.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-as-if-finance-mattered-2/
LOCATION:University of Manchester\, Oxford Road\, Manchester\, Greater Manchester\, M13 9PL\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250708
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250709
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250414T092748Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250415T141957Z
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SUMMARY:YSI Day @ EPOG 2025
DESCRIPTION:EPOG (Economic POlicies for the Global transition) is a master’s programme created in 2012 with the support of the European Commission under the Erasmus Mundus Master’s Course label. Over the past decade\, it has trained more than 300 outstanding students in political economy\, emphasizing critical and institutionalist approaches. \nFollowing the success of the YSI-day at the 2024 EPOG Conference in Marseille\, we aim to continue this initiative at the 2025 conference in Venice. The event will bring together approximately 50 graduating students from EPOG 2 and EPOG+\, alongside over 30 alumni\, faculty members\, partners\, and invited guests. The YSI-day will introduce YSI to the new cohorts and facilitate collaboration between EPOG alumni and YSI working groups. Through interactive sessions\, participants will develop project proposals for the 2025/2026 academic year\, fostering long-term engagement between the EPOG community and YSI. \nCurrently\, EPOG comprises two master’s programmes\, EPOG 2 and EPOG+. The latter\, recognized as a programme of excellence by the European Commission (Erasmus Mundus Joint Master Degree)\, is coordinated by the University of Compiègne\, in partnership with Sorbonne University\, University Paris Cité\, University of Turin\, Berlin School of Economics and Law\, University Rome 3\, Vienna University of Economics and Business\, and the University of the Witwatersrand. Additionally\, EPOG collaborates with over 30 academic and non-academic partners worldwide\, including INET\, where many YSI members and EPOG alumni are actively involved. \nBy strengthening these connections\, the YSI-day at the EPOG Conference 2025 will further integrate young scholars into YSI’s global network\, fostering interdisciplinary research and innovative approaches to economic policy.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-day-epog-2025/
LOCATION:Isola di San Sèrvolo\, Venice\, Metropolitan City of Venice\, 30100\, Italy
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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GEO:45.4185887;12.3572863
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250707T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250707T130000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250630T195039Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250923T024257Z
UID:10007513-1751889600-1751893200@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:Stablecoins Uncovered: Regulation\, Innovation\, Evidence\, and the Future of Digital Money
DESCRIPTION:An exclusive interview series dedicated to exploring the dynamic world of stablecoins and their transformative impact on finance. This series delves deep into the latest policy changes\, groundbreaking innovations\, and evidence shaping the future of digital money. Discussions center on stablecoins—what they are\, how they work\, and why they matter for the evolving financial landscape. \nThe series is thrilled to bring audiences conversations with leading experts\, forward-thinking developers\, influential policymakers\, and insightful academicians—all at the forefront of stablecoin technology and regulation. Each episode uncovers truths\, challenges assumptions\, and presents real-world evidence as it charts the way forward for stablecoins and related financial innovations. \nWhether listeners are professionals in the field\, curious observers\, or passionate about the future of finance\, this series is designed to be engaging\, informative\, and welcoming. Audiences are invited to join as the series connects with visionaries shaping the future of digital money\, and to discover the opportunities and challenges that lie ahead in this exciting sector.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/stablecoins-uncovered-regulation-innovation-evidence-and-the-future-of-digital-money/2025-07-07/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/stablecoins-uncovered-regulation-innovation-evidence-and-the-future-of-digital-money/2025-07-07/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250707T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250707T170000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250117T090658Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250630T083150Z
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SUMMARY:Decolonizing our Imaginaries: Critical Approaches to Cooperative Studies
DESCRIPTION:Introduction \nIn 2025\, the international cooperative community will celebrate a special milestone as it designates the second International Year of Cooperatives in less than 20 years. This unique designation highlights cooperatives’ pivotal role in promoting socio-economic development\, sustainability\, and community resilience worldwide. The ICA CCR Young and Emerging Scholars (YES) Network\, together with the working group on Cooperatives from the Young Scholar Initiative (YSI) of the Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) and in collaboration with HEC University of Montreal\, would like to organize a workshop dedicated to empower early career researchers in the field of cooperatives by providing them with valuable insights and opportunities to present their research\, network with other peers\, and showcase their work. \nThe field of cooperative research is growing in prominence\, taking on increased urgency as we seek to address the challenges posed by traditional scholarly narratives\, such as in economics\, management\, agriculture\, climate studies\, and\, more broadly\, social sciences. However\, in different sectorial departments\, it is still challenging to make cooperative scholars’ voices heard and valorize them. Within this context\, the workshop can empower and connect emergent scholars who grapple with the complexities of conducting research in this expanding domain. \nYoung Scholars will gather for an informal dinner on the evening of Sunday\, July 6th at the social cooperative Batiment 7\, where a guided tour of the cooperative and a discussion with its member will start immersing young and emerging scholars into the cooperative spirit. \n  \nThe workshop will take place on July 7th. The central theme of the workshop is decolonizing cooperatives\, addressing historical inequalities\, and empowering marginalized communities. Special guests\, such as Prof. Marcelo Vieta and Prof Simon Teasdale will offer valuable perspectives and insights on this topic\, enriching the discussion and inspiring future research endeavors. The focus will be on new radical and innovative ways of thinking about cooperatives\, how can coop support improving sustainability standards\, the definition of economic and political democracy and the role of cooperatives in pushing democracy. We will focus on how to decolonize our language when we do research on cooperative.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/decolonizing-our-imaginaries-critical-approaches-to-cooperative-studies/
LOCATION:HEC University of Montreal\, Hélène Desmarais Building\, Rue De la Gauchetière Ouest\, Montréal\, Montréal\, H2Z 1Z5\, Canada
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250703T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250703T170000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250202T195500Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250202T195500Z
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SUMMARY:Methodological Pluralism in Critical Finance Research (3-4 July 2025)
DESCRIPTION:After a decade and a half of rapid expansion under the shadow of the 2008 crisis\, critical finance scholarship has developed a remarkably pluralist research agenda. Topics range from financial hegemony to subordination\, from sustainable to digital finance\, from asset managers to hedge funds\, from central to shadow banking\, and more. Scholars have studied the transatlantic core of global finance as well as its manifestations in developing and emerging markets\, international and comparative dimensions of finance\, the actions of financial elites and processes of everyday financialisation. As research topics have multiplied\, so have research methodologies. Current works draw on a wide range of different sources from large commercial data to experiments\, from public archives to digital records\, from expert interviews to field notes\, and more. Scholars use numerous tools to generate insights from these sources and a wide range of different approaches to interpret them effectively. \nOn 3-4 July 2025\, this conference seeks to explicitly engage with and foster a conversation about this methodological pluralism. It invites scholars to reflect on their own research practices\, exchange ideas about different sources\, tools\, and approaches\, and to discuss their unique contribution to our collective understanding of global finance and financialised capitalism. Our aim is to showcase a wide range of empirical sources and analytical tools\, and to discuss the unique challenges and opportunities they provide. \nTopics and focus \nTo that end\, we invite interested researchers to present papers – both published and unpublished – that can spark a conversation about methodological challenges and opportunities in the critical study of global finance. This may include papers with a primary focus on method but conventional research papers are also welcome. In both cases\, we ask authors to discuss the methods that were applied to studying finance. \nFor example\, we are interested in how scholars use the following data sources and methods in their research: \nAI tools / archives / audio-visual data / balance sheets / behavioural experiments / company reports / descriptive statistics / data terminals / digital methods / expert interviews / field notes / financial accounts / focus groups / grey literature / industry events / network analysis / legal analysis / newspapers / policy documents / participant observation / public speeches / satellite data / social media / spatial data / survey data / visualisations / web scraping \nThe conference will feature a keynote lecture by Dariusz Wójcik\, Professor of Financial Geography at the National University of Singapore (NUS) and author of the recently published ‘Atlas of Finance‘ (Yale University Press\, 2024). \nSubmissions \nPlease submit a short abstract (300 words) which clearly indicates the empirical sources and/or methodological tools that will be discussed. Please send your abstracts by 15 February 2025 to globalfinancemethods@gmail.com \nFunds are available to support travel expenses for a number of unfunded early career scholars. If you would like to apply for financial assistance\, please indicate this in a brief statement when submitting your abstract. \n  \nImportant dates \n\nPlease submit your abstract by: 15 February 2025\nNotifications of acceptance by: 15 March 2025\nRegistration due: 15 April 2025\nPapers due: 15 June 2025\nConference dates: 3-4 July 2025
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/methodological-pluralism-in-critical-finance-research-3-4-july-2025/
LOCATION:Goethe University Frankfurt\, Theodor-W.-Adorno-Platz 6\, Frankfurt am Main\, 60323\, Germany
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250702T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250702T190000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250219T162548Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250219T181729Z
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SUMMARY:YSI @ IAFFE 2025 Pre-Conference
DESCRIPTION:Poster Session “Social Justice through Solidarity: Cultivating solidarity within feminist economics” \nThe 2025 IAFFE Pre-Conference will take place on July-2 before the Conference (from July-3 to July-5) at the University of Massachusetts – Amherst\, United States. The theme of the 2025 IAFFE Annual Conference “Social Justice through Solidarity: Cultivating solidarity within feminist economics” encourages us to build on the possibilities implied by thinking about solidarity:  \n\nWhy is solidarity important in the work of feminist economists? \nWhat’s the relationship between solidarity and concepts like intersectionality or coalition-building? \nHow can we contribute to redressing historical injustices (e.g. slavery\, genocides\, or colonialism)?  \nWhat are the dynamics that get in the way of solidarity\, and how can feminist economists help overcome those barriers? \nWhat would a feminist economics lens add to the analysis of the solidarity economy? \nHow can feminist economists incorporate insights from the work on the commons\, cooperatives\, social profitability\, or mutual aid\, for instance\, especially drawing on the work of women of color\, Indigenous women\, and women from the Global South? \nHow does solidarity scale at the macroeconomic level? How does taking solidarity into account change the way we think about microeconomic interactions?\n\n  \nThis YSI Gender and Economics Working Group Poster Session is designed to provide an opportunity for young scholars to present their work (in diverse formats and states: papers\, drafts and  work in progress document;  videos\, podcast\, etc) and discuss it among peers in a forum which brings together young and senior feminist scholars from around the world.  \n  \nWe invite all young researchers who might be interested in presenting a contribution to apply by submitting an abstract (300 words max)\, describe how it relates to the conference theme and share your motivation for participating.  \nWe seek to generate intergenerational\, interdisciplinary and interregional networks to share lessons learned about how we might use solidarity to advance social justice through feminist economics. With that in mind we welcome contributions from scholars of different disciplines and young economists with diverse career paths in advocacy and policy making dealing with the above questions in their academic development.  \nParticipants will have the chance to present their work in a poster during the pre-conference.  \nAs this is an in-person only event and\, to encourage young scholars and early careers participation\, some selected participants\, prioritizing those based in the region\, could be eligible for financial support for travel and accommodation during the conference. Please indicate the need for funding in the application. Note that acceptance of a proposal does not imply a funding commitment and that the stipends could only be used for travel expenses but do not cover the registration fees that each participant should afford on their own.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-iaffe-2025-pre-conference/
LOCATION:University of Massachusetts\, Massachusetts Avenue\, Amherst\, Hampshire County\, 01003\, United States
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250701T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250701T190000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250317T121821Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250702T083738Z
UID:10007496-1751392800-1751396400@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:YSI Webinars for the UN Rio Conventions: “Why do climate negotiations fail? From different points of view”
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  \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. \n  \nThe purpose of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention (COP) of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) is to convene member countries every year to determine ambition and responsibilities and identify and assess climate measures. The 21st session of the COP (COP21) led to the Paris Agreement\, which mobilized global collective action to limit the global temperature increase to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels by 2050\, and to act to adapt to the already existing effects of climate change. This year\, COP30 will be held from 10 to 21 November\, in Belem\, Brazil. \n  \nAs YSI Community\, we are involved in the UNFCCC Processes through engagements in the COPs and SBs to raise awareness of the Climate Process. However\, we see a challenge on how the negotiation process turns into a success. \n  \nThis year\, we invite you to the YSI Webinars on the UNFCCC where we will go deeper into “Why do climate negotiations fail?”. To understand why do climate negotiations fail\, we want to create a holistic perspective. In this process\, we want to consider three distinct perspectives to the climate negotiations. Namely\, theoretical (scientists)\, practical (non-party) and negotiators (party) perspectives. \n  \nFirst Webinar: From a Practical Perspective with Clive Donnley on March 26th at 6 PM CET\n\nTo learn from NGOs and non-party organizations who have experience in the climate negotiations process.  \n\n\n\nWhat are the existing limitations for non-parties to engage in climate negotiations? \nTo what extent do their voices matter? \nWhat do they wish to see differently?\n\n\n\nModerator: Vania Llerena.\nDiscussants: Annet Dianah Nannono\, Adekunle Fiyin Ademikanra\, and Srishti Jain. \nAccess to the Session Recording here.  \n\n  \nSecond Webinar: From a Negotiators Perspective with Wassim Dbouk on May 28th at 6 PM CET\n\nTo learn from those who collaborated with politicians from a country (party) active in the negotiations. To understand the following questions\, \n\n\n\nWhat are the challenges in convincing parties to commit?\nWhy do parties avoid making climate commitments and agree? \nWhat type of roadblocks can be avoided and how?\n\n\n\nModerator: Maria Virginia Solis Wahnish.\nDiscussants: Simba Marowa\, Adekunle Fiyin Ademikanra\, and Mateusz Ciasnocha. \nAccess to the Session Recording here.\nAccess to the Slides here.  \n\n  \nThird Webinar: From a Theoretical Perspective with Piotr Tryjanowski on July 1st at 6 PM CET\nTo discuss why we observe failure in climate negotiations. To be specific\,  \n\n\n\n\n\nWhat drives persistent coordination challenges in international climate talks?\nHow might insights from natural sciences help reframe the way we approach climate negotiations?\nWhat are the possible alternative solutions to devise a climate negotiations system to mitigate the existing limitations?\n\n\n\n\n\nModerator: Nurlan Lalayev.\nDiscussants: Reyhan Mammadova and Florian Repper. \nAccess to the Session Recording here.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-webinars-on-the-unfccc-why-do-climate-negotiations-fail-from-different-points-of-view/2025-07-01/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-webinars-on-the-unfccc-why-do-climate-negotiations-fail-from-different-points-of-view/2025-07-01/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250701T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250701T153000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
UID:10008138-1751378400-1751383800@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/2025-07-01/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
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LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-07-01/
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250701
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250702
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SUMMARY:YSI-EAEPE Summer School: Reimagining Migration Economics through a Pluralist Lens
DESCRIPTION:Dates: 30.06.2025 – 02.07.2025 \nVenue: Scuola di Economia e Studi Aziendali – Roma Tre\, Roma \nAbstract Submission Deadline: 15.05.2025 – Rolling Acceptance \nThe 18th EAEPE Summer School explores migration through a pluralist\, heterodox lens\, offering a space to engage critically with the mainstream of models of migration economics. It examines migration as a complex\, multidimensional process shaped by structural\, historical\, and cultural forces. Here\, participants will have the opportunity to learn from renowned scholars in the field and receive feedback on their work. \nPeople have always moved—between rural and urban areas\, across borders\, within regions\, and across continents—shaping and reshaping economic\, cultural\, and psychological landscapes. Current political debates often frame migration as a new crisis threatening Western industrialised nations\, focusing narrowly on movements from colonised countries to the so-called Global North as if these flows were the entirety of migration. Migration is a multifaceted phenomenon that can be read as driven by individual motivations\, imperial or capitalist institutions\, or by cultural processes\, but clearly never understood through a single perspective. \nPeople might move to search for opportunities\, or because they are forcibly displaced due to war\, political instability\, and environmental pressures. People from the capitalist core might move to the periphery as expats in a legitimised role\, while others move illegally through borders made of barbed wire and salt. Capitalist labour demands funnel many into low-wage\, precarious work in places that seem to be more focused on value-creation than on societal and human needs. Stratification dynamics create new and reproduce old racialised\, gender\, or class groups\, with new marginalizations and inequalities. Migration might open new hopes of cooperation and development where it is least expected. Together\, these forces form a complex\, evolving network that continues to redefine societies\, economies\, and identities worldwide. \nHowever\, mainstream economics often reduces migration to a simplistic question of labour supply and individual utility maximisation. Neoclassical models generally portray migrants as rational actors responding to market signals\, thereby ignoring broader structural influences and the diversity of motivations behind migration. Scholars from all schools of social sciences have critiqued this approach\, arguing that it fails to account for power imbalances\, historical inequalities\, and the role of social and environmental factors in migration. \nIn response\, the Summer School offers a pluralistic approach that draws on heterodox economics and interdisciplinary perspectives\, aiming to equip participants with tools to analyse migration in its full complexity. This approach considers this phenomenon as a process embedded within a broader network of forces—economic\, social\, ecological\, and historical—that interact dynamically and shape global patterns. Rather than viewing migration through isolated “push” and “pull” factors\, we emphasise its role within interconnected systems. Participants will explore diverse perspectives\, including the impact of institutional and structural dynamics\, the political economy of global labour markets\, ecological pressures\, social and cultural networks\, and the historical legacies of colonialism. \nThrough these lenses\, we aim to build a richer\, more nuanced understanding of migration in economics that challenges simplistic economistic narratives and captures the complex reality of global movement. The Summer School is Co-Organised with the European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy (EAEPE) to connect with established heterodox scholars and rather than one-directional teaching we want to co-develop new ideas with PhD Students by using workshop formats and non-formal education methods. \nThe 18th EAEPE Summer School is open to PhD students and early-career researchers working in particular in the field of institutional and evolutionary analysis\, but is not limited to those approaches. Lecturers will address the topic of migration from different perspectives and approaches. Many Research Areas are relevant: Social Economics\, Public Economics\, Migration Economics\,Development Economics\, Macroeconomics\, Labour Economics\, Urban and Regional Economics\, Economic History\, Evolutionary Economics\, Comparative Economics\, and the impact of migration on Innovation and Industrial Policy. \nMore generally\, contributions from all fields using institutional\, evolutionary\, multidisciplinary approaches are welcome. Lectures by internationally renowned scholars will be given in the morning\, while afternoons will be devoted to presentations by advanced PhD students and early-career researchers\, who will thus benefit from comments and suggestions from experts in the field. \nMore details on the website of EAEPE
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-eaepe-summer-school-reimagining-migration-economics-through-a-pluralist-lense/
LOCATION:Scuola di Economia e Studi Aziendali  – Roma Tre\, Via Silvio D'Amico\, Roma\, Città metropolitana di Roma Capitale\, 00145\, Italy
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250626
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250627
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
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UID:10007449-1750896000-1750982399@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:YSI ft. Degrowth Cabaret @ ISEE-Degrowth conference 2025
DESCRIPTION:The Degrowth Cabaret is a performative and participatory event that invites conference participants and local audiences to engage with degrowth imaginaries in a vibrant\, unconventional format. Rather than offering another lecture or panel\, this will be a shared stage where young scholars\, activists\, artists (both professional and amateur)\, and creative producers co-create a unique cabaret performance that reflects\, questions\, and plays with the themes of post-growth futures—sufficiency\, care\, decoloniality\, and utopia\, among others. \nThis will be the first cabaret of its kind: an artistic intervention within the degrowth movement that challenges the boundaries between academia\, activism\, and art. Blending theatre\, music\, dance\, storytelling\, satire\, and experimental formats—including performance-lectures and physical theatre—it is not just a show\, but an invitation to co-create\, co-learn\, and imagine together. The Cabaret foregrounds critical joy\, embodiment\, and collective creativity as tools for socio-ecological transformation\, offering new ways of feeling and acting upon economic alternatives. \nThe Degrowth Cabaret is a hybrid event that combines performance\, critical dialogue\, and collective creation to explore the pressing questions of degrowth and socio-ecological transformation. It will premiere during the ISEE – Degrowth Conference 2025 in Oslo\, blending artistic expression\, academic insight\, and public participation into a unique format that invites audiences to imagine futures beyond the growth imperative. \nYSI emerged in response to the 2008 crisis\, as a space to incorporate new and critical voices into the conversation about our economic systems. We want to take that mission one step further by inviting young degrowth artivists to join us not only through theory and analysis\, but also through artistic\, embodied\, and collaborative forms of expression. \nThe Degrowth Cabaret opens doors to new audiences. It creates a bridge between young scholars and artists\, activists\, and creative practitioners who may have thought YSI was not for them—either because they don’t have formal academic training or because they express their insights in non-traditional ways. These are people equally invested in the socio-ecological transformation we seek\, but who speak a different language. With this project\, we aim to build a new shared language—playful\, critical\, and inclusive. \nBy creating space for experimentation\, imagination\, and radical collaboration\, the Degrowth Cabaret fosters new kinds of interdisciplinary dialogues and new ways of “doing knowledge.” In that sense\, it directly contributes to the YSI mission of pluralizing economics and nurturing a new generation of thinkers and doers. It helps expand the YSI network into territories that are both intellectually and socially vital.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-ft-degrowth-cabaret-isee-degrowth-conference-2025/
LOCATION:Blitz\, Oslo\, Norway
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250625T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250627T170000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250107T215129Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250313T180308Z
UID:10007153-1750838400-1751043600@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:YSI Experimental Panel @DSA2025: Interdisciplinary Workshop on Institutions and Development
DESCRIPTION:In October 2024\, Daron Acemoglu\, Simon Johnson\, and James A. Robinson (AJR) were awarded the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences for their work on institutions and how they affect economic development and prosperity. As highly influential as their contributions are in the field of economics\, this award has been met with much criticism not just across disciplines and fields of study in the social sciences but also from heterodox schools of thought within economics.  \nPart of this criticism has been that their economic analysis is historically inaccurate and is not adequately informed by other fields such as development studies\, political science\, and history. This event proposal\, by taking the momentum gained by institutional perspectives from the 2024 Nobel Prize win by AJR and acknowledging the need for discourse on economic development to be more meaningfully informed by different social sciences\, thereby wishes to forge connections among Young Scholars working on institutions and development across different fields and through different perspectives by establishing a collaboration with the Development Studies Association (DSA) at their annual conference in June 2025. \nThe proposed YSI panel will take an experimental format given that the main objective is to establish theoretical nexus\, empirical extensions\, and concrete opportunities for interdisciplinary work in investigating the role of institutions on development. Thus\, this panel will welcome papers highlighting how institutions have been theorised and operationalised across social sciences such as political economy and development studies\, contextualised within the conference theme of navigating the present polycrisis. As a novelty\, each participant will not present their own submission but will instead be in charge of discussing a paper submitted by another Young Scholar. Their discussion must focus on how their own research benefits from and informs the work that has been assigned to them. Young Scholars will then be able to provide clarifications and facilitate a deeper understanding of their own work. Thus\, a concrete outcome from this experimental panel would be a network of early career researchers working on closely related topics\, which can potentially lead to joint research projects and future collaborations. \nDSA 2025 will also be a hybrid event\, so we also welcome applications from participants who may not be able to join us in Bath in person.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-experimental-panel-dsa2025-interdisciplinary-workshop-on-institutions-and-development/
LOCATION:University of Bath\, Bath\, Bath and North East Somerset\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250625
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250628
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20250127T073853Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250127T075843Z
UID:10007183-1750809600-1751068799@heske.wisdmlabs.net
SUMMARY:YSI Workshop at the 28th Annual Conference on Global Economic Analysis (GTAP)
DESCRIPTION:On the occasion of the 28th Annual Conference on Global Economic Analysis organized by Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa under the theme “Accelerating Economic Transformation\, Resilience\, Diversification\, and Job Creation\,” at the Radisson Blu Hotel & Convention Centre\, Kigali\, Rwanda on June 25-27\, 2025\, URE Working Group will host a dedicated workshop for young scholars interested in contributing to the dynamic field of urban and regional economics through quantitative analysis. This workshop aims to foster an interactive environment where emerging economists can showcase their research\, obtain feedback\, and engage with seasoned professionals. \nThe workshop will provide a platform for young scholars to engage with established economists and experts in the field of economics\, focusing on quantitative analysis of urban economic issues in Africa and beyond. This dedicated workshop will be held in conjunction with the conference under the theme “Accelerating Urban Economic Transformation and Resilience through Quantitative Analysis\,” and we invite scholars whose paper were accepted and whose research work  focus on the following 7 subthemes: \n\nUrban Informality and Economic Resilience\nSpatial Restructuring and Inequality in Global Value Chains\nHarnessing Digital Economies for Urban & Regional Resilience\nSustainable Urban Development through Green Transitions\nPeri-Urbanization and Access to Opportunities\nLocal Fiscal Policy in Addressing Urban Inequalities\nNeoliberal Reforms and the Informal Economy in the Global South\n\nParticipants whose research focuses on the following 2025 GTAP conference themes are also invited: \n\nAdvancements and resilience in value chains and economic development\nAfrica in the global economy\nSeizing the benefits of the digital economy for growth\nTackling the economics of regional integration and cooperation\nWhat the green transition means for Africa\nFilling data gaps – understanding the informal economy\nFood security and nutrition\nFragmentation of global trade\nPromoting gender in development\nReducing poverty and inequality\nTechnology adoption and infrastructure development\n\nThe workshop will include a combination of presentations\, interactive discussions\, and collaborative sessions. Participants will present their research focusing on the conference subthemes above. The workshop will be geared towards graduate students\, early-career researchers\, and young professionals engaged in Urban and Regional  economics research.
URL:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/ysi-workshop-at-the-28th-annual-conference-on-global-economic-analysis-gtap/
LOCATION:Radisson Blu Hotel & Convention Centre\, Kigali\, Nyarugenge\, Rwanda
CATEGORIES:An in-person event
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250624T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250624T153000
DTSTAMP:20260413T161353
CREATED:20231212T030110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T063624Z
UID:10008137-1750773600-1750779000@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/2025-06-24/
CATEGORIES:A series of zooms
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/lecture2-p4x2-hierarchy-pyramid-dynamics.png
LOCATION:https://heske.wisdmlabs.net/event/money-view-reading-group/2025-06-24/
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END:VCALENDAR