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References.bib.lyz~
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%% This BibTeX bibliography file was created using BibDesk. 0_XQI8F4GC 0_PFRKU6VZ 0_FSP63RFM 0_X783KAKV 0_Z34WWM4N 0_W8Z7A9XJ 0_X8B8NA63 0_PG67TTIX 0_ECMMGVHV 0_JFGCZGK3 0_VBDR5M2T
%% http://bibdesk.sourceforge.net/
%% Created for Marshall Feldman at 2016-11-11 16:07:57 -0500
%% Saved with string encoding Unicode (UTF-8)
@book{Willer_1973_Systematic,
Author = {Willer, David and Willer, Judith},
Date = {1973},
Date-Added = {2016-10-27 20:23:20 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-27 20:23:20 +0000},
Isbn = {0-13-880351-X},
Keywords = {Methodology History,Social sciences},
Location = {{Englewood Cliffs, N.J}},
Pagetotal = {145},
Publisher = {{Prentice-Hall}},
Series = {General sociology series},
Shorttitle = {Systematic {{Empiricism}}},
Timestamp = {2016-10-27T20:17:25Z},
Title = {Systematic {{Empiricism}}: {{Critique}} of a {{Pseudoscience}}}}
@article{Blackburn_2008_subprime,
Author = {Blackburn, Robin},
Date-Added = {2016-10-24 19:24:09 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-24 19:24:58 +0000},
File = {BlackburnR 2008 - The subprime crisis.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files-1/Zotero_Library//BlackburnR/BlackburnR 2008 - The subprime crisis.pdf:application/pdf},
Journaltitle = {New Left Review},
Month = {March - April},
Pages = {63--106},
Timestamp = {2008-11-29T04:01:55Z},
Title = {The Subprime Crisis},
Volume = {50},
Year = {2008}}
@report{Levitin_2012_Explaining,
Abstract = {There is little consensus as to the cause of the housing bubble that precipitated the financial crisis of 2008. Numerous explanations exist: misguided monetary policy; a global savings surplus; government policies encouraging affordable homeownership; irrational consumer expectations of rising housing prices; inelastic housing supply. None of these explanations, however, is capable of fully explaining the housing bubble. This Article posits a new explanation for the housing bubble. First, it demonstrates that the bubble was a supply-side phenomenon attributable to an excess of mispriced mortgage finance: mortgage-finance spreads declined and volume increased, even as risk increased \textemdash{} a confluence attributable only to an oversupply of mortgage finance. Second, it explains the mortgage-finance supply glut as resulting from the failure of markets to price risk correctly due to the complexity, opacity, and heterogeneity of the unregulated private-label mortgage-backed securities (PLS) that began to dominate the market in 2004. The rise of PLS exacerbated informational asymmetries between the financial institutions that intermediate mortgage finance and PLS investors. These intermediation agents exploited informational asymmetries to encourage overinvestment in PLS that boosted the financial intermediaries' volume-based profits and enabled borrowers to bid up housing prices. This Article proposes the standardization of PLS as an information-forcing device. Reducing the complexity and heterogeneity of PLS would facilitate accurate risk pricing, which is necessary to rebuild a sustainable, stable housing-finance market.},
Author = {Levitin, Adam J. and Wachter, Susan M.},
Date = {2012-04-12},
Date-Added = {2016-10-24 19:20:58 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-24 19:20:58 +0000},
File = {LevitinA, WachterS 2012 - Explaining the Housing Bubble.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files-1/Zotero_Library//LevitinA, WachterS/LevitinA, WachterS 2012 - Explaining the Housing Bubble.pdf:application/pdf;Snapshot:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Firefox/Profiles/9ke9fs84.default/zotero/storage/P8UQI3DE/papers.html:text/html},
Institution = {{Social Science Research Network}},
Keywords = {affordable housing goals,CMBS,Community Reinvestment Act,Fannie Mae,Freddie Mac,GSE,housing bubble,housing finance,informational asymmetries,irrational exuberance,MBS,mortgage,PLS,Real estate,RMBS,securitization,standardization},
Location = {{Rochester, NY}},
Note = {00196},
Number = {ID 1669401},
Timestamp = {2016-10-24T19:16:26Z},
Title = {Explaining the {{Housing Bubble}}},
Type = {{{SSRN Scholarly Paper}}},
Url = {https://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=1669401},
Urldate = {2016-10-24},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {https://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=1669401}}
@inproceedings{Peck_2015_Navigating,
Abstract = {In both a formal and temperamental sense, contemporary Anglo-American economic geography is a heterodox enterprise. The paper explores distinctive currents in the discipline's theory-culture, both in its own terms and in relation to the wider field of heterodox economics. A methodological intervention is proposed, inspired by the substantivist project of ``comparative economy,'' with the
goal of prompting a renewed conversation between economic geography's ``lumpers,'' those concerned with the refinement and reconstruction of generalized categories of analysis, and its ``splitters,'' who opt to work against (or outside) such tacitly accepted categories, favoring their
deconstruction and displacement. Even if lumpers and splitters are never entirely comfortable in one another's company, they should not be allowed to live apart. Furthermore, their cohabitation is an enduring and positive characteristic of economic geography's heterodox theory-culture, the substantive concerns of which center on the problematic of economic spatiality, its constitution, causality, and consequences.},
Author = {Peck, Jamie},
Date = {2015-10-21},
Date-Added = {2016-10-21 20:25:58 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-21 20:25:58 +0000},
Eventtitle = {Global Conference on Economic Geography},
File = {PeckJ 2015 - Navigating Economic Geographies.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files/Zotero_Library//PeckJ/PeckJ 2015 - Navigating Economic Geographies.pdf:application/pdf},
Location = {{Oxford University, Oxford, UK}},
Note = {00000},
Timestamp = {2016-10-14T23:55:03Z},
Title = {Navigating {{Economic Geographies}}}}
@article{Fourcade_2015_Superiority,
Abstract = {In this essay, we analyze the dominant position of economics within the network of the social sciences in the United States. We begin by documenting the relative insularity of economics, using bibliometric data. Next we analyze the tight management of the field from the top down, which gives economics its characteristic hierarchical structure. Economists also distinguish themselves from other social scientists through their much better material situation (many teach in business schools, have external consulting activities), their more individualist worldviews, and their confidence in their discipline's ability to fix the world's problems. Taken together, these traits constitute what we call the superiority of economists, where economists' objective supremacy is intimately linked with their subjective sense of authority and entitlement. While this superiority has certainly fueled economists' practical involvement and their considerable influence over the economy, it has also exposed them more to conflicts of interests, political critique, even derision.},
Author = {Fourcade, Marion and Ollion, Etienne and Algan, Yann},
Date-Added = {2016-10-21 18:28:11 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-21 18:29:46 +0000},
Doi = {http://dx.doi.org.uri.idm.oclc.org/10.1257/jep.29.1.89},
File = {FourcadeM, OllionE, AlganY 2015 - The Superiority of Economists.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files-1/Zotero_Library//FourcadeM, OllionE, AlganY/FourcadeM, OllionE, AlganY 2015 - The Superiority of Economists.pdf:application/pdf},
Issn = {08953309},
Journaltitle = {The Journal of Economic Perspectives},
Keywords = {Analysis,Business and Economics,Conflicts of interest,Consultants,economics,Influence,Social sciences,Studies},
Langid = {english},
Month = {Winter},
Number = {1},
Pages = {89--114},
Rights = {Copyright American Economic Association Winter 2015},
Timestamp = {2016-10-21T18:19:34Z},
Title = {The {{Superiority}} of {{Economists}}},
Url = {http://search.proquest.com.uri.idm.oclc.org/docview/1651522567/266926233C13472EPQ/1},
Urldate = {2016-10-21},
Volume = {29},
Year = {2015},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://search.proquest.com.uri.idm.oclc.org/docview/1651522567/266926233C13472EPQ/1},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org.uri.idm.oclc.org/10.1257/jep.29.1.89}}
@book{Shaikh_2016_Capitalism:,
Abstract = {Orthodox economics operates within a hypothesized world of perfect competition in which perfect consumers and firms act to bring about supposedly optimal outcomes. The discrepancies between this model and the reality it claims to address are then attributed to particular imperfections in reality itself. Most heterodox economists seize on this fact and insist that the world is characterized by imperfect competition.},
Author = {Shaikh, Anwar},
Date = {2016},
Date-Added = {2016-10-20 20:33:46 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-20 20:33:46 +0000},
File = {Snapshot:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Firefox/Profiles/9ke9fs84.default/zotero/storage/X77FPHBE/capitalism-9780199390632.html:text/html},
Note = {00012},
Publisher = {{Oxford University Press}},
Timestamp = {2016-09-24T12:49:05Z},
Title = {Capitalism: {{Competition}}, {{Conflict}}, {{Crises}}},
Url = {https://global.oup.com/academic/product/capitalism-9780199390632},
Urldate = {2016-09-19},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {https://global.oup.com/academic/product/capitalism-9780199390632}}
@book{Bowles_2005_Understanding,
Author = {Bowles, Samuel and Edwards, Richard and Roosevelt, Frank},
Date = {2005-03-10},
Date-Added = {2016-10-20 20:22:49 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-20 20:22:49 +0000},
Edition = {3},
Isbn = {0-19-513865-1},
Keywords = {ECN/LRS 526,ILL},
Pagetotal = {608},
Publisher = {{Oxford University Press, USA}},
Shorttitle = {Understanding {{Capitalism}}},
Timestamp = {2012-08-02T17:18:47Z},
Title = {Understanding {{Capitalism}}: {{Competition}}, {{Command}}, and {{Change}}}}
@article{Dicken_2004_Geographers,
Abstract = {Over the years, geographers have developed a disturbing \textendash{} even dysfunctional \textendash{} habit of missing out on important intellectual and politically significant debates, even those in which geographers would seem to have a major role to play. The syndrome of processes currently bundled together within the term `globalization' is intrinsically geographical, as are the outcomes of such processes. Yet, once again, it seems, we are not, as a discipline, centrally involved in what are clearly very `big issues' indeed. The purpose of this paper is to explore, in the context of ongoing globalization debates, the bases of this undesirable situation and to consider what might be done to redress it in ways that could both enhance intra- and interdisciplinarity and also make a contribution towards building a better world.},
Author = {Dicken, Peter},
Date = {2004-03-01},
Date-Added = {2016-10-19 21:33:10 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-19 21:33:10 +0000},
Doi = {10.1111/j.0020-2754.2004.00111.x},
File = {DickenP 2004 - Geographers and `globalization' - (yet) another missed boat.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files//DickenP/DickenP 2004 - Geographers and `globalization' - (yet) another missed boat.pdf:application/pdf;Snapshot:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Firefox/Profiles/9ke9fs84.default/zotero/storage/FTE3KJTF/abstract.html:text/html},
Issn = {1475-5661},
Journaltitle = {Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers},
Keywords = {disciplinarity,geography,globalization},
Langid = {english},
Note = {00262},
Number = {1},
Pages = {5--26},
Shorttitle = {Geographers and `globalization'},
Timestamp = {2016-10-19T21:22:43Z},
Title = {Geographers and `globalization': (Yet) Another Missed Boat?},
Url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com.uri.idm.oclc.org/doi/10.1111/j.0020-2754.2004.00111.x/abstract},
Urldate = {2016-10-19},
Volume = {29},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com.uri.idm.oclc.org/doi/10.1111/j.0020-2754.2004.00111.x/abstract},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.0020-2754.2004.00111.x}}
@article{Peck_2016_Macroeconomic,
Abstract = {In dialogue with Ray Hudson's paper on `rising powers' in globalizing capitalism, this review article reflects on the position and priority of these macroscopic questions in the field of economic geography, focusing in particular on the prospects for a reanimated political economy of uneven spatial development. Two themes are explored. First, the paper asks what it means to confront the problematic of rising (and falling) capitalisms, and why it is that the vocabulary for this discussion has to be imported, if not improvised. Second, it explores what it might mean not just to revisit and re(in)state, but to reconstruct notions of uneven spatial development, which despite their virtually uncontestable status in the field of economic geography have in practice often been allowed recede into the explanatory background, either as an implicit ontological precondition or as little more than an ambient sensibility.},
Author = {Peck, Jamie},
Date = {2016-10},
Date-Added = {2016-10-19 20:30:18 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-11-11 21:03:19 +0000},
Doi = {10.1080/23792949.2016.1237263},
File = {PeckJ 2016 - Macroeconomic geographies.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files/Zotero_Library//PeckJ/PeckJ 2016 - Macroeconomic geographies.pdf:application/pdf},
Issn = {2379-2949},
Journaltitle = {Area Development and Policy},
Issue = {3},
Pages = {305--322},
Shortjournal = {Area Development and Policy},
Timestamp = {2016-10-14T16:01:25Z},
Title = {Macroeconomic Geographies},
Url = {http://www-tandfonline-com.uri.idm.oclc.org/doi/full/10.1080/23792949.2016.1237263},
Volume = {1},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www-tandfonline-com.uri.idm.oclc.org/doi/full/10.1080/23792949.2016.1237263},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23792949.2016.1237263}}
@article{Gaffney_2008_Great,
Author = {Gaffney, Mason},
Date-Added = {2016-10-13 20:41:23 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-13 20:42:21 +0000},
File = {GaffneyM 2008 - The Great Crash of 2008.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files/Zotero_Library//GaffneyM/GaffneyM 2008 - The Great Crash of 2008.pdf:application/pdf},
Journaltitle = {GroundSwell},
Keywords = {Land Economics},
Timestamp = {2009-02-11T20:53:29Z},
Title = {The {{Great Crash}} of 2008},
Url = {http://www.masongaffney.org/essays/Great_Crash_of_2008.pdf},
Urldate = {2008-09-21},
Year = {2008},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.masongaffney.org/essays/Great_Crash_of_2008.pdf}}
@article{Hall_2013_Geographies,
Abstract = {This report focuses on the intersection between finance and the `real economy'. I begin by examining how political economy approaches to money and the wider financialization literature reveal the entangled relationship between finance and broader economic practices. I then review how recent work in economic geography has used these approaches to develop understandings of the role of financial circuits in everyday economic life and the implications of this for the international financial system. This research is important because it problematizes popular and policy calls to rebalance the economic activity in favour of the `real economy'. I argue that this highlights the need to examine how financial circuits might be produced differently in order to develop a more sustainable financial system and associated economy.},
Author = {Hall, Sarah},
Date = {2013-04-01},
Date-Added = {2016-10-13 16:27:55 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-13 16:27:55 +0000},
Doi = {10.1177/0309132512443488},
File = {Hall_2013_Geographies of money and finance III Financial circuits and the `real economy'.pdf:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Firefox/Profiles/9ke9fs84.default/zotero/storage/KGMBHZSE/Hall_2013_Geographies of money and finance III Financial circuits and the `real economy'.pdf:application/pdf;Snapshot:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Firefox/Profiles/9ke9fs84.default/zotero/storage/ATJ34UZJ/285.html:text/html},
Issn = {0309-1325, 1477-0288},
Journaltitle = {Progress in Human Geography},
Keywords = {financial crisis,financialization,firms,geographies of money and finance,Infrastructure,`real economy',urban economy},
Langid = {english},
Note = {00015},
Number = {2},
Pages = {285--292},
Shortjournal = {Prog Hum Geogr},
Timestamp = {2015-02-24T21:06:11Z},
Title = {Geographies of Money and Finance {{III Financial}} Circuits and the `real Economy'},
Url = {http://phg.sagepub.com.uri.idm.oclc.org/content/37/2/285},
Urldate = {2014-11-13},
Volume = {37},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://phg.sagepub.com.uri.idm.oclc.org/content/37/2/285},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309132512443488}}
@incollection{Dumenil_2012_Crisis,
Author = {Dum{\'e}nil, G{\'e}rard and L{\'e}vy, Dominique},
Booktitle = {The {{Great Recession}} and the Contradictions of Contemporary Capitalism},
Date = {2012},
Date-Added = {2016-10-13 16:21:27 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-13 16:21:27 +0000},
Editor = {Bellofiore, Riccardo and Vertova, Giovanna},
Location = {{Aldershot, England}},
Note = {00008},
Publisher = {{Edward Elgar}},
Timestamp = {2016-10-13T16:21:08Z},
Title = {The {{Crisis}} of the {{Early}} 21st {{Century}}: {{Marxian}} Perspectives},
Url = {http://www.jourdan.ens.fr/levy/dle2012f.pdf},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.jourdan.ens.fr/levy/dle2012f.pdf}}
@collection{Goldstein_2009_Heterodox,
Date = {2009},
Date-Added = {2016-10-13 16:07:37 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-11-11 21:04:53 +0000},
Editor = {Goldstein, Jonathan P. and Hillard, Michael G.},
File = {GoldsteinJ, HillardM 2009 - Heterodox Macroeconomics - Keynes, Marx and globalization.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files/Zotero_Library//GoldsteinJ, HillardM/GoldsteinJ, HillardM 2009 - Heterodox Macroeconomics - Keynes, Marx and globalization.pdf:application/pdf},
Isbn = {0-415-66597-3},
Pagetotal = {304},
Publisher = {{Routledge}},
Shorttitle = {Heterodox {{Macroeconomics}}},
Timestamp = {2016-10-13T16:05:11Z},
Title = {Heterodox {{Macroeconomics}}: {{Keynes}}, {{Marx}} and {{Globalization}}}}
@book{Coyle_2010_Soulful,
Abstract = {To many, Thomas Carlyle's put-down of economics as "the dismal science" is as fitting now as it was 150 years ago. But Diane Coyle argues that economics today is more soulful than dismal, a more practical and human science than ever before. Building on the popularity of books such as Freakonomics that have applied economic thinking to the paradoxes of everyday life, The Soulful Science describes the remarkable creative renaissance in how economics is addressing the most fundamental questions--and how it is starting to help solve problems such as poverty and global warming. A lively and entertaining tour of the most exciting new economic thinking about big-picture problems, The Soulful Science uncovers the hidden humanization of economics over the past two decades. Coyle shows how better data, increased computing power, and techniques such as game theory have transformed economic theory and practice in recent years, enabling economists to make huge strides in understanding real human behavior. Using insights from psychology, evolution, and complexity, economists are revolutionizing efforts to solve the world's most serious problems by giving policymakers a new and vastly more accurate picture of human society than ever before. They are also building our capacity to understand how what we do today shapes what the world will look like tomorrow. And the consequences of these developments for human life, for governments, and for businesses are only now starting to be realized--in areas such as resource auctions, pollution-credit trading, and monetary policy. The Soulful Science tells us how economics got its soul back--and how it just might help save the planet's.},
Author = {Coyle, Diane},
Date = {2010},
Date-Added = {2016-10-07 23:35:31 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-07 23:35:31 +0000},
Isbn = {978-0-691-13623-3},
Keywords = {Business & Economics / Economic History,Business & Economics / Economics / General,Business & Economics / Economics / Theory,Political Science / Public Policy / Economic Policy},
Langid = {english},
Note = {00000 Google-Books-ID: DSH4Z2ogk0cC},
Pagetotal = {305},
Publisher = {{Princeton University Press}},
Shorttitle = {The {{Soulful Science}}},
Timestamp = {2016-10-07T23:34:33Z},
Title = {The {{Soulful Science}}: {{What Economists Really Do}} and {{Why It Matters}}}}
@incollection{Colander_2009_Moving,
Abstract = {Economists in the post-Cold War era are increasingly circumspect about universal, one-size-fits-all conceptions of human behaviour and economic institutions. Contemporary economics is thus marked by a nascent pluralism. Economic Pluralism brings these pluralist sensibilities to the fore. Its twenty original essays explore the positive potential and critical limits of pluralism in economic theory, philosophy, institutions, and policies, and education. These twenty original essays reflect the maturity and breadth of pluralist scholarship in economics today. The first eight chapters (including critical essays by Tony Lawson, Diana Strassmann et al., Frederic Lee, and David Colander) stake out contentious positions on the value of pluralism in economic theory and philosophy. The remaining chapters explore the meaning and consequences of pluralism in economic education, institutions, and policies. This volume provides a unique "second generation" discussion of pluralism in economics. Its twenty original essays stake out contentious positions on pluralism in economic theory, philosophy, institutions, and policies, and education, reflecting multiple generations and traditions of thought. It is a volume certain to spur wider conversation about the scope and value of economic pluralism for the 21st century. This volume would be of most interest as a supplementary text for graduate or undergraduate courses that include units on heterodox economics or economic philosophy.},
Author = {Colander, David},
Booktitle = {Economic {{Pluralism}}},
Date = {2009-09-10},
Date-Added = {2016-10-07 23:33:49 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-07 23:33:49 +0000},
Editor = {Jr, Robert F. Garnett and Olsen, Erik and Starr, Martha},
Isbn = {978-1-135-23060-9},
Keywords = {Business & Economics / Economics / General,Business & Economics / Economics / Macroeconomics,Business & Economics / General,Political Science / Public Policy / Economic Policy},
Langid = {english},
Note = {00026},
Publisher = {{Routledge}},
Timestamp = {2016-10-07T23:32:49Z},
Title = {Moving {{Beyond}} the {{Rhetoric}} of {{Pluralism}}: {{Suggestions}} for an '{{Inside}} the {{Mainstream}}' {{Heterodoxy}}}}
@article{Stillwell_2016_Heterodox,
Author = {Stillwell, Frank},
Date = {2016-02},
Date-Added = {2016-10-07 23:18:47 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-07 23:18:47 +0000},
File = {StillwellF 2016 - Heterodox economics or political economy - World Economics Association.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files/Zotero_Library//StillwellF/StillwellF 2016 - Heterodox economics or political economy - World Economics Association.pdf:application/pdf;Heterodox economics or political economy? | World Economics Association:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Firefox/Profiles/9ke9fs84.default/zotero/storage/BT4SGHCB/heterodox-economics-or-pe.html:text/html},
Journaltitle = {World Economics Assoiation Newsletter},
Note = {00000},
Number = {1},
Pages = {2--6},
Timestamp = {2016-03-01T15:50:37Z},
Title = {Heterodox Economics or Political Economy? | {{World Economics Association}}},
Url = {http://www.worldeconomicsassociation.org/files/Issue6-1.pdf},
Urldate = {2016-03-01},
Volume = {6},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.worldeconomicsassociation.org/files/Issue6-1.pdf}}
@article{King_2013_case,
Abstract = {SAGE Publications},
Author = {King, John E.},
Date = {2013-03-01},
Date-Added = {2016-10-07 23:08:57 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-07 23:08:57 +0000},
Doi = {10.1177/1035304612474219},
File = {KingJ 2013 - A case for pluralism in economics.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files/Zotero_Library//KingJ/KingJ 2013 - A case for pluralism in economics.pdf:application/pdf;Snapshot:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Firefox/Profiles/9ke9fs84.default/zotero/storage/P6RR7AQ3/17.html:text/html},
Issn = {1035-3046,},
Journaltitle = {The Economic and Labour Relations Review},
Langid = {english},
Note = {00011},
Number = {1},
Pages = {17--31},
Shortjournal = {The Economic and Labour Relations Review},
Timestamp = {2016-10-07T22:32:00Z},
Title = {A Case for Pluralism in Economics},
Url = {http://elr.sagepub.com/content/24/1/17},
Urldate = {2016-10-07},
Volume = {24},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://elr.sagepub.com/content/24/1/17},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1035304612474219}}
@article{krugman_new_2011,
Abstract = {Krugman P. The New Economic Geography, now middle-aged, Regional Studies. This paper claims that the New Economic Geography has now become `middle-aged'. On the one hand, the New Economic Geography is said to be of less relevance when describing current developments in advanced economies because it focuses more on tangible causes of the spatial concentration of economic activities, and not so much on intangible sources, such as information spillovers. On the other hand, the paper states that recent developments in developing economies like China are quite in line with the core--periphery model that predicts increasing regional specialization as a result of economic integration. Although both economists and geographers study these spatial processes, no fruitful exchange between the two is expected because of the use of different methodologies. Krugman P. La nouvelle g{\'e}ographie {\'e}conomique atteint l'{\^a}ge m{\^u}r, Regional Studies. Cet article pr{\'e}tend que la nouvelle g{\'e}ographie {\'e}conomique atteint `l'{\^a}ge m{\^u}r'. D'un c{\^o}t{\'e}, on dit que la nouvelle g{\'e}ographie {\'e}conomique est peu pertinente quant aux d{\'e}veloppements des {\'e}conomies avanc{\'e}es parce qu'elle porte plut{\^o}t sur les causes manifestes de la concentration g{\'e}ographique des activit{\'e}s {\'e}conomiques que sur les sources ind{\'e}finissables, telles les retomb{\'e}es de l'information. De l'autre c{\^o}t{\'e}, l'article affirme que des d{\'e}veloppements r{\'e}cents dans les {\'e}conomies avanc{\'e}es, voire la Chine, sont tout {\`a} fait en accord avec le mod{\`e}le du centre-p{\'e}riph{\'e}rie, qui pr{\'e}voit une augmentation de la sp{\'e}cialisation r{\'e}gionale suite {\`a} l'int{\'e}gration {\'e}conomique. Bien que les {\'e}conomistes et les g{\'e}ographes {\'e}tudient ces processus g{\'e}ographiques, on n'attend aucun d{\'e}bat constructif {\`a} cause des m{\'e}thodologies diff{\'e}rentes. Nouvelle g{\'e}ographie {\'e}conomique Agglom{\'e}ration R{\'e}gions Commerce international Krugman P. Die Neue Wirtschaftsgeografie -- inzwischen im mittleren Alter, Regional Studies. In diesem Beitrag wird die These aufgestellt, dass sich die Neue Wirtschaftsgeografie inzwischen im mittleren Alter befindet. Einerseits gilt die Neue Wirtschaftsgeografie als weniger relevant zur Beschreibung von aktuellen Entwicklungen in den Industriestaaten, weil sie sich st{\"a}rker auf die greifbaren Ursachen der r{\"a}umlichen Konzentration von Wirtschaftsaktivit{\"a}ten und weniger auf nicht greifbare Quellen wie z. B. Informations{\"u}bertragungen konzentriert. Andererseits wird in diesem Beitrag festgestellt, dass die j{\"u}ngsten Entwicklungen in Schwellenl{\"a}ndern wie China durchaus dem Kern-Peripherie-Modell entsprechen, in dem eine h{\"o}here regionale Spezialisierung als Ergebnis einer wirtschaftlichen Integration prognostiziert wird. Obwohl diese r{\"a}umlichen Prozesse sowohl von {\"O}konomen als auch von Geografen untersucht werden, ist aufgrund der Verwendung unterschiedlicher Methodologien kein fruchtbarer Austausch zwischen diesen beiden Gruppen zu erwarten. Neue Wirtschaftsgeografie Agglomeration Regionen Internationaler Handel Krugman P. La Nueva Geograf{\'\i}a Econ{\'o}mica ahora ya ha madurado, Regional Studies. En este art{\'\i}culo se defiende la tesis de que la Nueva Geograf{\'\i}a Econ{\'o}mica ahora ya ha madurado. Por una parte, la Nueva Geograf{\'\i}a Econ{\'o}mica tiene menos relevancia cuando se describen los desarrollos actuales en las econom{\'\i}as avanzadas porque se centra m{\'a}s en las causas tangibles de la concentraci{\'o}n espacial de las actividades econ{\'o}micas y no tanto en las fuentes intangibles, tales como los desbordamientos de informaci{\'o}n. Por otra parte, en este art{\'\i}culo destaco que los recientes avances en las econom{\'\i}as en desarrollo como China se ajustan mucho con el modelo centro-periferia que prev{\'e} una mayor especializaci{\'o}n regional como resultado de la integraci{\'o}n econ{\'o}mica. Aunque tanto economistas como ge{\'o}grafos estudian estos procesos espaciales, no se espera un intercambio fruct{\'\i}fero entre los dos debido al uso de diferentes metodolog{\'\i}as. Nueva Geograf{\'\i}a Econ{\'o}mica Aglomeraci{\'o}n Regiones Comercio internacional},
Author = {Krugman, Paul},
Date = {2011-01-01},
Date-Added = {2016-09-19 20:01:09 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-09-19 20:01:09 +0000},
Doi = {10.1080/00343404.2011.537127},
File = {KrugmanP 2011 - The New Economic Geography, Now Middle-aged.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files/Zotero_Library//KrugmanP/KrugmanP 2011 - The New Economic Geography, Now Middle-aged.pdf:application/pdf;Snapshot:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Firefox/Profiles/9ke9fs84.default/zotero/storage/SVVE8ER9/00343404.2011.html:text/html},
Issn = {0034-3404},
Journaltitle = {Regional Studies},
Note = {00146},
Number = {1},
Pages = {1--7},
Title = {The New Economic Geography, Now Middle-aged},
Url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00343404.2011.537127},
Urldate = {2015-09-03},
Volume = {45},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00343404.2011.537127}}
@article{krugman_whats_1998,
Abstract = {Since 1990 a new genre of research, often described as the 'new economic geography', has emerged. It differs from traditional work in economic geography mainly in adopting a modelling strategy that exploits the same technical tricks that have played such a large role in the 'new trade' and 'new growth' theories; these modelling tricks, while they preclude any claims of generality, do allow the construction of models that - unlike most traditional spatial analysis - are fully general-equilibrium and clearly derive aggregate behaviour from individual maximization. The new work is highly suggestive, particularly in indicating how historical accident can shape economic geography, and how gradual changes in underlying parameters can produce discontinuous change in spatial structure. It also serves the important purpose of placing geographical analysis squarely in the economic mainstream.},
Author = {Krugman, Paul},
Date = {1998-06-01},
Date-Added = {2016-09-19 19:32:01 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-09-19 19:32:01 +0000},
Doi = {10.1093/oxrep/14.2.7},
Journaltitle = {Oxford Review of Economic Policy},
Number = {2},
Pages = {7--17},
Title = {What's new about the new economic geography?},
Url = {http://oxrep.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/14/2/7},
Urldate = {2009-07-01},
Volume = {14},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://oxrep.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/14/2/7},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxrep/14.2.7}}
@article{leyshon_limits_2004,
Annotation = {Suggests that the publication of David Harvey's book "The Limits to Capital," rekindled an interest in geographies of money and finance, and argued strongly that an understanding of the spatiality and temporality of capitalism required a prior understanding of the dynamics of the financial system. Economic conditions under which the book was written; Timeliness of the book; Role of fictitious capital and of credit monies; Ways in which the credit system in general acts to defer crises caused by the international contradictions of the capitalist system.},
Author = {Leyshon, Andrew},
Date = {2004-06},
Date-Added = {2016-09-19 19:30:57 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-09-19 19:30:57 +0000},
Doi = {10.1111/j.1467-8330.2004.00425.x},
Issn = {0066-4812, 1467-8330},
Journaltitle = {Antipode},
Number = {3},
Pages = {461--469},
Title = {The Limits to Capital and Geographies of Money},
Url = {http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/links/doi/10.1111%2Fj.1467-8330.2004.00425.x},
Urldate = {2013-01-29},
Volume = {36},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/links/doi/10.1111%2Fj.1467-8330.2004.00425.x},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8330.2004.00425.x}}
@article{hudson_incorporating_2012,
Abstract = {Current macroeconomics ignores the roles that rent, debt and the financial sector play in shaping our economy. We discuss the Classical view on rents and policy responses to the rentier sector in the 19th century. The finance, insurance \& real estate sector is today's incarnation of the rentier sector. This paper shows how financial flows can be conceptually and statistically studied separately from (but interacting with) the real sector. We discuss finance's interaction with government and with the international economy.},
Author = {Hudson, Michael and Bezemer, Dirk},
Date = {2012},
Date-Added = {2016-09-13 21:44:03 +0000},
Date-Modified = {2016-09-13 21:44:03 +0000},
File = {HudsonM,BezemerD 2012 - Incorporating the Rentier Sectors into a Financial Model.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files/Zotero_Library//HudsonM,BezemerD/HudsonM,BezemerD 2012 - Incorporating the Rentier Sectors into a Financial Model.pdf:application/pdf},
Journaltitle = {World Economic Review},
Number = {1},
Title = {Incorporating the Rentier Sectors into a Financial Model},
Url = {http://wer.worldeconomicsassociation.org/article/view/36},
Urldate = {2012-09-25},
Volume = {1},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://wer.worldeconomicsassociation.org/article/view/36}}
@book{scott2013theurban,
Abstract = {This book was first published in 1980.},
Author = {Scott, A. J.},
Date = {2013-03-28},
Isbn = {978-0-415-85324-8},
Location = {London},
Note = {00206},
Pagetotal = {280},
Publisher = {Routledge},
Title = {The Urban Land Nexus and the State}}
@report{colander2009thefinancial,
Abstract = {The economics profession appears to have been unaware of the long build-up to the current worldwide
financial crisis and to have significantly underestimated its dimensions once it started to unfold. In our
view, this lack of understanding is due to a misallocation of research efforts in economics. We trace
the deeper roots of this failure to the profession's insistence on constructing models that, by design,
disregard the key elements driving outcomes in real-world markets. The economics profession has
failed in communicating the limitations, weaknesses, and even dangers of its preferred models to the
public. This state of affairs makes clear the need for a major reorientation of focus in the research economists undertake, as well as for the establishment of an ethical code that would ask economists to understand and communicate the limitations and potential misuses of their models.},
Author = {Colander, David and {Hans F{\"o}llmer} and {Armin Haas} and {Michael Goldberg} and {Katerina Juselius} and {Alan Kirman} and {Thomas Lux} and {Brigitte Sloth}},
Date = {2009-02},
Institution = {Kiel Institute for the World Economy},
Location = {Kiel, Germany},
Note = {00011},
Number = {1489},
Pages = {14},
Title = {The Financial Crisis and the Systemic Failure of Academic Economics},
Type = {Working Paper},
Url = {https://www.ifw-members.ifw-kiel.de/publications/the-financial-crisis-and-the-systemic-failure-of-academic-economics/KWP_1489_ColanderetalFinancial%20Crisis.pdf},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {https://www.ifw-members.ifw-kiel.de/publications/the-financial-crisis-and-the-systemic-failure-of-academic-economics/KWP_1489_ColanderetalFinancial%20Crisis.pdf}}
@book{doan1997american,
Author = {Doan, M. C.},
Date = {1997},
Publisher = {Univ Pr of Amer},
Title = {American housing production, 1880-2000: a concise history}}
@article{theurillat2015thereal,
Abstract = {Revealing the parties, the processes and the institutions and, consequently, both the diversity and contingency of the real estate markets, the existing increasing literature emphasises the contemporary numerous links and interdependencies between real estate, land value, planning and town planning policy and even the financial system. This paper is an attempt to understand all the real estate markets, from the most peripheral ones, where the urban rent is the lowest, to the most dense city centres. To gain a better understanding of the real estate market, a process of firstly deconstruction and then reconstruction is used. The process of deconstruction involves identifying various market trends according to property type (principally residential buildings), players and institutions, territorial situations and temporalities based on research conducted in Switzerland. We then developed a meta-synthesis inspired by Fernand Braudel whose works put as much emphasis on day-to-day economic activity as on long-term activity, and on local as well as global issues.},
Author = {Theurillat, Thierry and R{\'e}rat, Patrick and Crevoisier, Olivier},
Date = {2015-06-01},
Doi = {10.1177/0042098014536238},
File = {Snapshot:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Zotero/Profiles/0vrntrnn.default/zotero/storage/PZHFH53E/1414.html:text/html},
Issn = {0042-0980, 1360-063X},
Journaltitle = {Urban Studies},
Keywords = {Braudel, Institutions, Real estate, Switzerland, territories},
Langid = {english},
Note = {00003},
Number = {8},
Pages = {1414--1433},
Shortjournal = {Urban Stud},
Shorttitle = {The real estate markets},
Title = {The real estate markets: Players, institutions and territories},
Url = {http://usj.sagepub.com.uri.idm.oclc.org/content/52/8/1414},
Urldate = {2016-08-16},
Volume = {52},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://usj.sagepub.com.uri.idm.oclc.org/content/52/8/1414},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0042098014536238}}
@article{davis2008therentprice,
Abstract = {We construct a quarterly time series of the rent-price ratio for the aggregate stock of owner-occupied housing in the United States, starting in 1960, by merging micro data from the last five Decennial Censuses of Housing surveys with price indexes for house prices and rents. We show that the rent-price ratio ranged between 5 and 5.5 percent between 1960 and 1995, but rapidly declined after 1995. By year-end 2006, the rent-price ratio reached a historic low of 3.5 percent. For the rent-price ratio to return to its historical average over, say, the next five years, house prices likely would have to fall considerably.},
Author = {Davis, Morris A. and Lehnert, Andreas and Martin, Robert F.},
Date = {2008-06},
Journaltitle = {The Review of Income and Wealth},
Number = {2},
Pages = {279--284},
Title = {The Rent-Price Ratio for the Aggregate Stock of Owner-Occupied Housing},
Volume = {54}}
@article{jiang2014endogenous,
Author = {Jiang, Xiao},
Date = {2014-11},
Doi = {10.1111/meca.12065},
File = {Endogenous Cycles and Chaos in a Capitalist Economy\: A Circuit of Capital Model | ReadCube Articles:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Zotero/Profiles/0vrntrnn.default/zotero/storage/9AXCQ47W/10.1111meca.html:text/html},
Issn = {00261386},
Journaltitle = {Metroeconomica},
Langid = {english},
Note = {00000},
Pages = {n/a--n/a},
Shorttitle = {Endogenous Cycles and Chaos in a Capitalist Economy},
Title = {Endogenous Cycles and Chaos in a Capitalist Economy: A Circuit of Capital Model},
Url = {http://www.readcube.com/articles/10.1111%2Fmeca.12065?r3_referer=wol&show_checkout=1},
Urldate = {2014-11-04},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.readcube.com/articles/10.1111%2Fmeca.12065?r3_referer=wol&show_checkout=1},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/meca.12065}}
@book{harvey2006thelimits,
Author = {Harvey, David},
Date = {2006},
Edition = {New Edition},
File = {HarD06L_Afterword.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_Afterword.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_Ch1.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_Ch1.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_Ch2.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_Ch2.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_Ch3.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_Ch3.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_Ch4.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_Ch4.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_Ch5.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_Ch5.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_Ch6.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_Ch6.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_Ch7.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_Ch7.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_Ch8.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_Ch8.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_Ch9.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_Ch9.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_Ch10.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_Ch10.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_Ch11.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_Ch11.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_Ch12.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_Ch12.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_Ch13.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_Ch13.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_front.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_front.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_Indices.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_Indices.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_Intros.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_Intros.pdf:application/pdf;HarD06L_References.pdf:/Users/marsh/Google Drive for marsh@uri/Marsh/HarD06L/HarD06L_References.pdf:application/pdf},
Isbn = {978-1-84467-095-6},
Location = {London},
Pagetotal = {478},
Publisher = {Verso},
Title = {The Limits to Capital}}
@report{bezemer2009noone,
Author = {Bezemer, Dirk J.},
Date = {2009-06-16},
Institution = {Groningen University},
Number = {15892},
Title = {"No One Saw This Coming": Understanding Financial Crisis Through Accounting Models},
Type = {Working Paper},
Url = {http://www.google.com/url?sa=D&q=http://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/15892/&usg=AFQjCNGkym5CQOElyaXh_Xc4iPMkJ91Z5Q},
Urldate = {2012-02-21},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.google.com/url?sa=D&q=http://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/15892/&usg=AFQjCNGkym5CQOElyaXh_Xc4iPMkJ91Z5Q}}
@book{ricardo1821onthe,
Author = {Ricardo, David},
Date = {1821},
Langid = {english},
Note = {00375 Google-Books-{ID}: {wjBjAAAAMAAJ}},
Pagetotal = {560},
Publisher = {John Murray},
Title = {On the Principles of Political Economy, and Taxation}}
@incollection{woods1979housing,
Author = {Woods, Margaret E.},
Booktitle = {The Story of housing},
Date = {1979},
Editor = {Fish, Gertrude Sipperly},
Isbn = {978-0-02-337920-8},
Location = {New York},
Note = {00000},
Pages = {43--122},
Publisher = {Macmillan},
Title = {Housing and Cities: 1790 to 1890}}
@article{leamer2007housing,
Abstract = {Of the components of {GDP}, residential investment offers by far the best early warning sign of an oncoming recession. Since World War {II} we have had eight recessions preceded by substantial problems in housing and consumer durables. Housing did not give an early warning of the Department of Defense Downturn after the Korean Armistice in 1953 or the Internet Comeuppance in 2001, nor should it have. By virtue of its prominence in our recessions, it makes sense for housing to play a prominent role in the conduct of monetary policy. A modified Taylor Rule would depend on a long-term measure of inflation having little to do with the phase in the cycle, and, in place of Taylor's output gap, housing starts and the change in housing starts, which together form the best forward-looking indicator of the cycle of which I am aware. This would create pre-emptive anti-inflation policy in the middle of the expansions when housing is not so sensitive to interest rates, making it less likely that anti-inflation policies would be needed near the ends of expansions when housing is very interest rate sensitive, thus making our recessions less frequent and/or less severe.},
Author = {Leamer, Edward E.},
Date = {2007},
Journaltitle = {National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series},
Title = {Housing {IS} the Business Cycle},
Url = {http://www.nber.org/papers/w13428},
Volume = {No. 13428},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.nber.org/papers/w13428}}
@article{wissoker2016putting,
Abstract = {As housing production was ramping up in the 1990s and 2000s, some of the industry's largest firms experienced remarkable growth primarily through mergers and acquisitions and the issuance of debt; the market share of the 10 largest firms tripled between 1995 and 2005. This article describes the role of financial firms in encouraging that growth and some of its consequences. Drawing on financial filings, news reports, investor analyses, and other relevant data, this article offers an overview of the relationship between homebuilders and investment firms, as well as a new explanation of the oversupply of housing in the 2000s. In doing so, this article seeks to bring attention to homebuilders as a missing feature in analyses of housing supply and housing markets, and proposes directions for future research.},
Author = {Wissoker, Peter},
Date = {2016-05-03},
Doi = {10.1080/10511482.2015.1115418},
Issn = {1051-1482},
Journaltitle = {Housing Policy Debate},
Note = {00000},
Number = {3},
Pages = {536--562},
Shorttitle = {Putting the Supplier in Housing Supply},
Title = {Putting the Supplier in Housing Supply: An Overview of the Growth and Concentration of Large Homebuilders in the United States (1990--2007)},
Url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10511482.2015.1115418},
Urldate = {2016-05-18},
Volume = {26},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10511482.2015.1115418}}
@collection{freeman1996marxand,
Date = {1996},
Editor = {Freeman, Alan and Carchedi, Guglielmo},
Keywords = {Read!},
Location = {Cheltenham, {UK} ; Brookfield, {US}},
Note = {00000},
Publisher = {Edward Elgar Publishing},
Title = {Marx and Non-Equilibrium Economics}}
@article{krugman2009howdid,
Author = {Krugman, Paul},
Date = {2009-09-06},
File = {New York Times Snapshot:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Zotero/Profiles/0vrntrnn.default/zotero/storage/JWK2M8QQ/06Economic-t.html:text/html},
Issn = {0362-4331},
Journaltitle = {The New York Times},
Keywords = {Credit, Deflation (Economics), Economic Conditions and Trends, economics, Great Depression (1930's), Recession and Depression, Subprime Mortgage Crisis, United States Economy},
Pages = {MM36},
Title = {How Did Economists Get It So Wrong?},
Url = {http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/06/magazine/06Economic-t.html},
Urldate = {2013-01-15},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/06/magazine/06Economic-t.html}}
@article{christophers2011revisiting,
Abstract = {In a recent interview, David Harvey referred to the initial stages of the ongoing global economic crisis as a ``financial crisis of urbanization.'' This article explores and substantiates Harvey's argument by returning to the thesis of capital switching that Harvey, following Henri Lefebvre, initially expounded in the 1970s and 1980s. The nub of this argument was that as capitalist production edges toward periodic crises of overaccumulation, capital ``switches'' from production per se into production of the urban built environment as a means to absorb surplus capital and hence avert---if only temporarily---crisis. Although Harvey's thesis has proven extremely influential among political economists, urban theorists, and geographers of various stripes, previous attempts to buttress it with empirical evidence have failed to unearth any demonstrable switching dynamic of the kind Harvey theorizes. This article analyzes data for the years leading up to 2007 and the unfolding of the current economic crisis. Focusing primarily on the United Kingdom, it presents two separate analyses that suggest a clear pattern of capital switching into the built environment since the turn of the millennium: first, a switching of overall private-sector expenditures and, second, a switching of pension fund investment. Together, the analyses place urbanization, following Harvey, at the heart of contemporary economic crisis.},
Author = {Christophers, Brett},
Date = {2011-11},
Doi = {10.1080/00045608.2011.583569},
Issn = {00045608},
Journaltitle = {Annals of the Association of American Geographers},
Keywords = {{CAPITAL} movements, Economic aspects, finance, {FINANCIAL} crises, {GLOBAL} Financial Crisis, 2008-2009, Great Britain, {GREAT} Britain -- Economic conditions -- 1997-, {HARVEY}, David, History, {PRIVATE} sector, Urbanization},
Issue = {6},
Pages = {1347--1364},
Title = {Revisiting the Urbanization of Capital},
Url = {http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00045608.2011.583569},
Urldate = {2012-04-26},
Volume = {101},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00045608.2011.583569},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00045608.2011.583569}}
@incollection{keen2009thedynamics,
Author = {Keen, Steve},
Booktitle = {The Political Economy of Monetary Circuits: Tradition and Change in Post-Keynesian Economics},
Date = {2009-11-24},
Editor = {Rossi, Sergio and Ponsot, Jean-francois},
Isbn = {0-230-20337-X},
Location = {London; New York},
Pages = {161--187},
Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan},
Title = {The Dynamics of the Monetary Circuit}}
@book{haila2016urbanland,
Author = {Haila, Anne},
Date = {2016},
File = {HailaA 2016 - Urban Land Rent - Singapore as a Property State.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files-1/Zotero_Library//HailaA/HailaA 2016 - Urban Land Rent - Singapore as a Property State.pdf:application/pdf},
Series = {Studies in urban and social change},
Title = {Urban Land Rent: Singapore as a Property State}}
@incollection{trigg2004marxand,
Abstract = {The theory of the monetary circuit, as developed in its most powerful form by
Graziani (1989), has made a significant contribution to the analysis of credit
money in Marxian economics. A key issue is the extent to which circuit theory
fails to take into account the relationship between sectors producing capital
and consumption goods. In Marx's reproduction schema, how much money do capitalists need to advance in order for exchange between sectors to balance,
and for the circuit to be closed? The purpose of this paper is to address this
issue by examining diffrrent models of the monetary circuit, each of which
has a textual grounding in Marx's often contradictory musings in Capital,
Volume 2. Alongside alternative conceptions of the circuit of money, different interpretations exist about the role of the multiplier which can be nested
in Marx's reproduction schema. The problem, from a Marxian point of
view, is that in the existing literature investment is usually confined to the
capital goods sector It can be argued that Marx, for the most part, viewed
investment as involving accumulation in both departments of production.
Using a multiplier framework, derived from input-output technology, this
wider treatment of investment is considered as an alternative way of
modelling the circulation of money. In addition to contributing to Marxian
analysis of the money circuit, this approach could also be more accessible to a wider Post Keynesian audience, since a scalar Keynesian multiplier is employed.},
Author = {Trigg, Andrew B.},
Booktitle = {Neoliberalism in Crisis, Accumulation, and Rosa Luxemburg's Legacy},
Date = {2004-05-08},
Edition = {1},
Editor = {Zarembka, Paul and Soederberg, Susanne},
Isbn = {0-7623-1098-7},
Location = {Amsterdam},
Pages = {91--120},
Publisher = {Elsevier},
Series = {Research in Politial Economy},
Title = {Marx and the Theory of the Monetary Circuit},
Volume = {21}}
@book{marx1967capital,
Author = {Marx, Karl},
Date = {1967},
Date-Modified = {2016-09-13 16:31:19 +0000},
Editor = {Engels, Friedrich},
Location = {Moscow},
Origdate = {1893},
Publisher = {Progress publishers},
Shorttitle = {Capital},
Title = {Capital: a critique of political economy. Volume 2: The process of circulation of capital},
Volume = {2}}
@article{sheppard2011geographical,
Abstract = {The line of scholarship dominating Anglophone geographers' approaches to studying economic geography since 1980 can be characterized as geographical political economy; an approach prioritizing commodity production over market exchange. Here the spatialities of capitalism co-evolve with its economic processes and economic, political, cultural and biophysical processes are co-implicated with one another. Disequilibrium is normal and space/time an emergent feature. This approach is very different from geographical economics. Mutual engagement is desirable and most easily approached via the geographical sub-field of regional political economy. Regional political economy demonstrates that capitalism's spatialities increase agents' uncertainty and the likelihood of unintended consequences, that microfoundations are inadequate, and that capitalism is generative of economic inequality and uneven geographical development. The scope of geographical political economy is illustrated by the geography of commodity production.},
Author = {Sheppard, Eric},
Date = {2011-03-01},
Doi = {10.1093/jeg/lbq049},
File = {Snapshot:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Zotero/Profiles/0vrntrnn.default/zotero/storage/P3RIZBN6/319.html:text/html},
Issn = {1468-2702, 1468-2710},
Journaltitle = {Journal of Economic Geography},
Keywords = {disequilibrium dynamics, geography, O10, political economy, R00, Uneven development},
Langid = {english},
Note = {00067},
Number = {2},
Pages = {319--331},
Shortjournal = {J Econ Geogr},
Title = {Geographical political economy},
Url = {http://joeg.oxfordjournals.org.uri.idm.oclc.org/content/11/2/319},
Urldate = {2016-08-31},
Volume = {11},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://joeg.oxfordjournals.org.uri.idm.oclc.org/content/11/2/319},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jeg/lbq049}}
@report{rugitsky2014financialization,
Abstract = {This paper offers an interpretation of the Great Recession based on Foley's circuit of capital model. It is maintained that the contractionary effects of financialization were compensated by the housing bubble, from the mid-1990s to the early 2006. The busting of the bubble, then, was followed by the crisis. The model is calibrated with reference to quarterly data from the Flow of Funds Accounts, from 1960 to 1995. The interaction of financialization and the housing bubble, from 1996 to 2006 and from 2006 to 2009, is examined by simulating a baseline version of the model and imposing the observed shocks.},
Author = {Rugitsky, Fernando M.},
Date = {2014},
Institution = {School of Economics, Business and Accounting of the University of S{\~a}o Paulo},
Location = {Sao Paulo, Brazil},
Note = {00000},
Title = {Financialization, Housing Bubble, and the Great Recession: An Interpretation Based on a Circuit of Capital Model},
Url = {http://www.fea.usp.br/feaecon/media/fck/File/Rugitsky_Financialization_HousingBubble_Great_Recession.pdf},
Urldate = {2015-05-29},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.fea.usp.br/feaecon/media/fck/File/Rugitsky_Financialization_HousingBubble_Great_Recession.pdf}}
@article{christophers2016forreal,
Abstract = {With the aim of helping to revivify a stalled geographical literature on the place of land in capitalist political economies, this article presents a critique of the popular idea that land can be usefully conceptualised as a `fictitious' form of capital or commodity. The critique is based primarily on a close and critical consideration of the grounds on which the identifiers and theorists of such fictitiousness -- Marx/Harvey in the case of capital, Polanyi in the case of the commodity -- distinguished it from `real' variants. Those grounds, the article argues, are tenuous. And, far from disabling us, treating land as no more or less real than other forms of capital and commodity can empower us in productively revisiting and centring the question of land's political economy -- a crucial undertaking in a world where the materiality of land to social relations is writ increasingly large.},
Author = {Christophers, Brett},
Date = {2016-04-01},
Date-Modified = {2016-11-11 20:45:27 +0000},
Doi = {10.1111/tran.12111},
Issn = {1475-5661},
Journaltitle = {Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers},
Keywords = {Capitalism, fictitious capital, fictitious commodity, Land, political economy},
Langid = {english},
Number = {2},
Pages = {134--148},
Shortjournal = {Trans Inst Br Geogr},
Shorttitle = {For real},
Title = {For real: land as capital and commodity},
Url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/tran.12111/abstract},
Volume = {41},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/tran.12111/abstract},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/tran.12111}}
@article{ward2016virtual,
Author = {Ward, C. and Aalbers, M. B.},
Date = {2016-07-01},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-13 20:14:09 +0000},
Doi = {10.1177/0042098016638975},
Issn = {0042-0980, 1360-063X},
Journaltitle = {Urban Studies},
Langid = {english},
Note = {Virtual special issue editorial essay},
Number = {9},
Pages = {1760--1783},
Shorttitle = {Virtual special issue editorial essay},
Title = {'The shitty rent business': Whats the point of land rent theory?},
Url = {http://usj.sagepub.com/cgi/doi/10.1177/0042098016638975},
Urldate = {2016-09-15},
Volume = {53},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://usj.sagepub.com/cgi/doi/10.1177/0042098016638975},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0042098016638975}}
@article{harvey1978theurban,
Author = {Harvey, David},
Date = {1978},
Journaltitle = {International Journal of Urban and Regional Research},
Note = {00527},
Pages = {101--131},
Title = {The Urban Process Under Capitalism: A Framework for Analysis},
Volume = {2}}
@article{ferrari-filho2005theconcept,
Author = {Ferrari-Filho, Fernando and Concei{\c c}{\~a}o, Octavio Augusto Camargo},
Date = {2005-09},
File = {Ferrari-FilhoF,Concei{\c c}{\~a}oO 2005 - The Concept of Uncertainty in Post Keynesian Theory and in Institutional.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files-1/Zotero_Library//Ferrari-FilhoF,Concei{\c c}{\~a}oO/Ferrari-FilhoF,Concei{\c c}{\~a}oO 2005 - The Concept of Uncertainty in Post Keynesian Theory and in Institutional.pdf:application/pdf},
Journaltitle = {Journal of Economic Issues},
Note = {00000},
Number = {3},
Pages = {579--594},
Title = {The Concept of Uncertainty in Post Keynesian Theory and in Institutional Economics},
Url = {http://www.ie.ufrj.br/moeda/pdfs/concept-uncertainty.pdf},
Volume = {39},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.ie.ufrj.br/moeda/pdfs/concept-uncertainty.pdf}}
@article{haila1988landas,
Author = {Haila, Anne},
Date = {1988-09-01},
Doi = {10.1111/j.1467-8330.1988.tb00170.x},
File = {HAILAA 1988 - LAND AS A FINANCIAL ASSET - THE THEORY OF URBAN RENT AS A MIRROR OF ECONOMIC.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files-1/Zotero_Library/HailaA/HAILAA 1988 - LAND AS A FINANCIAL ASSET - THE THEORY OF URBAN RENT AS A MIRROR OF ECONOMIC.pdf:application/pdf},
Issn = {1467-8330},
Journaltitle = {Antipode},
Keywords = {Read!},
Langid = {english},
Number = {2},
Pages = {79--101},
Shorttitle = {{LAND} {AS} A {FINANCIAL} {ASSET}},
Title = {Land as a financial asset: The theory of urban rent as a mirror of economic transformation},
Url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1467-8330.1988.tb00170.x/abstract},
Urldate = {2011-08-30},
Volume = {20},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1467-8330.1988.tb00170.x/abstract},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8330.1988.tb00170.x}}
@report{mearman2010whatis,
Abstract = {This paper conducts a type of meta-analysis of a sample of commentaries on heterodox economics, also drawing on biological literature and other treatments of classification. The paper contrasts what might be called a `classical' category with a `modern' category and then analyses treatments of {HE} as a category. It is argued that though {HE} appears to be a complex object -- and that authors recognise this -- {HE} as a category is most often classical even though modern would appear more appropriate. That this is the case may reflect choices of levels of abstraction which in turn reflect instrumental purposes of influencing the reality of Economics. While arguments for the rejection of {HE} as a category are too strong, current treatments of {HE} are perhaps not careful enough in recognising its provisional and fluid nature. The paper considers these issues in turn.},
Author = {Mearman, Andrew},
Date = {2010},
File = {MearmanA 2010 - What is this thing called `heterodox economics'.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files/Zotero_Library//MearmanA/MearmanA 2010 - What is this thing called `heterodox economics'.pdf:application/pdf;RePEc Snapshot:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Zotero/Profiles/0vrntrnn.default/zotero/storage/XMBAGBHZ/1006.html:text/html},
Institution = {University of the West of England, Department of Economics},
Keywords = {Complexity, heterodox economics, Meta-analysis, taxonomy},
Number = {1006},
Title = {What is this thing called `heterodox economics'?},
Type = {Discussion Paper},
Url = {http://ideas.repec.org/p/uwe/wpaper/1006.html},
Urldate = {2012-06-13},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://ideas.repec.org/p/uwe/wpaper/1006.html}}
@article{Backhouse_2000_Progress,
Author = {Backhouse, Roger E.},
Date = {2000},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-07 22:57:35 +0000},
Doi = {10.1080/10427710050025358},
Issue = {02},
Journaltitle = {Journal of the History of Economic Thought},
Pages = {149-155},
Title = {Progress in Heterodox Economics},
Volume = {22},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10427710050025358}}
@article{Colander_2004_Changing,
Annote = {{\textless}p{\textgreater}ProQuest ID - 218655764{\textless}/p{\textgreater}},
Author = {Colander, David and Holt, Richard P F and Rosser, J Barkley},
Date = {2004},
Date-Modified = {2016-10-07 22:58:12 +0000},
Issn = {09538259},
Issue = {4},
Journaltitle = {Review of Political Economy},
Keywords = {1130:Economic theory, 9130:Experimental/theoretical, ILL, Political science},
Pages = {485-499},
Title = {The Changing Face of Mainstream Economics},
Url = {http://search.proquest.com/docview/218655764?accountid=28991},
Volume = {16},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://search.proquest.com/docview/218655764?accountid=28991}}
@article{lucarelli2012financialization,
Author = {Lucarelli, Bill},
Date = {2012-02-03},
Doi = {10.1177/0486613411434385},
File = {Full Text PDF:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Zotero/Profiles/0vrntrnn.default/zotero/storage/ZBB32UUU/Lucarelli - 2012 - Financialization and Global Imbalances Prelude to.pdf:application/pdf;Snapshot:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Zotero/Profiles/0vrntrnn.default/zotero/storage/UVKKMK52/0486613411434385.full.html:text/html},
Issn = {0486-6134, 1552-8502},
Journaltitle = {Review of Radical Political Economics},
Langid = {english},
Shortjournal = {Review of Radical Political Economics},
Shorttitle = {Financialization and Global Imbalances},
Title = {Financialization and Global Imbalances: Prelude to Crisis},
Url = {http://0-rrp.sagepub.com.helin.uri.edu/content/early/2012/02/02/0486613411434385},
Urldate = {2012-10-24},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://0-rrp.sagepub.com.helin.uri.edu/content/early/2012/02/02/0486613411434385},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0486613411434385}}
@unpublished{foley2009theanatomy,
Abstract = {The talk investigates the theory of financial and economic crises as a social coordination problem. It discusses the origins of the 2007-8 crises in financial fragility and global structural instability of capital movements and effective demand. The talk ends with suggestions for a new regime for the global economy based on fixed exchange rates, capital movement controls, and political regulation of key prices.},
Author = {Foley, Duncan K.},
Date = {2009-04-17},
Howpublished = {Lecture/Manuscript},
Location = {Barnard College, New York},
Note = {00000},
Title = {The Anatomy of Financial and Economic Crisis},
Type = {Lecture/Manuscript},
Url = {https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=sites&srcid=bmV3c2Nob29sLmVkdXxkdW5jYW4tZm9sZXktaG9tZXBhZ2V8Z3g6NjQyMGZmNmUwMDUwNDgwZA},
Urldate = {2014-11-11},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=sites&srcid=bmV3c2Nob29sLmVkdXxkdW5jYW4tZm9sZXktaG9tZXBhZ2V8Z3g6NjQyMGZmNmUwMDUwNDgwZA}}
@article{palan2013thefinancial,
Abstract = {The concept of `finance' or the `financial system' can be confusing. The assumption is that the financial system consists of related markets trading in a variety of financial instruments that are ultimately of a similar nature. In the late-19th century, however, financial assets have bifurcated into broadly two classes of property titles: incorporeal assets and intangible assets. This article argues that interrelations between the two classes of assets have generated pro-cyclical trends that are not dealt with by current regulation. It argues that these pro-cyclical trends can be even more confusing in the age of globalisation.},
Author = {Palan, Ronen},
Date = {2013-02-01},
Doi = {10.1177/0309816812472967},
File = {Full Text PDF:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Zotero/Profiles/0vrntrnn.default/zotero/storage/CHJ64K5U/Palan - 2013 - The financial crisis and intangible value.pdf:application/pdf;Snapshot:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Zotero/Profiles/0vrntrnn.default/zotero/storage/XTAD737A/65.html:text/html},
Issn = {0309-8168, 2041-0980},
Journaltitle = {Capital \& Class},
Keywords = {capital asset inflation, financial crisis, globalisation, intangible, pro-cyclicality},
Langid = {english},
Number = {1},
Pages = {65--77},
Shortjournal = {Capital \& Class},
Title = {The financial crisis and intangible value},
Url = {http://0-cnc.sagepub.com.helin.uri.edu/content/37/1/65},
Urldate = {2013-02-22},
Volume = {37},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://0-cnc.sagepub.com.helin.uri.edu/content/37/1/65},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309816812472967}}
@article{pettifor2013thenext,
Author = {Pettifor, Ann},
Date = {2013},
Journaltitle = {Real-World Economics Review},
Note = {00000},
Pages = {15--20},
Title = {The Next Crisis},
Volume = {64}}
@article{kotz2013thecurrent,
Abstract = {This paper offers an analysis of the current economic crisis in the United States that began in 2008, which is understood not as a business cycle recession but as a structural crisis. It presents a case that the current economic crisis is a particular type of crisis of over-investment, called an asset bubble induced over-investment crisis. It explains what is meant by that type of crisis and presents empirical evidence for the period since 1979 that supports this interpretation of the crisis. It argues that the forces that led to the current crisis cannot be seen in the behavior of the rate of profit.
{JEL} Classification: E11, E32, N12},
Author = {Kotz, David M.},
Date = {2013-09-01},
Doi = {10.1177/0486613413487160},
File = {Full Text PDF:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Zotero/Profiles/0vrntrnn.default/zotero/storage/ZTSCX6ZV/Kotz - 2013 - The Current Economic Crisis in the United States A.pdf:application/pdf;Snapshot:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Zotero/Profiles/0vrntrnn.default/zotero/storage/EK4RHH5H/284.html:text/html},
Issn = {0486-6134, 1552-8502},
Journaltitle = {Review of Radical Political Economics},
Keywords = {asset bubbles, Economic crisis, Marxist crisis theory, over-investment},
Langid = {english},
Note = {00000},
Number = {3},
Pages = {284--294},
Shortjournal = {Review of Radical Political Economics},
Title = {The Current Economic Crisis in the United States A Crisis of Over-investment},
Url = {http://rrp.sagepub.com/content/45/3/284},
Urldate = {2013-12-06},
Volume = {45},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://rrp.sagepub.com/content/45/3/284},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0486613413487160}}
@article{kotz2015capitalism,
Abstract = {To understand a severe economic crisis such as that of 2008, it is not sufficient to analyze capitalism-in-general along with various economic policy decisions and contingent events. An adequate analysis requires taking account of the particular form of capitalism. This approach to crisis theory is illustrated by an examination of the roots of the economic crisis that broke out in 2008 in the United States.},
Author = {Kotz, David M.},
Date = {2015-12-01},
Doi = {10.1177/0486613415584573},
File = {Snapshot:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Zotero/Profiles/0vrntrnn.default/zotero/storage/RVFEE2ZN/541.html:text/html},
Issn = {0486-6134, 1552-8502},
Journaltitle = {Review of Radical Political Economics},
Keywords = {B40, B51, Capitalism, crisis theory, E32, Institutions},
Langid = {english},
Note = {00000},
Number = {4},
Pages = {541--549},
Shortjournal = {Review of Radical Political Economics},
Title = {Capitalism and Forms of Capitalism Levels of Abstraction in Economic Crisis Theory},
Url = {http://rrp.sagepub.com/content/47/4/541},
Urldate = {2015-11-01},
Volume = {47},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://rrp.sagepub.com/content/47/4/541},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0486613415584573}}
@book{hudson2012thebubble,
Author = {Hudson, Michael},
Date = {2012-07-01},
Isbn = {3-9814842-0-7},
Keywords = {Get!, {URB} 494},
Pagetotal = {504},
Publisher = {{ISLET}},
Title = {{THE} {BUBBLE} {AND} {BEYOND}}}
@report{levitin2012explaining,
Abstract = {There is little consensus as to the cause of the housing bubble that precipitated the financial crisis of 2008. Numerous explanations exist: misguided monetary policy; a global savings surplus; government policies encouraging affordable homeownership; irrational consumer expectations of rising housing prices; inelastic housing supply. None of these explanations, however, is capable of fully explaining the housing bubble. This Article posits a new explanation for the housing bubble. First, it demonstrates that the bubble was a supply-side phenomenon attributable to an excess of mispriced mortgage finance: mortgage-finance spreads declined and volume increased, even as risk increased --- a confluence attributable only to an oversupply of mortgage finance. Second, it explains the mortgage-finance supply glut as resulting from the failure of markets to price risk correctly due to the complexity, opacity, and heterogeneity of the unregulated private-label mortgage-backed securities ({PLS}) that began to dominate the market in 2004. The rise of {PLS} exacerbated informational asymmetries between the financial institutions that intermediate mortgage finance and {PLS} investors. These intermediation agents exploited informational asymmetries to encourage overinvestment in {PLS} that boosted the financial intermediaries' volume-based profits and enabled borrowers to bid up housing prices. This Article proposes the standardization of {PLS} as an information-forcing device. Reducing the complexity and heterogeneity of {PLS} would facilitate accurate risk pricing, which is necessary to rebuild a sustainable, stable housing-finance market.},
Author = {Levitin, Adam J. and Wachter, Susan M.},
Date = {2012-04-12},
Institution = {Social Science Research Network},
Keywords = {affordable housing goals, {CMBS}, Community Reinvestment Act, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, {GSE}, housing bubble, housing finance, informational asymmetries, irrational exuberance, {MBS}, mortgage, {PLS}, Real estate, {RMBS}, securitization, standardization},
Location = {Rochester, {NY}},
Note = {00196},
Number = {{ID} 1669401},
Title = {Explaining the Housing Bubble},
Type = {{SSRN} Scholarly Paper},
Url = {https://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=1669401},
Urldate = {2016-10-24},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {https://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=1669401}}
@article{elden2010landterrain,
Abstract = {This paper outlines a way toward conceptual and historical clarity around the question of territory. The aim is not to define territory, in the sense of a single meaning; but rather to indicate the issues at stake in grasping how it has been understood in different historical and geographical contexts. It does so first by critically interrogating work on territoriality, suggesting that neither the biological nor the social uses of this term are particularly profitable ways to approach the historically more specific category of `territory'. Instead, ideas of `land' and `terrain' are examined, suggesting that these political-economic and political-strategic relations are essential to understanding `territory', yet ultimately insufficient. Territory needs to be understood in terms of its relation to space, itself a calculative category that is dependent on the existence of a range of techniques. Ultimately this requires rethinking unproblematic definitions of territory as a `bounded space' or the state as a `bordered power container', because both presuppose the two things that should be most interrogated, space and boundaries. Rather than boundaries being the distinction between place and space, or land or terrain and territory, boundaries are a second-order problem founded upon a particular sense of calculation and concomitant grasp of space. Territory then can be understood as a political technology: it comprises techniques for measuring land and controlling terrain, and measure and control --- the technical and the legal --- must be thought alongside the economic and strategic.},
Author = {Elden, Stuart},
Date = {2010-12-01},
Doi = {10.1177/0309132510362603},
File = {EldenS 2010 - Land, terrain, territory.pdf:/Volumes/Marsh_Files/Zotero_Library//EldenS/EldenS 2010 - Land, terrain, territory.pdf:application/pdf;Snapshot:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Zotero/Profiles/0vrntrnn.default/zotero/storage/R52Z2S4P/799.html:text/html},
Issn = {0309-1325, 1477-0288},
Journaltitle = {Progress in Human Geography},
Keywords = {calculation, Land, terrain, territoriality, Territory},
Langid = {english},
Note = {00291},
Number = {6},
Pages = {799--817},
Shortjournal = {Prog Hum Geogr},
Title = {Land, terrain, territory},
Url = {http://phg.sagepub.com.uri.idm.oclc.org/content/34/6/799},
Urldate = {2016-08-31},
Volume = {34},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://phg.sagepub.com.uri.idm.oclc.org/content/34/6/799},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309132510362603}}
@article{dicken2004geographers,
Abstract = {Over the years, geographers have developed a disturbing -- even dysfunctional -- habit of missing out on important intellectual and politically significant debates, even those in which geographers would seem to have a major role to play. The syndrome of processes currently bundled together within the term `globalization' is intrinsically geographical, as are the outcomes of such processes. Yet, once again, it seems, we are not, as a discipline, centrally involved in what are clearly very `big issues' indeed. The purpose of this paper is to explore, in the context of ongoing globalization debates, the bases of this undesirable situation and to consider what might be done to redress it in ways that could both enhance intra- and interdisciplinarity and also make a contribution towards building a better world.},
Author = {Dicken, Peter},
Date = {2004-03-01},
Doi = {10.1111/j.0020-2754.2004.00111.x},
Issn = {1475-5661},
Journaltitle = {Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers},
Keywords = {disciplinarity, geography, globalization},
Langid = {english},
Note = {00262},
Number = {1},
Pages = {5--26},
Shorttitle = {Geographers and `globalization'},
Title = {Geographers and `globalization': (yet) another missed boat?},
Url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com.uri.idm.oclc.org/doi/10.1111/j.0020-2754.2004.00111.x/abstract},
Urldate = {2016-10-19},
Volume = {29},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com.uri.idm.oclc.org/doi/10.1111/j.0020-2754.2004.00111.x/abstract},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.0020-2754.2004.00111.x}}
@article{keen2013amonetary,
Abstract = {Steve Keen's model of Minsky's Financial Instability Hypothesis (Keen, 1995) displayed qualitative characteristics that matched the real macroeconomic and income-distributional outcomes of the preceding and subsequent fifteen years: a period of economic volatility followed by a period of moderation, leading to a rise of instability once more and a serious economic crisis. This paper extends that model to build a strictly monetary macroeconomic model which can generate the monetary as well as the real phenomena manifested by both The Great Recession and The Great Moderation.},
Author = {Keen, Steve},
Date = {2013-02},
Date-Modified = {2016-11-11 20:48:52 +0000},
Doi = {10.1016/j.jebo.2011.01.010},
Issn = {0167-2681},
Journaltitle = {Journal of Economic Behavior \& Organization},
Keywords = {Debt deflation, Endogenous money, Financial instability hypothesis, Hyman Minsky, Nonlinear dynamics, Ordinary differential equations},
Pages = {221--235},
Shortjournal = {Journal of Economic Behavior \& Organization},
Title = {A monetary Minsky model of the Great Moderation and the Great Recession},
Url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167268111000266},
Volume = {86},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167268111000266},
Bdsk-Url-2 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2011.01.010}}
@inproceedings{keen2011adynamic,
Author = {Keen, Steve},
Date = {2011-05-16},
Date-Modified = {2016-11-11 20:48:22 +0000},
Eventtitle = {International Scientific Symposium for Development},
Location = {Kyev, Ukraine},
Organization = {International Scientific Symposium for Development},
Title = {A dynamic monetary mult-sector model of production},
Url = {http://www.debtdeflation.com/blogs/wp-content/uploads/papers/Keen2011DynamicMonetaryMultisectoralModel.pdf},
Urldate = {2012-02-22},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {http://www.debtdeflation.com/blogs/wp-content/uploads/papers/Keen2011DynamicMonetaryMultisectoralModel.pdf}}
@book{godley2012monetary,
Abstract = {This book challenges the mainstream paradigm with the introduction of a new methodology. Economies are represented realistically in a fully articulated system of national income and flow of funds accounts. The authors study how flows of income, expenditure and production are intertwined with stocks of assets and liabilities, determining how whole economies evolve through time. Starting with extremely simple stock-flow consistent models, the text describes a succession of increasingly complex models constructed with such rigor that, in harmony with its basis in accounting, there is always one equation which is implied logically by all the others. Readers will be able to download all the models and explore their properties for themselves.},
Author = {Godley, Wynne and Lavoie, Marc},
Date = {2012},
Date-Modified = {2016-11-11 20:46:32 +0000},
Isbn = {978-0-230-30184-9},
Keywords = {Business \& Economics / Banks \& Banking, Business \& Economics / Economics / Macroeconomics, Business \& Economics / Money \& Monetary Policy, {ILL}},
Langid = {english},
Pagetotal = {576},
Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan},
Shorttitle = {Monetary Economics},
Title = {Monetary Economics: An Integrated Approach to Credit, Money, Income, Production and Wealth}}
@article{foley1982realization,
Abstract = {A mathematical model of Marx's circuit of capital is presented, whose elements, the composition of capital, the rate of surplus value, the rate of capitalization of surplus value, and production, sales and financial time lags, are measurable from the accounts of capitalist firms. The model is solved for exponential paths. A solution with a positive rate of accumulation generally exists. On paths with positive rates of accumulation and positive time lags in the recommital of realized value to production an expansion of credit is required to permit the sale of commodities. A model of demand pull inflation is incorporated in the framework.},
Author = {Foley, Duncan K},
Date = {1982-12},
Doi = {10.1016/0022-0531(82)90063-1},
File = {ScienceDirect Snapshot:/Users/marsh/Library/Application Support/Zotero/Profiles/0vrntrnn.default/zotero/storage/9SKF9KDX/0022053182900631.html:text/html},