1. Introduction In late November, 2008, just after President Barak Obama won the American election, a group of progressive economists met in New York city at the New School for Social Research, to discuss the ongoing economic crisis and to try to reach a consensus on financial and macroeconomic policies that the group should advise the Obama Administration to implement. Organized under the sponsorship of the New School’s Schwartz Center for Economic Policy (SCEPA) and the University of Massac..
Over the years, the White House has not remained indifferent to the economic meltdown, conducting po...
During President Clinton\u27s first term, it is expected that a national industrial and planning pol...
To mark one year since the inauguration of President Barack Obama, this Special Report brings togeth...
Peter Goodman, NY Times national economic writer for the business section and author of Past Due: T...
Joyce Appleby outlines the first year of Barack Obama’s presidency noting a number of his successes ...
At the end of 2008, the newly elected President Barack Obama was facing one of the deepest economic ...
These are exciting times: the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, the first global rec...
There has been a growing discussion in recent years about rising inequality in the U.S. Yet, this di...
In Western Europe, political commentators have been surprised by the apparent inability of President...
Jason Furman was a top economic adviser to the successful presidential campaign of Barack Obama in 2...
This paper reports on the 2009 Academy of Social Sciences annual debate about prospects for the new ...
There is a shift in economic thinking from a growth model with its constellation of competition, sca...
This paper analyzes President Barack Obama’s economic language during the first 100 days of his admi...
In 2001, the so-called “New Economy” had emerged as a part of an unprecedented period economic deman...
As of June 2015, the U.S. has experienced 63 consecutive months of private sector jobs growth, a res...
Over the years, the White House has not remained indifferent to the economic meltdown, conducting po...
During President Clinton\u27s first term, it is expected that a national industrial and planning pol...
To mark one year since the inauguration of President Barack Obama, this Special Report brings togeth...
Peter Goodman, NY Times national economic writer for the business section and author of Past Due: T...
Joyce Appleby outlines the first year of Barack Obama’s presidency noting a number of his successes ...
At the end of 2008, the newly elected President Barack Obama was facing one of the deepest economic ...
These are exciting times: the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, the first global rec...
There has been a growing discussion in recent years about rising inequality in the U.S. Yet, this di...
In Western Europe, political commentators have been surprised by the apparent inability of President...
Jason Furman was a top economic adviser to the successful presidential campaign of Barack Obama in 2...
This paper reports on the 2009 Academy of Social Sciences annual debate about prospects for the new ...
There is a shift in economic thinking from a growth model with its constellation of competition, sca...
This paper analyzes President Barack Obama’s economic language during the first 100 days of his admi...
In 2001, the so-called “New Economy” had emerged as a part of an unprecedented period economic deman...
As of June 2015, the U.S. has experienced 63 consecutive months of private sector jobs growth, a res...
Over the years, the White House has not remained indifferent to the economic meltdown, conducting po...
During President Clinton\u27s first term, it is expected that a national industrial and planning pol...
To mark one year since the inauguration of President Barack Obama, this Special Report brings togeth...