Several Nobel laureates economists have called for redistributive policies. This paper shows that there is a strong case for redistributive policies because the global increase of income inequality and wealth concentration was an important driver for the financial and Eurozone crisis. The high levels of income inequality resulted in balance of payment imbalances and rising debt levels. Rising wealth concentration contributed to the crisis because the increasing asset demand from the rich played a key role in the rise of the structured credit market and enabled poor and middle-income households to accumulate increasing amounts of debt. To tame the inherent instability of the current mode of capitalism it is necessary to reduce inequality
This paper critiques the notion that unfettered inequality is an inevitable consequence of contempor...
By means of a macroeconomic model with an agent-based household sector and a stockflow consistent st...
This thesis is concerned with two main questions. Do systemic banking crises substantially affect th...
Several Nobel laureates economists have called for redistributive policies. This paper shows that th...
This article shows that the increase of income inequality and global wealth concentration was an imp...
This brief argues that increasing inequality had deep macroeconomic consequences as it contributed, ...
This paper argues that although the crisis may have emerged in the financial sector, its roots are m...
NIPE_WP_30_2011We show that banking crises have an important effect on income distribution: inequali...
In the three decades leading up to the financial crisis of 2008/09, income inequality rose across mu...
The crisis that broke out in August 2007 was caused by the fact that the market for collateralised d...
This is the first paper in estimating a population-averaged panel logit probability model to test th...
This paper proposes an explanation for why universal suffrage has not implied larger rich-to-poor tr...
The severity of the financial and economic crisis which started in 2007 cannot be understood without...
The distribution of income between capital and labour has, until very recently, been ignored by the ...
Abstract. Poverty and inequality are in all likelihood the most pernicious problems in contemporary...
This paper critiques the notion that unfettered inequality is an inevitable consequence of contempor...
By means of a macroeconomic model with an agent-based household sector and a stockflow consistent st...
This thesis is concerned with two main questions. Do systemic banking crises substantially affect th...
Several Nobel laureates economists have called for redistributive policies. This paper shows that th...
This article shows that the increase of income inequality and global wealth concentration was an imp...
This brief argues that increasing inequality had deep macroeconomic consequences as it contributed, ...
This paper argues that although the crisis may have emerged in the financial sector, its roots are m...
NIPE_WP_30_2011We show that banking crises have an important effect on income distribution: inequali...
In the three decades leading up to the financial crisis of 2008/09, income inequality rose across mu...
The crisis that broke out in August 2007 was caused by the fact that the market for collateralised d...
This is the first paper in estimating a population-averaged panel logit probability model to test th...
This paper proposes an explanation for why universal suffrage has not implied larger rich-to-poor tr...
The severity of the financial and economic crisis which started in 2007 cannot be understood without...
The distribution of income between capital and labour has, until very recently, been ignored by the ...
Abstract. Poverty and inequality are in all likelihood the most pernicious problems in contemporary...
This paper critiques the notion that unfettered inequality is an inevitable consequence of contempor...
By means of a macroeconomic model with an agent-based household sector and a stockflow consistent st...
This thesis is concerned with two main questions. Do systemic banking crises substantially affect th...