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Tag Archives: Katarina Juselius
When ”failure” in economics is ”success” and vice versa?
This post fully lives op to the mantra of the blog, as it contains a lot of “stochastic ramblings” (a nod to Greg Mankiw’s mantra of “random observations”). “Stochastic” as I wander unplanned around important subjects on the developments of economic sciences, and “ramblings” as most of it is scientifically unsubstantiated talk with little coherency, which just emerge from my gut. You have been warned. The backdrop of the following is a festive occasion. An occasion I am truly and deeply happy about. The Institute of New Economic Thinking (INET), which is partly funded by George Soros, has given a grant to establish a center on Imperfect Knowledge Economics (IKE) … Continue reading
Posted in Economic Sciences, Economists
Tagged George Soros, Imperfect Knowledge Economics, Institute of New Economic Thinking, Katarina Juselius, Kevin Hoover, Michael D. Goldberg, Niels Thygesen, Occupy Wall Street, Robert A. Johnson, Robert Frydman, Søren Johansen, University of Copenhagen
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