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    IMF Book Forum: Lost Decades

    Thu, 10/06/2011 - 22:16 EDT - EconBrowser
    • Comments
    • economic indicators

    A Book Forum on our book, Lost Decades will take place on October 14th, in Washington, DC.

    Lost Decades: The Making of America's Debt Crisis and the Long Recovery

    IMF Book Forum
    Friday, October 14, 2011 From 1:30 to 3 pm
    Events Hall, IMF, HQ1-01-704 (700 19th Street, NW, Washington, DC)
    This event is open to the public and to Bank/Fund staff. RSVP
    Featuring the authors
    Menzie Chinn (University of Wisconsin, Madison; Econbrowser blog)
    Jeffry Frieden (Harvard University)

    Chinn and Frieden explore the origins and long-term effects of the financial crisis in historical and comparative perspective.
    By 2008 the United States had become the biggest international borrower in world history, with almost half of its 6.4 trillion dollar federal debt in foreign hands. The massive inflow of foreign funds financed the booms in housing prices and consumer spending that fueled the economy until the collapse of late 2008. The authors explore the political and economic roots of this crisis as well as its long-term effects. “The book is capable of dealing with some of the most complicated economic arguments about the crisis in a way that is straightforward and capable of being understood by its audience, says Mike Konczal of the Roosevelt Institute. “If you have time to read only one book on the crisis, read this,” says acclaimed economic historian Barry Eichengreen, University of California Berkeley.

    Discussants:
    Gail Cohen (Joint Economic Committee of the U.S. Congress)
    Diane Lim Rogers (Concord Coalition)
    Closing Remarks:
    Simon Johnson (MIT and Peterson Institute; co-author of 13 Bankers)
    Moderated by:
    George Akerlof (Senior Resident Scholar, Research Department, IMF; Winner of the
    2001 Nobel Prize for Economics)

    • Original article
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      From Prakash Loungani's blog: A standing-room only audience at the IMF last month heard a presentation by [Menzie] Chinn and [Jeffry] Frieden [on Lost Decades], along with comments from Diane Lim Rogers (Concord Coalition), Gail Cohen (Joint Economic Committee) and Simon Johnson (MIT and Peterson Institute). The forum was moderated by Nobel Prize-winner George Akerlof.

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      The transcript and video for the IMF Book Forum (October 14th) is now online here.

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      For those of you attending the Allied Social Sciences Association (and AEA) meetings in Chicago, January 6-8, I'll be at the W.W. Norton booth in the exhibition hall, Friday afternoon, particularly 5PM onward, ready to talk about Lost Decades: The Making of America's Debt Crisis and the Long Recovery.

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      I'm not at the ASSA meetings in Atlanta this year, but my coauthor Hiro Ito is presenting our papers (with Joshua Aizenman) in two very interesting sessions on international finance. Jan.

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      From the preface to Lost Decades, published today (9/19) by W.W. Norton: The United States ...

    • The Financial Crisis, Interpreted

      And some unanswered questions. From Jeffry Frieden, "A Classic Foreign Debt Crisis," The Political Economist 12 (2) (Fall 2010) [newsletter of the Political Economy section of APSA, not online]: Much of the popular, and scholarly, analysis of the crisis has focused on its financial aspects: the breakdown of financial markets, the malfunction of financial innovations, the failure of financial regulation. ... ... This attention is certainly warranted.

    • Reflections on the Causes and Consequences of the Debt Crisis of 2008

      From "Reflections on the Causes and Consequences of the Debt Crisis of 2008," in the La Follette Policy Report by Menzie Chinn and Jeffry Frieden: In late 2008, the world's financial system seized up.

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    • Causes: Too Much Debt

      Menzie Chinn, one of my favorite bloggers, and Jeffry Frieden have a short and highly readable article up on the causes of the financial crisis. Chinn is not given to ideological ranting and is a great believer in actually looking at data, so I place significant weight in what he says. Chinn and Frieden place the emphasis on excessive American borrowing, by both the public and private sectors.

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