All Stories

  1. The neoclassical and Keynesian standpoint and policy implications regarding the Greek Financial Crisis
  2. International Development and the Washington Consensus
  3. Introduction
  4. An institutional perspective to international development
  5. Teaching introductory macroeconomics during the Greek financial crisis
  6. Teaching social economics during the global financial crisis
  7. The philosophical roots of development ethics
  8. How introductory macroeconomics should be taught after the global financial crisis: data from Greek university students
  9. The 2018 Clarence Ayres Scholar An Institutional Riposte to the “After the Washington Consensus”
  10. Alternative Political Economy Models of Transition
  11. The Collapse of the Stalinist Economic System
  12. The Analytical Framework
  13. The Internal Impact and External Influence of the Greek Financial Crisis
  14. An empirical appraisal of the role of money in Nigerian politics
  15. Europe in Crisis
  16. A Keynesian alternative to the Washington consensus policies for international development
  17. Living Standards and Social Well-Being
  18. Factors that Determine the Decline in University Student Enrolments in Economics in Australia: An Empirical Investigation
  19. Consistency and Viability of Capitalist Economic Systems
  20. Consistency and Viability of Islamic Economic Systems and the Transition Process
  21. Consistency and Viability of Socialist Economic Systems
  22. Toward a Good Society in the Twenty-First Century
  23. Introduction
  24. Introduction
  25. The ‘discouraged-business-major’ hypothesis: policy implications
  26. The Post Keynesian retort to "After the Washington Consensus"
  27. Alternative Perspectives of a Good Society
  28. Introduction
  29. Social Change versus Transition: The Political Economy of Institutions and Transitional Economies
  30. The Aristotelian Contribution to Development Ethics
  31. The Institutional Foundation of Development Ethics
  32. THE EVOLUTION OF THE TERM ‘WASHINGTON CONSENSUS’
  33. The impact of adverse initial conditions and the resulting speed and sequence of reforms in determining the delayed EU membership of Bulgaria
  34. An Institutional and Economic Complexity Approach to the Development of Agricultural Interest Groups in Australia
  35. What happened to the Washington Consensus? The evolution of international development policy
  36. The role of banking reform policy in transition economies: delayed reforms for the case of Serbia
  37. Varieties of Capitalism in Post-Communist Countries
  38. The Evolution of the Anti-Washington Consensus Debate: From ‘Post-Washington Consensus’ to ‘After the Washington Consensus’
  39. The Role of Risk as an FDI Barrier to Entry during Transition: The Case of Bulgaria
  40. Thomas Paine (1737‐1809) and Thomas Spence (1750‐1814) on land ownership, land taxes and the provision of citizens' dividend
  41. Evaluating the banking reforms in Serbia using survey results
  42. Introduction to Living Standards and Social Well-Being
  43. Motives for Foreign Direct Investment in the Manufacturing Sector in FYR Macedonia
  44. Book Review: Alternative Economic Models of Transition John Marangos; London: Ashgate, 2004, 334 pp., $114.95 (hardback). DOI: 10.1177/0486613407305335 Accepted October 22, 2006
  45. Globalization and the Integration-Assisted Transition in Central and Eastern European Economies
  46. Effectiveness of concept maps in economics: Evidence from Australia and USA
  47. Was Shock Therapy Consistent with the Washington Consensus?
  48. The shock therapy model of transition
  49. The monetary model of exchange rate determination: the case of Greece (1974 1994)
  50. The 'Discouraged-Business-Major Hypothesis': Policy Implications
  51. John Rogers Commons on Power
  52. Was Market Socialism a Feasible Alternative for Transition Economies?
  53. Developing a civilised society in transition economies: The Post Keynesian paradigm
  54. A Comparative Political Economy Approach to Farming Interest Groups in Australia and the United States
  55. Were the Chinese reforms a feasible alternative for transition economies?
  56. Contrasting primitive conceptions of Basic Income Guarantee
  57. Changing students' perception of Economics by facilitating their transition to university
  58. Why Is China a High-Lambda Society?
  59. Shock Therapy and its Consequences in Transition Economies
  60. Alternative paths to the transition process
  61. A Political Economy Approach to the Neoclassical Gradualist Model of Transition
  62. Alternative models of transition and institutional development
  63. Economic Transition in Central and Eastern Europe: Planting the Seeds
  64. Modelling the privatization process in transition economies
  65. Social Dividend Versus Basic Income Guarantee in Market Socialism
  66. Was Shock Therapy Consistent with Democracy?
  67. THE EFFECTIVENESS OF CONCEPT MAPS IN INTRODUCTORY MICROECONOMICS
  68. Was Shock Therapy Really a Shock?
  69. Global Transition Strategies in Eastern Europe: Moving to market relations
  70. A political economy methodology in modelling the transition process
  71. A SURVEY OF THE VALUE UNIVERSITY STUDENTS PLACE ON STUDYING ECONOMICS
  72. Alternative Methods of Institutional Development for Transition Economies
  73. A post Keynesian critique of privatization policies in transition economies
  74. The Political Economy of Shock Therapy
  75. A Political Economy Approach to the Neoclassical Model of Transition
  76. Preventive Therapy: The Neoclassical Gradualist Model of Transition from Central Administration to Market Relations
  77. International Trade Policies for Transition Economies: The Post Keynesian Alternative
  78. THE EFFECTIVENESS OF THE ECONOMICS ORIENTATION TUTORIAL: SOME FURTHER RESULTS
  79. THE EFFECTIVENESS OF COLLABORATIVE PROBLEM‐SOLVING TUTORIALS IN INTRODUCTORY MICROECONOMICS
  80. A Post Keynesian View of Transition to Market Capitalism: Developing a Civilized Society
  81. ENCOURAGING POSITIVE PERCEPTIONS OF ECONOMICS: THE EFFECTIVENESS OF THE ORIENTATION TUTORIAL
  82. Introduction
  83. The Development Ethics Perspective of a Good Society