International
Conference on 'Recovery or Bubble? The Global Economy
Today',
organised by
International Development Economics Associates (IDEAs)
Gulmohar Hall, Indian Habitat Centre,
New Delhi, 29-30 January 2010.
Click for the Conference
Report
While production and employment indicators in many
countries point to stabilisation and recovery from
the economic recession in the aftermath of the global
financial crisis, there are debates about the economic
recovery that is underway and fears of a new speculative
boom on which the global recovery rides. These principally
relate to the policy decisions taken in the US and
many other countries in response to the financial
crisis which involved easy monetary policy to save
the financial system and real economy from collapse,
and fiscal stimuli to trigger a recovery. There are
signs of a bubble similar to the one which led to
the credit-financed housing and consumer-spending
boom that preceded the 2008 downturn. Meanwhile, there
has been very little progress on the proposals on
reforming the financial system to prevent the future
occurrence of similar or related crisis. The proposed
conference seeks to analyse the various contours of
the global economic recovery underway such as the
current growth trajectories of the major developed
and emerging countries, the role of fiscal and monetary
stimuli; and the continuing global imbalances. It
would also analyse the post-crisis changes in financial
structures and look at how to reform the financial
regulatory framework so as to cushion the developing
countries against future shocks.
The Programme of the conference with links to the
presentations/paper follows below:
29 January 2010
Welcome and Introduction:
Jayati Ghosh (Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi)
Session I: Is there a Recovery?
(9:30 a.m.-1 p.m.)
Jan Kregel (University of Missouri, Kansas City and
Levy Economics Institute, Bard College, New York)
Arturo O'Connell (Board of Governors, Central Bank
of the Argentine Republic)
Rainer Kattel (Tallinn University of Technology, Estonia),
Europe and the Crisis
(Presentation)
Session II: Global Imbalances
(2 p.m.-5:30 p.m.)
Chair: Abhijit Sen (Jawaharlal
Nehru University, New Delhi & Member, Planning
Commission)
Prabhat Patnaik (Kerala State Planning Board and Jawaharlal
Nehru University, New Delhi), The
Diffusion of Activities
(Note)
Terry McKinley (Center for Development Policy and
Research, SOAS, London University), The
US-China Marriage of Convenience: Prospects for Global
Imbalances and Economic Recovery (Presentation)
K. S. Jomo (UN Assistant Secretary-General for Economic
Development, United Nations Department of Economic
and Social Affairs, New York), Facing
Multiple Crises: What is to be Done? (Presentation)
30 January 2010
Session I: Finance and
the Real Economy (9:30 a.m. -1 p.m.)
Chair: C.P. Chandrasekhar
(Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi)
Gabriel Palma (University of Cambridge)
Rizal Ramli (Chairman, Komite Bangkit Indonesia),
Finance and Real Sector (Presentation)
Saul Keifman (University of Buenos Aires, Argentina),
The Unravelling of Financialization:
A Macroeconomic Perspective (Presentation)
Session II: The Future
of Finance (2 p.m.-5:30 p.m.)
Chair: Jan Kregel (University
of Missouri, Kansas City and Levy Economics Institute,
Bard College, New York)
Leonardo Burlamaqui (The Ford Foundation, Peace and
Social Justice Program, Governance & Civil Society),
The Financial Crisis, and Reforming
Global Finance: Problem Statement, Recent Developments
and Contours of a Reform Agenda (Presentation)
Ajit Singh (Emeritus Professor of Economics, University
of Cambridge, Senior Research Fellow, Judge Business
School, University of Cambridge) and Josephine Ann
Zammit (Independent Consultant on Development Economics,
Geneva)
Jan Kregel (University of Missouri, Kansas City and
Levy Economics Institute, Bard College, New York)
Summing Up by C.P. Chandrasekhar
(Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi)
February 8, 2010.
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