|
In This Issue:
Welcome to the August 2005 issue of Econ Journal Watch. EJW is a triannual peer-reviewed journal for scholarly commentary on academic economics.
Our articles are organized into thematic Sections. Each Section can be accessed by clicking on the links running across the top of the page: Comments, Do Economists Reach a Conclusion? etc. Each Section contains articles in Adobe pdf format, which can be viewed individually. Or, click on the link at the bottom of this page to download and print the entire document as a single pdf file (219 pp).
Table of Contents with links to articles (pdf)
The issue contains four articles on money and banking:
In The Intellectual Tyranny of the Status Quo:
- Barry Eichengreen, Peter Temin, and others have argued that the gold standard (“golden fetters”) prevented U.S. monetary authorities from avoiding and correcting the Great Depression. This understanding is deeply mistaken, argues Richard Timberlake, who deploys statistical and institutional evidence for his alternate interpretation of what went wrong.
- 100 monetary economists can’t be wrong? Kurt Schuler says they were about Argentina’s monetary crisis and so-called currency board. He makes his case with detailed textual analysis contained in a linked appendix.
Do Economists Reach a Conclusion on the performance of free banking in history? Ignacio Briones and Hugh Rockoff survey the scholarly literature.
Investigating the Apparatus: Lawrence H. White documents the mammoth role of the Federal Reserve System in sponsoring monetary economists, hosting them at conferences, and publishing their work, and speculates on how such power influences behavior and thought.
Other articles:
In this issue’s Comments: Does democracy do right? In a new rejoinder, Bryan Caplan says that Donald Wittman gave much ground in the previous issue’s exchange about democracy’s epistemic shortcomings. Wittman's reply assures us that the median voter won't let us down.
Economics in Practice: At top economics journals—AER, JPE, QJE, EJ, and REStat—the editors have drastically reduced critical commentary. Three researchers document the 40-year trend and suggest that science is the worse for it.
In Character Issues, David Henderson describes how economists helped to abolish the draft.
Correspondence: Robert Aumann and Ken Binmore discuss how to discuss behavior that would be off the path; Sudha Shenoy asks whether economists can find a nonmathematical romance; and Casey Mulligan remarks on the PhD circle in academic economics.
The Correspondence channel is open. Send letters on any of the issue's material or submissions for articles to editor@econjournalwatch.org .
Download and Print Entire August 2005 Issue (219 pages, 10.3 MB)
|