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PERI's Globalization and Macroeconomics program provides research to promote sustained full employment and widespread prosperity for advanced and developing countries. An Employment-Targeted Economic Program for KenyaThe government of Kenya has committed itself to generating 500,000 new jobs per year at least through 2007. But a very high proportion of Kenyans who are currently working full-time are nonetheless unable to support themselves and their families above the poverty lineIn this full-length study, commissioned by the United Nations Development Programme, PERI scholars Robert Pollin, James Heintz, and Mwangi wa Githinji explore various means to create high-quality employment in Kenya. Thse include public investments in roads, irrigation and agricultural support services, large-scale credit subsidies for small businesses, reforming monetary policy and making significant changes to the regulation of Kenya's financial sector.Alongside this publication is an interview with Robert Pollin, conducted by James Garang, a Ph.D. student in economics at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst who was born in Sudan and spent nine years as a 'Lost Boy of Sudan' living in Kenyan refugee camp. Garang's question bring an intensely personal perspective to the realities of poverty in sub-Saharan Africa. >> Download An Employment-Targeted Economic Program for Kenya Rebellious Macroeconomis: Marx, Keynes & CrottyOn October 19-20, 2007, PERI hosted a conference entitled “Rebellious Macroeconomics: Keynes, Marx and Crotty,” honoring the life work of Professor James Crotty of the University of Massachusetts, Amherst Economics Department, and a close PERI associate. The conference was organized by Jonathan Goldstein of Bowdoin College and Michael Hillard of the University of Southern Maine. Eighteen conference papers were presented by a panel of distinguished heterodox macroeconomists. The papers celebrated Jim Crotty’s contributions to political economy over the past 35 years. Consistent with the major themes in Crotty’s research, the conference focused on the virtues of an integrated Keynesian, Marxian and institutionalist macroeconomic framework and applications of that framework to an analysis of the macrodynamics of the neoliberal regime. The Leashing and Unleashing of Western CapitalismRobert Pollin's review article of Andrew Glyn's recent book, Capitalism Unleashed: Finance, Globalization and Welfare appears in the July-August issue of New Left Review. Pollin considers the book to be a powerful new history of the age of neoliberalism in the OECD economies, the rich Western countries plus Japan. Glyn characterizes this neoliberal era as one of "austerity, privatization, and deregulation." Pollin challenges Glyn's discussion on several points, including the book's assessment of the impact of globalization on the OECD economies, and what, for the foreseeable future, are likely to be the most effective ways of putting Western capitalism 'back on a leash.' >> Download Robert Pollin's review article from New Left Review PERI Partners with United Nations’ International Poverty Centre to Develop Workable Pro-Poor Economic PoliciesPERI researchers have worked since 2003 with the International Poverty Centre of the United Nations Development Programme to develop new pro-poor economic policies for developing countries. The PERI projects have been part of a global initiative by the IPC called “Economic Policies, the Millennium Development Goals, and Poverty.” These initiatives have concentrated on fiscal policies, monetary policies, financial policies, and the public provision of services. IPC has now launched a new website, co-sponsored by PERI and the School for Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) at the University of London, that brings this work together. The materials on this new site include Country Studies, Policy Research Briefs, Working Papers, and Training Modules for policymakers in developing countries. The most recently launched IPC training module is on Financial Policy. It is authored by PERI Co-Director Gerald Epstein and Ilene Grabel of the University of Denver. >> Go to the new IPC Website (co-sponsored by PERI and SOAS) Robert Pollin on Microcredit in "Foreign Policy in Focus"The 2006 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Mohammad Yunus, for founding the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh in 1976, and leading a worldwide movement to provide credit in small amounts and other financial services to poor people and communities. But, within a larger context of predominant neoliberal economic policies throughout the developing world, can microcredit stand on its own as an effective tool for fighting global poverty? PERI Co-Director Robert Pollin addresses this issue in a new article for Foreign Policy in Focus. Pollin also debates Sam Daley-Harris, Director of the Microcredit Summit Campaign, on the effectiveness of microcredit as a poverty-fighting tool. Alternatives to Inflation TargetingInflation targeting—monetary policy that focuses almost exclusively on keeping inflation in the low single digits—has become the operational objective of central banks around the world. But the record with this approach has been generally disappointing. Economic growth and employment have generally suffered as countries adopt inflation-targeting policies, even while these measures have not even consistently succeeded in maintaining lower inflation. Over the past two years, PERI and Bilkent University in Turkey have organized an international team of economists to produce a new volume, Alternatives to Inflation Targeting, edited by PERI co-director Gerald Epstein. This new work includes a range of country-focused studies that propose central bank policies to promote growth, employment and poverty reduction, while also maintaining moderate inflation and a stable exchange rate. The project also includes thematic papers, including a study of the gender impacts of monetary policy, inflation and poverty. >> Click here for more information about the May 17 panel discussion >> More on the Alternatives to Inflation Targeting project Globalization, economic policy and employment: Poverty and gender implicationsWhen we speak of the impact of globalization on national and local economies, those economies are, actually composed of a wide variety of individuals, each class of whom will be effected differently by large-scale economic forces. In this paper, produced for the U.N.’s International Labour Office, PERI Associate Director James Heintz demonstrates how global labor markets are segmented by gender and how any analysis of the impact of macroeconomic policies on growth, employment and poverty reduction needs to be undertaken with this segmentation in mind. Specifically, Heintz addresses how macroeconomic policies differentially effect women’s and men’s employment, looking at monetary policy, trade policy, exchange rate regimes and public sector restructuring. Heintz brings his findings together in recommendations for an alternative policy framework of employment-centered, poverty-reducing development. >> Globalization, Economic Policy and Employment full report (91 pages) |