Innovative Thinkers Join Forces to Meet Challenges of Global Economic Crisis

Tue Oct 27, 2009 10:01am EDT
 
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Leading Economists and Policymakers Including Nobel Laureates George Akerlof,
Sir James Mirrlees, A. Michael Spence and Joseph Stiglitz Join to Foster New
Thinking.

George Soros Backs New Institute With $50 million Pledge

NEW YORK and BUDAPEST, Hungary, Oct. 27 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- In response
to the policy challenges presented by the economic crisis and the need to
develop fresh approaches to economic theory, a group of top academics, policy
makers, and private sector leaders today announced the creation of the
Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET). (www.ineteconomics.org) 

INET's founding Advisory Board members include Nobel laureates George Akerlof,
Sir James Mirrlees, A. Michael Spence and Joseph E. Stiglitz, Willem Buiter,
Markus K. Brunnermeier,  Robert Dugger, Duncan Foley, Thomas Ferguson, Roman
Frydman, Ian Goldin, Charles Goodhart, Anatole Kaletsky, John Kay, Axel
Leijonhufvud, Perry Mehrling, Y.V. Reddy, Ken Rogoff, Jeffrey Sachs, John
Shattuck, William R. White, and Yu Yongding.

The Institute was established with a pledge of $5 million per year for 10
years from Open Society Institute Chairman George Soros, a long-time critic of
classical economic theory, who will fund the effort through the Central
European University (CEU).

The Institute will make research grants, convene symposia, and establish a
journal. A first conference will be at King's College, Cambridge on April
9-11. Scholars will explore the implications of the financial crisis for
regulatory policy. The first round of research grants will be made before the
end of the year to cutting-edge scholars working with leading universities
around the world. INET's executive director will be Robert Johnson, an
economist with long experience in government, academia, and the private
sector.

Writing in an essay on the creation of INET Professor Stiglitz noted: "The
financial crisis has caused a moment of deep reflection in the economics
profession, for it has put many long-standing ideas to the test. If science is
defined by its ability to forecast the future, the failure of much of the
economics profession to see the crisis coming should be a cause of great
concern."

Speaking in Budapest at the CEU, through which INET will be funded and which
will be a hub of the INET network Soros said: "The entire edifice of global
financial markets has been erected on the false premise that markets can be
left to their own devices, we must find a new paradigm and rebuild from the
ground up. I decided to sponsor INET to facilitate the process. I hope others
will join me." Because he is both an INET benefactor and the proponent of a
particular theory, Reflexivity, Soros said he will recuse himself from the
grant making process: "While I hope reflexivity will be one of the concepts
examined, there are numerous alternatives to the prevailing dogma that must be
explored," Soros added.

Contact:  Robert Johnson: 212-444-9137; RAJ@ineteconomics.org


SOURCE  Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET)

Robert Johnson of Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET), +1-212-444-9137,
 RAJ@ineteconomics.org

 

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