The workshop is organised by Scott James, Reader in Political Economy at Kings College London and a visiting researcher at SPERI. Co-hosted with the , the workshop will take place on November 25th and 26th.
The global financial crisis, austerity and Brexit, the climate emergency, and the Covid-19 pandemic pose fundamental challenges to prevailing economic thinking and have generated a range of novel policy responses over recent years from quantitative easing to the furlough scheme. This raises questions of critical importance to political economy: To what extent have established economic ideas and narratives been challenged and revised? How have economic policy makers responded to successive crises and emergent issues? Has the economics profession kept pace with these developments? What are the long-term implications of the Covid-19 pandemic for the economy? Has neoliberalism been strengthened or undermined and is it still a useful conceptual tool? The workshop aims to address these and related questions by exploring the past, present and future of economic policy.
Rethinking Economic Policy: Crisis, Change and Continuity in the UK and beyond | Online workshop, November 25-26 2021
Full Programme
THURSDAY 25 NOVEMBER 2021
12.30-13.00. Welcome and introduction
- Scott James (SPERI and Kings College London)
13.00-14.30. Panel 1 Pandemic politics and policy
- Chair: Valentina Ausserladscheider (University of Vienna)
- Building back before: Fiscal support for the economy in the UK amid and after Covid-19&紳莉莽梯;&紳莉莽梯;Craig Berry, Daniel Bailey, David Beel and Nick ODonovan (Manchester Metropolitan University)
- Covid-19 and the work of trade unions: New challenges, adaptation and renewal &紳莉莽梯;Tom Hunt (University of Sheffield)
- Austerity after Covid? Incomplete ideational change in British economic policy &紳莉莽梯;Kate Alexander-Shaw (LSE)
15.00-16.30. Panel 2 Lessons in economic change
- Chair: Andrew Hindmoor (University of Sheffield)
- Rethinking concepts of change in political economy: A dialectical analysis of the City of London&紳莉莽梯;&紳莉莽梯;Matthew Eagleton-Pierce (SOAS)
- Choice, tactics, strategy. How British central bankers utilized global conditions to enact domestic fiscal and monetary reform in the 1970s &紳莉莽梯;Inga Rademacher (Kings College London)
- Trade policy for domestic consumption: Social reproduction in Global Britain&紳莉莽梯;&紳莉莽梯;Ed Pemberton (University of Sheffield)
16.45-17.45. Workshop reflectionsThe past, present and future of UK economic policy Professor Andrew Gamble
FRIDAY 26 NOVEMBER 2021
09.00-10.30. Panel 3 Tax and inequality
- Chair: James Wood (University of Cambridge)
- Tax transparency as a new emerging frontier in global tax governance: Observing and participating in the creation of a policy sub-field&紳莉莽梯;&紳莉莽梯;Andrew Baker and Richard Murphy (University of Sheffield)
- The evolution of economic ideas on taxing the rich: A quantitative text analysis of legislative debates in the UK, US and Germany&紳莉莽梯;&紳莉莽梯;David Hope and Julian Limberg (Kings College London)
- The new fault lines of inequality: Covid-19 and the UK asset economy&紳莉莽梯;&紳莉莽梯;Huw Macartney (University of Birmingham), Johnna Montgomerie (Kings College London) and Daniela Tepe-Belfrage (University of Liverpool)
11.00-12.30. Panel 4 Challenging neoliberalism?
- Chair: Scott James (SPERI/Kings College London)
- The economics ideas debate after neoliberalism&紳莉莽梯;&紳莉莽梯;Rune M繪ller Stahl (Copenhagen Business School)
- Left-Nationalist challenges to neoliberalism in Brexit Britain: A critical analysis of the Lexiteers&紳莉莽梯;&紳莉莽梯;Owen Parker and Matt Bishop (University of Sheffield)
- Humpty Dumpty politics: How are centre-left parties re-organising in post-Covid Europe?&紳莉莽梯;&紳莉莽梯;Sean McDaniel (Manchester Metropolitan University)
- Constructing a neoliberal exclusionary state: the role of far-right populism in economic policy change in post-war Austria&紳莉莽梯;&紳莉莽梯;Valentina Ausserladscheider (University of Vienna)
13.30-15.00. Panel 5 The politics of economic knowledge
- Chair: Jacqueline Best (University of Ottowa)
- Contingent learning and policy dissonance in the UKs fiscal policy framework&紳莉莽梯;&紳莉莽梯;Scott James (SPERI / Kings College London)
- Technocratic reason in hard times: The OBR, forecasting Brexit effects and the politics of economic expertise&紳莉莽梯;&紳莉莽梯;Ben Clift (University of Warwick) and Ben Rosamond (University of Copenhagen)
- The re-found art of economics&紳莉莽梯;&紳莉莽梯;Matthew Watson (University of Warwick)
- Long run potential: Considering potential output as a policy aim&紳莉莽梯;Leah Downey (University of Sheffield)
15.30-17.00. Panel 6 Monetary policy and central banks
- Chair: Helen Thompson (University of Cambridge)
- Treading the monetary tightrope: Post-pandemic central banking and the limits of monetary indiscipline&紳莉莽梯;&紳莉莽梯;Jeremy Green (University of Cambridge) and Scott Lavery (University of Sheffield)
- Independent central banks and the construction of a permanent inflation crisis&紳莉莽梯;&紳莉莽梯;James Wood (University of Cambridge) and Tiago Moreira Ramalho (Universit矇 libre de Bruxelles)
- Politics, publics and the limits of expertise: Central bank mandate reviews in critical perspective&紳莉莽梯;&紳莉莽梯;Jacqueline Best (University of Ottowa)
17.00-17.15. Closing remarks
- Scott James (SPERI and Kings College London)