Thomas Palley

Thomas I. Palley
Born (1956-03-17) March 17, 1956
Field Macroeconomics
School or
tradition
Post-Keynesian economics
Alma mater University of Oxford (B.A.)
Yale University (M.A.)
Yale University (Ph.D.)
Information at IDEAS / RePEc

Thomas Palley (born March 17, 1956) is a United States-based economist who has served as the chief economist for the US–China Economic and Security Review Commission. He is currently Schwartz Economic Growth Fellow at the New America Foundation.

Career

Palley received his Bachelor of Arts degree from Oxford University in 1976. He earned a master's degree in international relations and a PhD in economics from Yale University. Palley founded the Economics for Democratic & Open Societies project. He states its purpose is to "stimulate public discussion about what kinds of economic arrangements and conditions are needed to promote democracy and open society." [1] Palley's previous positions include director of the Open Society Institute’s Globalization Reform Project, and Assistant Director of Public Policy for the AFL-CIO.[1]

His work has covered macroeconomic theory and policy, international finance and trade, economic development, and labor markets where his approach is Post Keynesian.[2]

Post-Keynesian work

Academically his most famous work is the book Post Keynesian Economics: Debt, Distribution, and the Macro Economy. In this book Palley tries to develop Post-Keynesian macroeconomic models that combine the insights of various 'brands' of Post-Keynesian economics including the following: Yale Keynesianism (James Tobin), Cambridge–UK Keynesianism (Nicholas Kaldor), and American Post-Keynesianism (Paul Davidson, Hyman Minsky).

A critique of that book was written by Basil Moore, also a Post Keynesian economist. Moore argues that Palley succeeds in demonstrating the coherence of Post-Keynesian macroeconomics. This is done via the concepts of effective demand, price-setting, quantity-taking fix-price supply behavior and the ineffectiveness of nominal wage and price adjustments as a means of remedying aggregate demand deficiencies. But Moore raises the criticism that by using neoclassical tools and methodology Palley has failed to take both time and uncertainty (key Post-Keynesian concerns) in a sufficiently serious fashion.[3]

Selected works

References

  1. 1 2 http://www.thomaspalley.com/?page_id=11 Thomas Palley Economics for Democratic & Open Societies
  2. http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/thomaspalley Thomas Palley profile at the Guardian
  3. Basil J. Moore (1997) Book Review of Thomas Palley, Post Keynesian Economics: Debt, Distribution and the Macroeconomy, Journal of Comparative Economics Volume 25, Issue 3, December 1997, pp. 473–476
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