Transforming the U.S. Financial System: An Equitable and Efficient Structure for the 21st Century
3 authors - Paperback
£28.99
Kiichiro Yagi is Vice President and Professor in Economics at Setsunan University, Japan. He was educated in the University of Tokyo and Nagoya University. He received his Ph. D. from Kyoto University. He taught political economy and history of economics at Kyoto University for a quarter of century. Since the mid of nineteen-nineties he made efforts to integrate the ideas of evolutionary and institutional economics with classical political economy including Marxian economics. He is Chief Representative of the JSPE. Nobuharu Yokokawa is Professor of Economics at Musashi University, Tokyo Japan. He was educated at Shiga University (BA), the University of Tokyo (MSc) and Cambridge University (PhD). His publications include Value, Employment and Crisis (in Japanese, Shakai Hyouron Sya). He had co-edited Capitalism in Evolution (Edward Elgar), Industrialization of China and India and its Impact on World Economy (Routledge, forthcoming). Since 2007 he has been editor of the Uno Theory Newsletter. He is chairman of the JSPE Committee for International Communication and Exchange Shinjiro Hagiwara is Professor of Economics at Yokohama National University, Japan. He was educated at Fukushima University and at the University of Tokyo. His publications include US Multinationals in the World Economy (Ohtsuki 2005 in Japanese) and The Rise and Demise of the Keynesian Coalition (Yuhikaku 1996 in Japanese). He is a member of the executive board of the JSPE. Gary Dymski is Chair in Applied Economics at the Leeds University Business School, University of Leeds, and is on leave as Professor of Economics at the University of California, Riverside. He received his BA in urban studies from the University of Pennsylvania, graduating Phi Beta Kappa in 1975. He received a doctorate in economics from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst in 1987. He has published books, articles, chapters, and studies on banking, financial fragility, urban development, credit-market discrimination, the Latin American and Asian financial crises, exploitation, housing finance, the subprime lending crisis, financial regulation, the Eurozone crisis, and economic policy. He is an academic adviser of the JSPE.