National Institute Economic Review
1959 - 2024
Continuation of National Institute Economic Review.
From National Institute of Economic and Social Research
Cambridge University Press, UPH, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 8BS UK.
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Volume 241, month August, 2017
- The Financial Crisis: One Decade on Introduction pp. R1-R4

- Jagjit Chadha
- Interest Rate Normalisation pp. F4-F7

- Jagjit Chadha
- Monetary Policy Normals, Future and Past pp. R5-R12

- Peter Sinclair and William Allen
- “Sound Finances”: Strategy or Soundbite pp. R13-R32

- Michael McMahon
- Building on Incomplete Foundations: Financial Stability Policy since the Crash pp. R33-R47

- Richard Barwell
- The Financial Foundations of the Productivity Puzzle pp. R48-R57

- Jagjit Chadha, Amit Kara and Paul Labonne
- Medium-Run Implications of Changing Demographic Structures for the Macro-Economy pp. R58-R64

- Yunus Aksoy, Henrique Basso and Ronald Smith
- Quantitative Easing and the Independence of the Bank of England pp. R65-R69

- William Allen
- Unwinding: A Tale of Corridors and Floors pp. R70-R73

- Roger Farmer
Volume 240, month May, 2017
- Inequality, Social Mobility and the New Economy: Introduction pp. R1-R4

- Heather Rolfe
- Commentary: The Economic Landscape of the UK pp. F4-F13

- Jagjit Chadha
- Precarious and Productive Work in the Digital Economy pp. R5-R14

- Diane Coyle
- On Estimating the Fiscal Benefits of Early Intervention pp. R15-R29

- Leon Feinstein, Haroon Chowdry and Kirsten Asmussen
- The Role of the Eleven-Plus Test Papers and Appeals in Producing Social Inequalities in Access to Grammar Schools pp. R30-R41

- Rebecca Allen and Joanne Bartley
- Post-Compulsory Education in England: Choices and Implications pp. R42-R57

- Claudia Hupkau, Sandra McNally, Jenifer Ruiz-Valenzuela and Guglielmo Ventura
- Is London Really the Engine-Room? Migration, Opportunity Hoarding and Regional Social Mobility in the UK pp. R58-R72

- Sam Friedman and Lindsey Macmillan
Volume 239, month February, 2017
- Economic Policy and Surveillance in Europe: Introduction pp. R1-R2

- Simon Kirby
- Fiscal and Other Rules in EU Economic Governance: Helpful, Largely Irrelevant or Unenforceable? pp. R3-R13

- Iain Begg
- Does the Structural Budget Balance Guide Fiscal Policy Pro-Cyclically? Evidence from the Finnish Great Depression of the 1990s pp. R14-R31

- Tero Kuusi
- Analysing the Relevance of the MIP Scoreboard's Indicators pp. R32-R52

- Domonkos Tomáš, Ostrihoň Filip, Šikulová Ivana and Mária Širaňová
- A Public Investment Stimulus in Surplus Countries and Its Spillovers in the EA pp. R53-R62

- Jan in't Veld
Volume 238, month November, 2016
- UK and Europe: What Next? Introduction pp. R1-R3

- Jagjit Chadha
- Hard or Soft? The Politics of Brexit pp. R4-R12

- Anand Menon and Brigid Fowler
- Immigration after Brexit pp. R13-R21

- Jonathan Portes
- Negotiating the UK's Post-Brexit Trade Arrangements pp. R22-R30

- Peter Holmes, Jim Rollo and L. Winters
- Assessing the Impact of Trade Agreements on Trade pp. R31-R42

- Monique Ebell
- The UK and EU Foreign, Security and Defence Policy after Brexit: Integrated, Associated or Detached? pp. R43-R50

- Richard G. Whitman
Volume 237, month August, 2016
- The Future of Pensions: Reforms and their Consequences – Introduction pp. R1-R5

- Alexander Danzer, Richard Disney, Peter Dolton and Chiara Rosazza Bondibene
- The Referendum Blues: shocking the system pp. F4-F8

- Jagjit Chadha
- Pension reform in the United Kingdom: an economic perspective pp. R6-R12

- Richard Disney
- One pillar crumbling, the others too short: old-age provision in Germany pp. R13-R21

- Martin Werding
- Linking retirement age to life expectancy in a Bismarckian system – the case of Germany pp. R22-R29

- Valentin Vogt and Jörg Althammer
- Workplace pensions and remuneration in the public and private sectors in the UK pp. R30-R37

- Jonathan Cribb and Carl Emmerson
- Who wins? Evaluating the impact of UK public sector pension scheme reforms pp. R38-R46

- Alexander Danzer, Peter Dolton and Chiara Rosazza Bondibene
- The effect of the reforms to compulsion on annuity demand pp. R47-R54

- Edmund Cannon, Ian Tonks and Rob Yuille
- Variable annuities and aggregate mortality risk pp. R55-R61

- Martin Weale and Justin van de Ven
Volume 236, month May, 2016
- The economic consequences of leaving the EU pp. 2-6

- Angus Armstrong and Jonathan Portes
- Britain's influence in the EU pp. 7-13

- Anand Menon and John-Paul Salter
- Immigration, free movement and the EU referendum pp. 14-22

- Jonathan Portes
- Free movement of services, migration and leaving the EU pp. 23-30

- Catherine Barnard and Amy Ludlow
- EU membership, financial services and stability pp. 31-38

- Angus Armstrong
- The EU budget and UK contribution pp. 39-47

- Iain Begg
Volume 235, month February, 2016
- Financial Regulation: Are We Reaching an Efficient Outcome? pp. R1-R3

- Angus Armstrong and E Davis
- Commentary: UK Housing Market: Problems and Policies pp. F4-F8

- Angus Armstrong
- The Missed Opportunity and Challenge of Capital Regulation pp. R4-R14

- Anat R. Admati
- Regulatory Failure and Regulatory Change in the Banking Sector pp. R15-R17

- David Miles
- Liquidity Regulation: Rationales, Benefits and Costs pp. R18-R26

- Gianni De Nicolò
- Too Big to Fail and Too Big to Save: Dilemmas for Banking Reform pp. R27-R39

- James Barth and Clas Wihlborg
- Regulatory Cooperation on Cross-Border Banking – Progress and Challenges After the Crisis pp. R40-R49

- Thorsten Beck
- Macroprudential Supervision: From Theory to Policy pp. R50-R62

- Dirk Schoenmaker and Peter Wierts