New Political Economy
2012 - 2025
Current editor(s): Professor Colin Hay From Taylor & Francis Journals Bibliographic data for series maintained by Chris Longhurst (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 23, issue 6, 2018
- Post-truth Politics, Bullshit and Bad Ideas: ‘Deficit Fetishism’ in the UK pp. 641-655

- Jonathan Hopkin and Ben Rosamond
- Economic Competition, Policy Interdependence, and Labour Rights pp. 656-673

- Zhiyuan Wang
- How Do Business Interest Groups Respond to Political Challenges? A Study of the Politics of German Employers pp. 674-689

- Thomas Paster
- How Low Can It Go? Analysing the Political Economy of Carbon Market Design and Low Carbon Prices pp. 690-710

- Kate Ervine
- Quantitative Easing Forever? Financialisation and the Institutional Legitimacy of the Federal Reserve’s Unconventional Monetary Policy pp. 711-727

- Antti Ronkainen and Ville-Pekka Sorsa
- Clean Energy Trade Governance: Reconciling Trade Liberalism and Climate Interventionism? pp. 728-747

- Christopher M. Dent
- Welfare Capitalism in Post-Industrial Times: Trilemma or Power Over Rents? pp. 748-767

- Paul Lewis, Fei Peng and Magnus Ryner
- Accounting for Income-Contingent Loans as a Policy Hybrid: Politics of Discretion and Discipline in Financialising Welfare States pp. 768-785

- Ben Spies-Butcher and Gareth Bryant
- The Revival of Private Landlords in Britain’s Post-Homeownership Society pp. 786-803

- Richard Ronald and Justin Kadi
- Contesting Actually Existing Austerity pp. 804-818

- Oscar Berglund
Volume 23, issue 5, 2018
- Raced Markets: Prefatory Note pp. 531-533

- David Roediger
- Raced Markets: An Introduction pp. 534-543

- Lisa Tilley and Robbie Shilliam
- Crusoe, Friday and the Raced Market Frame of Orthodox Economics Textbooks pp. 544-559

- Matthew Watson
- ‘We All Have a Responsibility to Each Other’: Valuing Racialised Bodies in the Neoliberal Bioeconomy pp. 560-573

- Sibille Merz and Ros Williams
- Colonialism, Postcolonialism and the Liberal Welfare State pp. 574-587

- Gurminder K. Bhambra and John Holmwood
- Racism and Far Right Imaginaries Within Neo-liberal Political Economy pp. 588-608

- Richard Saull
- Detroit’s Municipal Bankruptcy: Racialised Geographies of Austerity pp. 609-626

- Sarah Phinney
- Refugees as Surplus Population: Race, Migration and Capitalist Value Regimes pp. 627-639

- Prem Kumar Rajaram
Volume 23, issue 4, 2018
- Bringing Balance to the Force? A Comparative Analysis of Institutionalisation Processes in the G20’s Mutual Assessment Process and the EU’s Macroeconomic Imbalances Procedure pp. 391-406

- Charlotte Rommerskirchen and Holly Snaith
- The Political Economy for Low-carbon Energy Transition in China: Towards a New Policy Paradigm? pp. 407-421

- Wei Shen and Lei Xie
- Learning from Role Models in Rwanda: Incoherent Emulation in the Construction of a Neoliberal Developmental State pp. 422-440

- Pritish Behuria
- Politics of Intra-firm Trade: Corporate Price Planning and the Double Role of the Arm’s Length Principle pp. 441-457

- Matti Ylönen and Teivo Teivainen
- What Makes Firms Competitive? States, Markets, and Organisational Embeddedness in Competitive Firm Restructuring in Postsocialist Economies pp. 458-474

- Besnik Pula
- Semi-peripheral Financialisation and Social Reproduction: The Case of Portugal pp. 475-494

- Ana C. Santos, João Rodrigues and Nuno Teles
- Narrating Crisis, Constructing Policy: Economic Ideas and Institutional Change in Syria pp. 495-511

- Daniel Neep
- Money power of Capital and Production of ‘New State Spaces’: A View from the Global South pp. 512-529

- Ilias Alami
Volume 23, issue 3, 2018
- Rising Economies in the International Patent Regime: From Rule-breakers to Rule-changers and Rule-makers pp. 255-273

- Jean-Frédéric Morin, Omar Serrano, Mira Burri and Sara Bannerman
- Party Politics and the Political Economy of Ghana’s Oil pp. 274-289

- Giles Mohan, Kojo Pumpuni Asante and Abdul-Gafaru Abdulai
- Subordinated Financial Integration and Financialisation in Emerging Capitalist Economies: The Brazilian Experience pp. 290-313

- Annina Kaltenbrunner and Juan Pablo Painceira
- Trapped in Informality: The Big Role of Small Firms in Russia’s Statist-patrimonial Capitalism pp. 314-330

- Alexandra Vasileva
- Financial Inclusion and Policy-Making: Strategy, Campaigns and Microcredit a la Turca pp. 331-347

- Ali Rıza Güngen
- Liberalisation, Financial Risk, and Formal Financial Participation in Pakistan: Hyperinflationary Microeconomic Responses to Moderate Volatility in a Developing Economy pp. 348-365

- Antonia Settle
- German Finance Capitalism: The Paradigm Shift Underlying Financial Diversification pp. 366-390

- Nils Röper
Volume 23, issue 2, 2018
- Corrigendum pp. iii-iii

- The Editors
- Introduction: Is the European Union Capable of Integrating Diverse Models of Capitalism? pp. 145-159

- Alison Johnston and Aidan Regan
- Better Than the Euro? The European Monetary System (1979–1998) pp. 160-173

- Martin Höpner and Alexander Spielau
- Exporting Assets: EMU and the Financial Drivers of European Macroeconomic Imbalances pp. 174-191

- Gregory W. Fuller
- The Political Economy of Austerity in Southern Europe pp. 192-207

- Sofia A. Perez and Manos Matsaganis
- Skill Formation, Immigration and European Integration: The Politics of the UK Growth Model pp. 208-222

- Steve Coulter
- Celtic Phoenix or Leprechaun Economics? The Politics of an FDI-led Growth Model in Europe pp. 223-238

- Aidan Regan and Samuel Brazys
- European Integration, Capitalist Diversity and Crises Trajectories on Europe’s Eastern Periphery pp. 239-253

- Dorothee Bohle
Volume 23, issue 1, 2018
- The Confidence Trap: Japan’s Past Bubble and China’s Recent Bubble pp. 1-26

- Myung-koo Kang
- The Legitimation of Post-crisis Capitalism in the United Kingdom: Real Wage Decline, Finance-led Growth and the State pp. 27-45

- Scott Lavery
- Civil Society and Investor–state Dispute Settlement: Assessing the Social Dimensions of Investment Disputes in Latin America pp. 46-65

- Julia Calvert
- From Neoliberalism to Neo-developmentalism? The Political Economy of Post-crisis Argentina (2002–2015) pp. 66-87

- Hilal Gezmiş
- Protecting Solar: Global Supply Chains and Business Power pp. 88-104

- Jonas Meckling and Llewelyn Hughes
- The Neutrality Illusion: Biased Economics, Biased Training, and Biased Monetary Policy. Testing the Role of Ideology on FOMC Voting Behaviour pp. 105-127

- Etienne Lepers
- The Transnational State and the Infrastructure Push pp. 128-144

- Morten Ougaard
Volume 22, issue 6, 2017
- The Economic Driven by Politics as Values: The Example of Pharmaceuticals in France pp. 611-627

- Andy Smith
- How Social Developmentalism Reframed Social Policy in Brazil pp. 628-644

- Lena Lavinas
- Mobile Payments, Social Money: Everyday Politics of the Consumer Subject pp. 645-660

- Ruben Kremers and James Brassett
- Regional Integration and Welfare: Framing and Advocating Pro-Poor Norms through Southern Regionalisms pp. 661-675

- Pía Riggirozzi
- A Political Economy of Youth Policy in Tunisia pp. 676-691

- Emma C. Murphy
- Financial Deregulation and the Role of Statecraft: Lessons from Britain’s 1971 Competition and Credit Control Measures pp. 692-708

- Jack Copley
- Death by a Thousand Cuts? Financial Political Power and the Case of the European Financial Transaction Tax pp. 709-726

- Manolis Kalaitzake
- Global Production Networks and Activism: Can Activists Change Mining Practices by Targeting Brands? pp. 727-742

- Michael John Bloomfield
- Rethinking the Role of State-owned Enterprises in China’s Rise pp. 743-760

- Lee Jones and Yizheng Zou
- Editorial Board pp. ebi-ebi

- The Editors
Volume 22, issue 5, 2017
- The state as a creature of money pp. 463-477

- Michael Beggs
- Governing stigmatised space: the case of the ‘slums’ of Berlin-Neukölln pp. 478-495

- Susanne Soederberg
- The World Bank and Emerging Powers: Beyond the Multipolarity–Multilateralism Conundrum pp. 496-520

- Ali Burak Güven
- Who drives climate-relevant policies in the rising powers? pp. 521-540

- Hubert Schmitz
- ‘Adaptive accumulation’ and US political economy pp. 541-556

- Rodney Loeppky
- Budget surplus goal experiments in Australia and Sweden pp. 557-572

- Scott Brenton and Jon Pierre
- The political economy of the Trans-Pacific Partnership: a ‘21st Century’ trade agreement? pp. 573-594

- John Ravenhill
- The political economy of post-crisis international standards for resolving financial institutions pp. 595-609

- Lucia Quaglia
Volume 22, issue 4, 2017
- Introduction to special issue on the material cultures of financialisation pp. 355-370

- Kate Bayliss, Ben Fine and Mary Robertson
- The material and culture of financialisation pp. 371-382

- Ben Fine
- Material cultures of water financialisation in England and Wales pp. 383-397

- Kate Bayliss
- (De)constructing the financialised culture of owner-occupation in the UK, with the aid of the 10Cs pp. 398-409

- Mary Robertson
- Cultivating the self-reliant and responsible individual: the material culture of financial literacy pp. 410-422

- Ana C. Santos
- The digital revolution in financial inclusion: international development in the fintech era pp. 423-436

- Daniela Gabor and Sally Brooks
- Financialisation, media and social change pp. 437-449

- Catherine Happer
- From happiness to social provisioning: addressing well-being in times of crisis pp. 450-462

- Marco Boffo, Andrew Brown and David A. Spencer
Volume 22, issue 3, 2017
- Historicising Ricardo’s comparative advantage theory, challenging the normative foundations of liberal International Political Economy pp. 257-272

- Matthew Watson
- Where states and markets meet: the financialisation of sovereign debt management pp. 273-293

- Florian Fastenrath, Michael Schwan and Christine Trampusch
- In the wake of austerity: social impact bonds and the financialisation of the welfare state in Britain pp. 294-310

- Emma Dowling
- The political economy of decarbonisation: from green energy ‘race’ to green ‘division of labour’ pp. 311-327

- Erick Lachapelle, Robert MacNeil and Matthew Paterson
- Putting Culture in its Place? A Critical Engagement with Cultural Political Economy pp. 328-341

- Juan Ignacio Staricco
- Putting the ‘Amsterdam School’ in its Rightful Place: A Reply to Juan Ignacio Staricco’s Critique of Cultural Political Economy pp. 342-354

- Bob Jessop and Ngai-Ling Sum
Volume 22, issue 2, 2017
- The political economy of governance in a ‘global value chain world’ pp. 129-133

- Frederick W. Mayer, Nicola Phillips and Anne C. Posthuma
- Outsourcing governance: states and the politics of a ‘global value chain world’ pp. 134-152

- Frederick W. Mayer and Nicola Phillips
- Workers’ rights in global value chains: possibilities for protection and for peril pp. 153-168

- Layna Mosley
- Contextualising compliance: hybrid governance in global value chains pp. 169-185

- Jennifer Bair
- Coordinated governance in global value chains: supranational dynamics and the role of the International Labour Organization pp. 186-202

- Anne Posthuma and Arianna Rossi
- The sticky materiality of neo-liberal neonatures: GMOs and the agrarian question pp. 203-218

- Myles Carroll
- Big Data and algorithmic governance: the case of financial practices pp. 219-236

- Malcolm Campbell-Verduyn, Marcel Goguen and Tony Porter
- Labour market flexibility, employment and inequality: lessons from Chile pp. 237-256

- Paul W. Posner
Volume 22, issue 1, 2017
- Time, trading and algorithms in financial sector security pp. 1-11

- Grahame F. Thompson
- Putting ‘merchants of debt’ in their place: the political economy of retail banking and credit-based financialisation in Germany pp. 12-30

- Daniel Mertens
- The political economy of housing in England pp. 31-60

- Miguel Coelho, Sebastian Dellepiane-Avellaneda and Vigyan Ratnoo
- Pragmatic financialisation: the role of the Japanese Post Office pp. 61-75

- Gary Robinson
- Governing new global health-care markets: the case of stem cell treatments pp. 76-91

- Brian Salter, Yinhua Zhou and Saheli Datta
- The symbolic politics of delegation: macroprudential policy and independent regulatory authorities pp. 92-108

- Domenico Lombardi and Manuela Moschella
- Foreign direct investment, political risk and the limited access order pp. 109-127

- Janis Nikolaus Kluge
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