Video
I learned to do video mainly in the series of short interviews I did with INET grantees that I called “Thirty Ways to Be an Economist” (actually forty videos).
The rest of the links below are to talks I gave for various seminars and conferences, so they wound up scattered all over the internet. Here they are gathered in one place, and arranged chronologically, so page down to end for the most recent.
- Fischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance (Goldman Sachs, New York, October 20, 2005)
- Fischer Black (Fisher College of Business, Ohio State University, November 9, 2007)
- Beyond Marx and Keynes (Heyman Center, Columbia University, March 31, 2010. My bit begins at 48:45)
- The New Lombard Street: Anatomy of Crisis (Inaugural INET Conference at King’s College, Cambridge, April 2010)
- Economics of the Real World [Curriculum Reform], (INET Conference at Bretton Woods, April 2011)
- Future of the Fed, (Roosevelt Institute, April 2011)
- The New Lombard Street, (Institute for New Economic Thinking, May 2011)
- Economics in Uncertain Times (The Agenda, October 2011)
- Bringing Back Political Economy: Europe Ground Zero (Columbia University, Nov 2011. My bit begins at 30:15.)
- Insights from Bagehot for these Trying Times (Wake Forest University, March 2012)
- The Clash of Economic Ideas (George Mason University, April 2012. My bit begins at 37:20)
- Mehrling on Soros (INET Conference at Berlin, April 12, 2012. My bit begins at 55:00)
- APU-INET Workshop on Indian Development (INET Summer School Workshop, July 2012)
- Beyond Monetary Walrasianism: Five Key Features of Modern Monetary Systems (Max Planck Institute, Leipzig, Germany, October 4, 2012. My bit begins at 131:45)
- Financial Globalization and Instability (Azim Premji Winter School, Bangalore, India, January 15, 2013)
- Central Banking at a Crossroads: Europe and beyond (DIIS Central Banking Conference, Copenhagen, January 2013)
- Is Central Bank Coordination Possible? (Festival of Economics, Trento, Italy, May 2013. The Question/Answer is the most interesting, starting at 45:30.)
- Economics and Life: An interview of Prof. Mehrling (Quattrogatti, Trento, May 2013)
- Money As a Hierarchical System: Legal and Economic Perspectives (The Public Interest Law Foundation, Columbia Law School, September 2013. My bit begins at 1:06:45)
- Beyond Monetary Walrasianism: Five Key Features of Modern Monetary Systems (Fields Institute, University of Toronto, November 2013)
- New Economic Thinking [Curriculum Reform] (INET Conference at Toronto, April 2014)
- Fundamentals of Shadow Banking: The Dealer Model (University of Missouri-Kansas City, April 2014)
- Shanghai Meetup [with MOOC students] (Shanghai, June 2014)
- Perry Mehrling on MOOCs and Blended Learning (CCNMTL, Columbia University, September 2014)
- Twentieth Century History of Money and Finance (University of Utah, February 2015)
- The New Politics of Central Banking (INET Conference at OECD, Paris, April 2015)
- Modern Financial Systems and the Role of Central Banks (Central Bank of Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, December 2015)
- The Euro in the Global Economy 2016: a new financial crisis? (European Institute, Columbia University, March 2016) My bit begins at 12:35 but don’t miss the Q&A at the end.
- Understanding Global Money (Committee on Global Thought, Columbia University, April 2016) My bit begins at 10:00.
- Remembering Jack Treynor (Treynor Memorial, MIT, June 2016) My bit begins at 45:40
- Monetary Rules and Emergency Lending (Mercatus-Cato, Washington DC, Sept 2016) My bit at 3:20, but don’t miss the Q&A fireworks at the end!
- Financialization and its Discontents (Intersections of Finance and Society, London, Nov 2016) Audio only.
- Warsaw Lectures (Warsaw School of Economics, Oct 2017): I. Why is Money Difficult? II. History of Money and Finance III. Fundamentals of the Money View IV. Past, Present, and Future of Shadow Banking V. Understanding Global Money
- Cryptocurrency Panel Discussion (Festival of Economics, Edinburgh, Oct 2017). My bit begins at 3:20. Audio only.
- Doubling Down on Failure (INET Plenary, Oct 2017). My bit begins at 54:30.