SFC modeling in Paris

At the Conference on Political Economy and the outlook for capitalism there will be several sessions on stock-flow models.
Papers listed in the program include:
Michael Clévenot, Jacques Mazier and Yann Guy, Estimation et simulation d’un régime de croissance financiarisée avec un modèle SFC
Edwin Le Heron and Toussaint Bakala, Generalized liquidity preference theory in a SFC model and financial crisis
Amine Marouane, La révolution tunisienne: enjeux et perspectives à partir d’un modèle SFC
James Juniper, Modern Money Theory (MM) and Minsky: Towards a Stock-flow-Consistent (SFC) Synthesis
Stefano Lucarelli, A Stock-Flow Analysis of a Schumpeterian Innovation Economy: The Role of Knowledge(s) in the Economic Development
Vincent Duwicquet and Jacques Mazier, Ajustement et redistribution en union monétaire
Marc Lavoie, Le modèle SFC à trois pays et deux banques centrales à la lumière de la crise de la zone euro
Jamel Saadaoui, Modèle SFC à deux pays avec financiarisation et changes flexibles
Pascal Seppecher, em>Agents hétérogènes et monnaie endogène dans un modèle SFC
Alessandro Caiani, Stefano Lucarelli and Antoine Godin, Schumpeter in a matrix: a Stock Flow Consistent analysis of technological change
Tarik Mouakil, A Minsky Crisis in a Stock-Flow Consistent Model
Ahmed Hammadache and Vincent Duwicquet, Prix pétroliers et déséquilibres internationaux avec l’apport d’un modèle SFC
Stephen Kinsella and G. Tiou-Tagba Aliti, Simulating the impact of austerity on the irish economy using a stock-flow consistent model
Gennaro Zezza, Using SFC models for the analysis of European economies
Antoine Godin, Green Jobs for full employment, a Stock Flow Consistent analysis

It looks like the largest gathering of SFC modeler so far!

The Fifth “Dijon” Post-Keynesian Conference

13-14th of May 2011 | Université de Bourgogne, Roskilde and Aalborg University

On the 75th year anniversary of The General Theory, this year’s conference themes are:

1. The (Macro) economic Consequences of:
• European Monetary System
• European banks and financial institutions
• European labor markets: unemployment, employment and income distribution
• European fiscal policies: Employment, income distribution and budget deficits
• European Environment and economic growth
2. The General Theory after 75 years:
• Keynes’ methodology
• Keynes’s macroeconomic theory as different from mainstream economics in all areas of relevance
3. Teaching Keynes’s macroeconomics:
• How to teach Keynes’s macroeconomics?
• What to do when textbooks are lacking?

Proposals for a full session and/or for individual papers within these topics are especially welcome.
They could either have a mainly political perspective related to the actual crises in Europe or they might focus on theoretical dimension, how to make a macroeconomic analysis in the spirit of the General Theory. Within the latter category we think that a special session commemorating the original contributions by the late Wynne Godley would be timely.
Submission should be send to professor Jesper Jespersen jesperj@ruc.dk not later than 1st February 2011.

The organizing committee consists of:
Jesper Jespersen, Roskilde Universitet
Mogens Ove Madsen, Aalborg Universitet
Louis-Philippe Rochon, Laurentian University
Claude Gnos, Université de Bourgogne, Dijon

For more information on the conference visit the official web site or download the call for papers.