Open Peer Discussion Forum for Economic Thought

This site presents papers that scholars have submitted for publication in Economic Thought. You are cordially invited to comment on these papers.

Comments can range from short remarks to full reviews.  We encourage you to be frank, but polite. As a rule, commentators should give their name. If they fear hurting their relationship with authors, they can use an alias, which has to be clearly recognizable as such.

Editors will vet comments before publication to make sure appropriate and comprehensible language is used and that they are  directly on the paper at hand. Since the OPD plays a crucial role in the peer review process, commentators are requested to make substantive comments relating to the content of the articles that they are engaging with. Comments that either fail to engage with the material, or express an opinion (positive or negative) about the article without making a substantive contribution will not be accepted. Standards of fairness will be particularly high if an alias is used

Authors who have submitted a paper for open peer review are strongly encouraged to take part in this collaborative effort by responding to comments and by reading and commenting on papers of other authors. Where a paper is selected for publication in the journal and there is a comment on the OPD which takes the form of an extended commentary and is of sufficient quality, the editors may, at their discretion, decide to publish this commentary alongside the paper.

We thank all contributors very much for their time and input.

Papers under review

Is Heraclitean spirit present in contemporary evolutionary socioeconomic theory?

This paper posits that Heraclitus’ work constitutes a somewhat underappreciated foundation in the study of socioeconomic thought. It then differentiates his perspective from earlier economic thought in ancient societies and critically examines the surviving fragments of his work. The dialectical …

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Posted for review 7 Nov 2023

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Structural Change in Post Keynesian Monetary Theory: A Non-Compensatory Disequilibrium Framework

Post Keynesian Economics has shifted away and even renegade from Keynes’ original research program, i.e., the Unemployment Equilibrium thesis, endogenous money and liquidity preference determination of interest rate in which money and uncertainty play a fundamental part. This paper attempts …

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Posted for review 20 Feb 2022

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Extrapolate Lessons from the Economic Philosophy of Ibn Khaldun to Better Fight COVID-19

Ibn Khaldun’s economic philosophy represents an interesting explanation of the convergence of social, political and economic realms of human lives. In his theory, he provides insights into the requirements for achieving sustainable economic development. He reiterates several theories like the …

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Posted for review 4 May 2021

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