John T. Harvey

Professor Texas Christian University

  • Fort Worth TX

Dr. Harvey's research focuses on exchange rates, business cycles, and contemporary economic schools of thought.

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Biography

John T. Harvey earned his Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Tennessee and has been at Texas Christian University ever since. He specializes in international economics (particularly exchange rates), macroeconomics, business cycles, and contemporary schools of thought. Dr. Harvey has over forty refereed publications, plus two edited volumes, two books, and a number of teaching and research awards. His first volume was Currencies, Capital Flows and Crises (2009, Routledge Publishing), which presented a Post-Keynesian explanation of exchange rate determination based on the premise that, in contrast to the orthodox view that trade flows drive exchange rate movements, it is financial capital flows which play the primary role. It combines analyses rooted in the scholarly traditions of John Maynard Keynes and Thorstein Veblen with that of modern psychology to produce a set of new theories to explain international monetary economics including not only exchange rates, but also world financial crises. His recent business cycle work (which he hopes to turn into a book) builds on this, creating a model that explains the transition from expansion to recession as a function of entrepreneurs’ overly-optimistic expectations.

Dr. Harvey’s second volume was Contending Perspectives in Economics (second edition 2020, Edward Elgar Publishing). It is an introduction to eight different contemporary schools of thought, each chapter having been vetted by at least one member of that school It is one of very few such studies and the only one to go to such lengths in an attempt to remain unbiased.

Dr. Harvey has twice served as chair of the TCU Department of Economics, as well as Executive Director of the International Confederation of Associations for Pluralism in Economics, lead editor of the World Economic Review, member of the board of directors of the Association for Evolutionary Economics, and member of the editorial boards of the American Economist, American Review of Political Economy, the Critique of Political Economy, the Encyclopedia of Political Economy, the Journal of Economics Issues, and the Social Science Journal. Dr. Harvey is a frequent speaker for local civic organizations and has been interviewed on dozens of podcasts based around the world. He also has a blog at Forbes.com entitled Pragmatic Economics and a YouTube station called “The Cowboy Economist.”

Areas of Expertise

Contemporary Economic Schools of Thought
Macroeconomics
Exchange Rates
Business Cycles

Accomplishments

Deans’ Award for Research and Creative Activity

2015

Chancellor’s Award for Creative Teacher

2012

Education

University of Tennessee

Ph.D.

Economics

1987

University of Tennessee

M.A.

Economics

1986

University of Tennessee

B.A.

Economics and Political Science

1983

Affiliations

  • Association for Evolutionary Economics
  • The American Economist : Associate Editor
  • American Review of Political Economy : Board of Editors

Media Appearances

Ep125[1/3,1/6] John Harvey: MMT, the UK, and pound sterling

Activist #MMT - podcast  online

2022-07-03

Welcome to episode 125 of Activist #MMT. Today's the first in a six-part series with Texas Christian University (TCU) economics professor and Cowboy Economist, John Harvey. The first three parts are hosted by me, the final three by MMT researcher, Texas lawyer, and my previous guest, Johnathan Wilson. Jonathan and John talk about how MMT can apply to nations outside the US, using Russia as an example, and also some of the core theoretical and ideological differences between MMTers and mainstream economists, focusing on a recent critique of MMT by Drumetz and Pfeister. (You can hear my own interview with Jonathan in episodes 106 and 107.)

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Full audio: Cowboy Economist #22: Explaining Inflation (John Harvey)

Activist #MMT - podcast  online

2022-07-02

This is the full audio from the Cowboy Economist video #22: Explaining Inflation

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Full audio: Cowboy Economist #21: Cousin John speaks to the Northeast Tarrant County Democrats about the Job Guarantee! (John Harvey)

Activist #MMT - podcast  online

2022-07-02

The full audio from the Cowboy Economist video #02: How the private sector finances its deficits.

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Event Appearances

Invited Speaker

Levy Institute at Bard College  Summer Workshop on Modern Monetary Theory

2022-06-13

Invited Opening Speaker

Systemic Cyber Defense: Integrating Economics, Information, Innovation, and Operationalization  US Naval War College

2018-05-01

Invited Speaker for Opening Panel

Cyber, Security, and Economics: Challenges to Current Thinking, Presumptions, and Future Cyber Defense Transformations  US Naval War College

2016-12-06

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Articles

Testing Keynes' Aggregate Investment Function

Journal of Post Keynesian Economics

John T. Harvey

2021

In Keynes' model, no variety of private sector spending plays a more critical role than investment. This is so because reaching full employment requires that it be large enough to offset the volume of saving that would be forthcoming at that level of economic activity, which occurs only rarely and by coincidence. Despite its key role, very few Post Keynesians have undertaken empirical studies of Keynes' approach. While I suspect that there are a number of reasons for this, perhaps the greatest stumbling block is one related to data: how do we measure not just investors' expectations, but the difference between what was expected and what actually transpired? I believe I have developed a defensible solution to this problem, one that not only allows for a more direct test of Keynes' theory but also offers tremendous support for it.

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Why is National Cyber Insurance Not a Thing?

Naval War College

John T. Harvey

2021

Chapter for Naval War College volume on "lessons not learned."

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The Financial Sector’s Vulnerabilities, Villains, and Options for Defense

Military Cyber Affairs

John T. Harvey

2018

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