NEW PUBLICATION - The Great Dane @mathiaslarsen.bsky.social Larsen and I review the differing concepts of state-led approaches to the green transition over the past two decades. We attempt to provide some conceptual coherence to the debate. The article is Open Access.
04.09.2025 08:51
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Screenshot of the title page of linked article:
"Noisy Politics, Quiet Technocrats: Strategic Silence by Central Banks"
By Benjamin Braun and Maximilian Dรผsterhรถft
๐จNew article๐จ The consensus is that contestation pushed central banks to talk ๐ฎ๐ฐ๐ณ๐ฆ about inequality & climate.
Our theory: At first, CBs seek to ward off politicization by talking ๐ญ๐ฆ๐ด๐ด about controversial topics.
We tested this ๐ฌ๐ญ๐ซ๐๐ญ๐๐ ๐ข๐ ๐ฌ๐ข๐ฅ๐๐ง๐๐ ๐ก๐ฒ๐ฉ๐จ๐ญ๐ก๐๐ฌ๐ข๐ฌ.๐งต
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...
01.07.2025 10:11
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New (open access!) paper out now with Eric Helleiner and Hongying Wang in New Political Economy:
"A less reluctant (green) Atlas? Explaining the Peopleโs Bank of Chinaโs distinctive environmental shift"
1/ A brief thread ๐งต
doi.org/10.1080/1356...
30.05.2025 10:15
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The pervasive mispricing of climate risks are increasingly a threat to firms in the sector and to financial stability more broadly, giving greater impetus to questions of its climate scenario modelling, risk management strategies and governance.
There's more to come from us on this topic!
28.04.2025 10:09
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My co-author @james7jackson.bsky.social with a short blog for @cepi-cips.bsky.social on the looming climate-related risks and financial instability facing the insurance sector. Our recent work identifies 3 (or 4?) causes of "practical ignorance" when pricing in CRFR
www.cips-cepi.ca/2025/04/22/h...
28.04.2025 10:02
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Authors: Jacqueline Best, Matthew Paterson, Ilias Alami, Daniel Bailey, Sarah Bracking, Jeremy Green, Eric Helleiner, James Jackson, Paul Langley, Sylvain Maechler, John Morris, Stine Quorning, Adrienne Roberts, Jens vanโt Klooster, Robert Watt and Stanley Wilshire.
Abstract: In this article, we survey the literature on central bank action on climate change, focusing particularly on how the combined crises of COVID-19, inflation, and Ukraine have affected this action. We argue that the current situation is a critical juncture in which recent crises have created a highly indeterminate situation regarding what central banks might do regarding climate change. To date, some central banks have used these crises as opportunities for expanding their role while others have succumbed to pressure to withdraw from climate action. We explore three dynamics that generate this openness to various potential trajectories for climate action...
New article!
This review surveys the state of knowledge regarding central bank activity on climate change, and argues that there is considerable indeterminacy in the trajectory of this activity & its potential to contribute to effective climate action.
doi.org/10.1080/0964...
01.04.2025 06:31
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It was a real pleasure to work with @james7jackson.bsky.social and @matpaterson.bsky.social on this article!
10.12.2024 15:30
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Our findings demonstrate the diversity of views within the British state on the complexity of protecting CBI in the midst of the intensifying contradictions and strategic dilemmas related to climate governance and climate change.
10.12.2024 15:28
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This article explores these dual dynamics within the Bank of England as seen by insiders, and finds differing accounts that are refracted through differing understandings of politics and the Bank's existing political status.
10.12.2024 15:26
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The article finds that new green objectives can depoliticise prior forms of mission creep whilst simultaneously licensing new internal debates on further institutional evolutions that could be repoliticising.
10.12.2024 15:24
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Central Banks are increasingly between a rock and a hard place on this issue, as both action and inaction in the context of new green objectives and escalating climate risks present significant challenges to their apolitical & technocratic reputations.
10.12.2024 15:22
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