Access Statistics for Kees De Koning

Author contact details at EconPapers.

Working Paper File Downloads Abstract Views
Last month 3 months 12 months Total Last month 3 months 12 months Total
A Home Individual Savings Account, An opportunity for the English underprivileged? 0 0 0 24 0 5 8 75
A Keynesian factor in monetary policy: the Economic Growth Incentive Method (EGIM) 0 0 0 32 3 8 11 81
A U.S. home equity withdrawal scheme 0 0 0 6 1 4 5 15
A different economic growth strategy for the U.S 0 0 0 8 0 2 7 33
A proposal to use two interest rates in the U.S.; the FED Funds Rate and the Economic Recovery Rate 0 0 0 21 0 1 5 39
A review of the global financial crisis and its effects on U.S. working class households - a tale of vulnerability and neglect 0 0 2 49 2 5 11 74
About winners and losers: the Euro Area example 0 0 1 35 3 7 13 91
After the Great Recession; the Laws of Unintended Consequences 0 0 0 21 2 8 14 152
An income gap theory and its effects on unemployment and economic growth 0 0 0 41 3 9 11 155
Are countries prepared for the next recession? 0 0 0 32 0 2 6 61
Are financial markets fit for purpose? 0 0 0 21 1 2 5 71
Are there fault lines in the Netherland's pension provision? 0 0 0 70 2 5 6 32
Collective Household Economics and the need for funds approach The 2007-2008 financial crisis and its effects 0 0 0 46 0 1 1 50
Collective Household Economics: Why borrowers rather than banks should have been rescued! 0 0 0 39 1 4 6 62
Collective Household Economics: a Wake Up Call for Central Banks? 0 0 0 21 1 3 5 40
Conversion Theory II: the case for Recession Bonds 0 0 0 11 1 9 11 44
Conversion Theory: the key to understanding economic developments before and after the 2008 financial crisis 0 0 0 22 0 0 2 77
Debt, equity and income: the limits to the freedom of choice in an economy 0 0 0 24 0 4 4 85
Debts should come with a serious economic health warning! 0 0 0 21 1 8 12 34
Did Central Banks apply the right strategies after the financial crisis? 0 0 0 29 2 6 7 43
Do savings promote or hamper economic growth? The Euro area example 0 0 0 37 0 1 1 77
Economic System Failures: the U.S. case 0 0 0 19 0 5 6 68
Financial crisis, economic crisis and individual households' income and savings crisis 0 0 0 33 0 4 6 94
G-SIBOs (Global Systemically Important But Overlooked):The Collective of U.S. Households 0 0 0 19 0 3 4 39
Helicopter money or a risk sharing approach? 0 0 0 30 0 1 3 69
How can household wealth be used to stimulate economic growth. The Italian example 0 0 0 20 0 3 7 51
How home equity can be used to fight a recession. A U.S. case study 0 0 0 16 2 4 9 60
How savings can lower economic growth levels: the U.S. case 0 0 0 27 0 2 5 35
How the U.S. financial crisis could have been averted 0 0 0 28 0 4 9 80
Inequality as a Source of Recessions and Poverty 0 0 1 23 1 3 6 41
Overfunding and underfunding, a main cause of the business cycle? 0 0 0 28 2 4 5 127
Pension savings and economic growth 0 0 0 50 3 8 9 143
Pension savings: A key question about returns 0 0 0 26 0 4 7 38
People's Power: The Power of Money 0 0 0 71 0 10 13 105
Profits:The Economic or Auditors' Assessment? 0 0 0 6 2 5 7 58
Quantitative Easing Home Equity An Alternative Economic Management Tool 0 0 0 3 1 4 5 17
Quantitative easing and the U.K. economy 0 0 0 18 0 6 6 24
Rebuilding the European Union Economies after the corona virus pandemic: a new Country by Country Home Equity Release Method: (E.U.HERM) 0 0 1 37 1 3 8 59
Rebuilding the U.K.economy after the corona virus pandemic: a new Home Equity Release Method (U.K. HERM) 0 0 0 25 1 4 6 101
Rebuilding the U.S. economy after the corona virus pandemic: a new Home Equity Release Method (HERM) 0 0 0 22 0 3 7 60
Savings; the least understood economic concept, the U.S. case 0 0 0 8 0 1 7 45
Tessa: A new economic tool; A Temporary Equity Spend and Save Again system 0 0 0 11 0 2 5 40
The Collective Individual Households or Coin economic theory 0 0 0 6 1 7 11 77
The U.K. and the Flow of Funds involving: the Bank of England, U.K. households and the U.K. Government 0 0 0 10 1 7 12 23
The U.S. Great Recession Experience. The Reasons why Losses in Jobs and in Home Equity Savings reinforced each other 0 0 0 11 3 4 7 18
The U.S. experience, Free markets in money: a contradiction in terms! 0 0 0 14 0 4 5 36
The U.S. rise in inflation levels and the loss of purchasing powers 1 1 1 28 7 11 18 43
The United Kingdom: Economic Growth, a Draft Master Plan 0 0 0 23 0 2 3 57
The United States: An Economic Balance Sheet Analysis 1 1 1 43 1 6 7 101
The benign neglect of the individual households' equity crisis 0 0 0 11 1 4 5 53
The evil force of borrowing and the weakness of Quantitative Easing 0 0 0 27 0 1 7 139
The myth of economic growth in the United States 0 0 0 50 0 3 10 69
The real financial crisis: an individual households' crisis The case for index-linked government bonds for the Netherlands, the U.S. and the U.K 0 0 0 20 1 3 3 59
The risk of a recession period in the U.S. and the possible role of home equity 0 0 0 4 0 4 6 15
The savings depreciation factor and economic growth 0 0 0 25 0 0 2 62
The savings paradox or managing financial, economic or financial risks 0 0 0 21 2 7 9 62
The unique benefits of a Tessa system: the U.S. case 0 0 0 9 1 7 8 34
The world's dream, economic growth revisited 0 0 0 17 1 3 4 63
U.K.’s economic variables over the last decade in the context of the current corona crisis 0 0 0 18 1 3 6 26
U.S. Government debts, a dangerous cocktail of borrowing, spending and inflation levels 0 0 0 21 0 5 10 36
U.S. Households' Balance Sheet and the link to economic policies 0 0 0 16 0 4 10 46
Wealth, incomes and debt: the blocked channels 0 0 0 12 1 4 7 46
When Capitalism no longer works - a Profit Warning 0 0 0 37 1 5 7 100
When savings are not counted as savings: The missed opportunity to use home equity to stimulate the U.S. economy 0 0 0 20 0 3 7 29
Who manages savings in the U.S. and why should they be managed? 0 0 0 9 0 0 3 18
Why it makes economic sense to help the have-nots in times of a financial crisis 0 0 0 51 2 7 10 34
Why it makes economic sense to help the have-nots in times of a financial crisis 0 0 0 41 2 7 7 29
Total Working Papers 2 2 7 1,674 62 288 475 4,020


Statistics updated 2026-03-04