The Columbia Center for Political Economy at Columbia World Projects identifies and advances the most promising contemporary developments within economics and promotes a new political economy with a robust institutional, cross-disciplinary orientation.

“With the creation of this center, Columbia University will be joining a critically important national and global effort to address the nature of political economy and how it determines matters such as the distribution of wealth and the relationship of the public and private spheres of our lives,” said Columbia President Lee C. Bollinger. “I can’t think of a subject more urgent or consequential, and I’m deeply grateful to the Hewlett Foundation for its support.”
About
The economic shocks generated by the financial meltdown of 2008 and the COVID-19 pandemic have catalyzed a wide range of fresh thinking. Not just financial or viral crises, but soaring inequalities, transformations to the scale of firms, often beyond effective regulation, inadequate investments in public goods, and global supply chain limitations have called into question the adequacy of inherited economic frameworks, especially radical market-based approaches that often go hand in hand with budgetary austerity.
At the same time, a new intellectual ferment is underway. We are witnessing a sprouting of post-neoliberal theory and an empirical turn in applied research, and liberation from a fixation on efficiency as the primary criterion to evaluate market outcomes. Further, scholarship concerning the zone of political economy is bringing economics into conversation with other disciplines, as scholars respond to the multiple dimensions of inequality—attending not only to vital assets like housing and medical care, but also to access to dignity and respect, heightened political as well as economic uncertainty, and fractured institutions.
The Columbia Center for Political Economy is motivated by these contemporary circumstances, with confidence that renewed thinking in economics and interdisciplinary engagement can generate feasible policy ideas, advance equitable prospects to better secure and share prosperity, help ensure a sustainable environment, and undergird representative democracy.
With support from the Hewlett Foundation, the center builds upon initiatives and programs across Columbia University, spanning disciplines and fields of inquiry including economics, history, law, political science, sociology, public health, engineering, and data science. The center seeds new research, prompts scholarly publications and policy outputs, fosters curricular materials that will feed into textbooks and coursework, and creates and deepens networks of scholars and practitioners among the Columbia community and beyond.
At the core of its work, the center is developing “idea labs'' to serve as intellectual and policy incubators across distinct themes.
Idea Labs
The Idea Labs function as convening hubs for Columbia faculty and students to advance new thinking, affect graduate training, and incubate ideas. Concerned with developing new intellectual frameworks in economics and related fields that take seriously power, equity, and uncertainty, the Labs create opportunities for faculty and students to engage with practitioners and policymakers, and support, identify, and advance the most promising recent developments in academic thinking. The Labs have an intentional cross-disciplinary focus and bring together economics, history, law, political science, sociology, public health, engineering, data science, and other fields.
In total, the Center will launch four Idea Labs focused on Work and Labor, Firms and Antitrust, the Political Economy of Climate, and Money and Finance. The first two labs, Work and Labor and Firms and Antitrust, were launched in the Center’s inaugural year.
The Work and Labor Idea Lab explores the forces, institutions, and ideas that regulate labor and labor markets, with a focus on the modes of collective action by workers, as well as the interactions among workers, employers, markets, and the larger society. It also concentrates on the future of labor movements at home and abroad, with an emphasis on technological and other transformations.
The Firms and Antitrust Idea Lab develops new intellectual frameworks for understanding firms and firm behaviors, providing the basis for more equitable policies. Work in the Lab explores the conditions that shape how and when firms compete, cooperate, collude, merge, and exclude rivals, push prices below competitive rates for suppliers, compete for investors and labor, and deal with activists or enlist government support to access resources or dampen competition. It considers alterations to antitrust analysis and law that today’s major transformations warrant, and proposes conceptual frameworks and policy options fit for our new economic reality.
As multi-year projects, each Idea Lab will do the following:
- Host a Postdoctoral Research Scholar;
- Provide Faculty Grants and, starting in the Center’s second year, Graduate Student Grants on related topics;
- Host and co-host relevant conferences, seminars, workshops, and other public and semi-public events; and
- Generate scholarly publications and public-facing reports.
We encourage you to join an Idea Lab as an engaged faculty member to explore and shape the next generation of thinking. To learn more, please contact [email protected].
Leadership
Faculty Co-Directors
Kate Andrias
Patricia D. and R. Paul Yetter Professor of Law and Co-Director of the Center for Constitutional Governance, Columbia Law School
Ira Katznelson
Ruggles Professor of Political Science and History, Columbia University; Deputy Director, Columbia World Projects
Suresh Naidu
Professor of Economics and International and Public Affairs, Columbia University
Katharina Pistor
Edwin B. Parker Professor of Comparative Law and Director of the Center on Global Legal Transformation, Columbia Law School
Executive Director
Madeline Neighly
Executive Director, Columbia Center for Political Economy Columbia World Projects
Advisory Board
Geoffrey Heal
Donald C. Waite III Professor of Social Enterprise, Columbia Business School
Olatunde Johnson
Jerome B. Sherman Professor of Law, Columbia Law School
María Victoria Murillo
Director of the Institute of Latin American Studies and Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, Columbia University
Premilla Nadasen
Professor of History, Barnard College
Joseph E. Stiglitz
University Professor, Columbia University
Adam Tooze
Director of the European Institute and Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Professor of History, Columbia University
Bruce Western
Director of the Justice Lab and Bryce Professor of Sociology and Social Justice, Columbia University
Faculty Grant Opportunity
The inaugural Faculty Grant Opportunity is now closed. Grantees will be announced in May 2023. Sign up for the Columbia World Projects newsletter to be notified when the next application becomes available.
Opportunities
There are no open positions at this time.
Events
CPE Big Ideas Book Series:
Recently, a spate of economists have authored conceptual books on topics of interdisciplinary and cross-sector import for an audience broader than their field. Meanwhile, scholars from other disciplines are tackling pressing problems of political economy from a range of perspectives. To spur engagement between economists and scholars and practitioners from other disciplines, this series will bring together diverse perspectives in an open dialogue.
- April 6: Pranab Bardhan discussing A World of Insecurity
- May 4: Bradford DeLong discussing Slouching Towards Utopia
- May 18: Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson discussing Power and Progress
CPE Policy Knowledge Workshop Series:
These workshops focus on how scholarly knowledge, past and present, sometimes becomes policy knowledge; that is, when ideas principally generated in the academy come to be embedded in governmental processes, actions, and institutions. The workshops are held four times per semester to explore the ways in which particular concepts get adopted and implemented as government programs and strategies, as well as the ways certain policy demands enable and inspire new intellectual work. The workshops are open to Columbia faculty and graduate students across disciplines. To attend a workshop, please email Madeline Neighly.
- March 21: Policy Knowledge Workshop with Alice O’Connor
- April 18: Policy Knowledge Workshop with Alondra Nelson
Conferences and Forums
- March 30-31: Digital Global Futures Policy Forum
- April 13-14: The Non-Market Effects of Market Power
- May 5: State, Local, and Executive Branch Strategies to Build Worker Power
Previous Events:
- March 9: Claudia Goldin discussing Career and Family: Women’s Century-Long Journey toward Equity
- March 3: Constitutional Political Economy Conference
- February 28: Policy Knowledge Workshop with Julia Ott
- February 7: Policy Knowledge Workshop with K. Sabeel Rahman
- January 19, 2023: Leah Boustan discussing Streets of Gold: America's Untold Story of Immigrant Success, Big Ideas Book Series. Read more about the event here.
- October 24, 2022: The Legacy of Frances Perkins, Pioneer for Social Justice
- October 21, 2022: Connecting the Dots: Globalization, Intermediation, and Efficiency
- September 30 - October 1, 2022: The Future of the Labor Movement Conference
- September 21, 2022: Legal History Workshop with Gary Gerstle
Get Involved
If you or your organization is interested in supporting the work of the center, please email [email protected]