Yes, Gil Skillman has the right citation for our book "Transforming the U.S. Financial System." By the way Anders, I did respond to your note to me of a few days ago; apparently you didn't get the message. As long as I'm in a self-promotion mode, I'll mention another book along similar themes that I co-edited with Gary Dymski, that came out about a month ago with U. of Michigan Press. It is much more of an academic volume--as well as a festschrift in honor of Prof. Hyman Minsky--but for those of you out there who may be interested, here is the lowdown: The book is "New Perspectives in Monetary Macroeconomics: Explorations in the Tradition of Hyman P. Minsky." The contents are as follows: 1. Introduction by Gary Dymski and Robert Pollin. I. Theoretical Papers 2. "Financial Fragility: Is an Etiology at Hand?" by Lance Taylor. 3. "Complex Dynamics in a Simple Macroeconomic Model with Financing Constraints," Domenico Delli Gatti, Mauro Gallegati and Laura Gardini. 4. "Asymmetric Information, Uncertainty, and Financial Structure: 'New' versus 'Post' Keynesian Microfoundations," by Gary Dymski. 5. "Are Keynesian Uncertainty and Macrotheory Compatible? Conventional Decision Making, Institutional Structures, and Conditional Stability in Keynesian Macromodels," by James Crotty. II. Empirical Papers in International Economics 6. "Minskian Fragility in the International Financial System," by H. Peter Gray and Jean M. Gray. 7. "Debt Crisis Adjustment in Latin America: Have the Hardships Been Necessary?" by David Felix. III. Empirical Papers on Advanced Economies 8. "Financial Fragility and the Great Depression: New Evidence on Credit Growth in the 1920s," by Dorene Isenberg. 9. "A Political Economy Model of Comparative Central Banking," by Gerald Epstein. 10. "Saving, Finance and Interest Rates: An Empirical Consideration of some Basic Keynesian Propositions," by Robert Pollin and Craig Justice. IV. Exploring Analytic Interconnections. 11. "Minsky, Keynes, and Sraffa: Investment and the Long Period," by Edward Nell. 12. "Joseph Schumpeter: A Frustrated 'Creditist'" by James Earley. 13. "Marx, Minsky, and Monetary Economics," by Arie Arnon. V. A Framework for New Macro-Policy Approaches 14. "The Costs and Benefits of Financial Instability: Big Government Capitalism and the Minsky Paradox," by Robert Pollin and Gary Dymski. I would be of course happy to answer any questions anyone has about the book while you are in the process of writing out your check to purchase it. -- Bob Pollin