That is not the process they use. They use the work and provide acknowledgement through the legal approval to publish the work. You are looking at it from a position of reference and quotation, which is used for academic sourcing. The form of acknowledgement for used work is different it is a case of approval, permission and declaration. You are looking at it from a academic paper publication process, which requires the reference to a source of information. When work is used by the government it requires a more stringent process of compliance and legal conformity. This is what you are not appreciating. To get something published when you merely reference or quote material you have to provide a reference source and put it in a bibliography, that is the standard process of academic publications. To get something published that is used by a government it requires approval, permissions and legal declarations, which is much more stringent and often very hard to get. When legally owned work is used referencing is not the legal standard required, it is the legal authority through a contract, authorisation process or permissions and approval process that is needed. Sometimes declarations are required but this can be averted through permissions. The important material is the legal evidence of ownership of the work, the evidence of the use of the work, the legal permission to include the work and the legal authority and approval to publish the work. I can provide evidence of my copyright ownership of the work, I can also provide emails and letters from the relevant government departments that the work was used and that I was granted the approval to publish the work. I have 13 folders full of documentation and email approvals to prove this. After the evidence, which most people reading the book won't see, is collected and the declarations are made you can publish. When it comes to legal ownership of work and publication rights the academic reference process is insufficient to protect either party. It is merely a reference to a source of information, not a legal right to use it or evidence of ownership. The important factor in official or governmental use of material (use of material, not just referencing of information) is the ownership rights, the legal rights to use the work, the approval to publish the work, the permissions to include the work and the correct declarations to publish the work. The academic referencing process is not appropriate for governmental use. I have all of the legal documentation to prove ownership, evidence of its use, the right to publish and I have displayed the correct declarations in the work. I have had to receive approval to publish this work, which is required to be legally compliant. This is the necessary requirement for publishing work that protected by governmental license. In terms of ownership of the work, evidence of its use, the right to publish and compliance I have the right to publish it globally and have significant evidence to prove it. The area you could debate is whether the work I have produced is the reason for the economic outcomes. If this is more what you are arguing there is more room to do so. It is not a matter of providing documentation and legal fulfilment. It is a question of providing empirical material and debating its effect on the economy. Before I enter this debate I would like to point out that regardless of the economic advantages of the pension reforms I put forward that have been used, the treasury cost efficiencies they have enabled have saved the United Kingdom billions of pounds every year for the last decade. This in itself is a massive success and warrants the value of my work to be appreciated. In terms of the effectiveness of pension economic control, since the active alteration of pension saving allowances has been applied inflation targets have been hit, economic growth targets have been hit and interest rates have been allowed to remain low due to pension economic control being able to suppress inflation. In 2012 when pension pumping was introduced unemployment fell dramatically and the deflationary period was avoided throughout the last decade in the United Kingdom. Economic growth was sustained from 2010 until the Coronavirus outbreak.
1. The UK government is the largest employer of University-trained and credentialed economists in the UK, so they would certainly be aware of Morganist's ground breaking work, and 2. Personally, at this point I would settle for white papers from recognized private or public economist think tanks, of which there are thousands. And given these extraordinary claims as to his direct action effects on the UK's Public Pension appreciation, GDP and inflation performance I would think that Morganist is a carefully studied topic of economic inquiry among trained economists.
You are looking at it as an academic process of reference and citation, as opposed to the legal ownership and use rights and legal rights and processes of publication. I am wondering to myself whether the other economists have the appropriate credentials to produce their work if it is not legally supported and approved by the government. When it comes to the active use of work for publication when the work is applied or included in documentation references are insufficient, it is the use of supporting legal requirements and approvals that is needed. What is turning me off the academic process and referencing system is the lack of legal approval. I will again put a link to a referenced work I have produced that is contained in the European Universities Institutes 'The Euro: information resources and bibliography' page. You said you wanted evidence that my work is used, in the EU it is considered one of the resources to support the Euro in their library. The book was written in 2012 and was massively successful. https://www.eui.eu/Research/Library/ResearchGuides/Economics/Eurozone It is also referenced in the book below. European University Institute's Bibliography of the Global Financial/Economic Crisis 38th edition, May 2018 Compiled by Thomas Bourke. Before you claim that it is not pension work, the book 'Euro Crisis - Aggregate Demand Control is European Single Currency Weakness' contains specific recommendations for pension reform and pension policy directly in the United Kingdom, which have since been introduced. The recommendation to introduce mandatory pension contributions by employers to help to control inflation and boost pension saving was put forward along with research and an explanation of the IASIE's four pillars. This was subsequently introduced in the United Kingdom, where is now required to make mandatory employer pension contributions. At the time of writing the book the United Kingdom was still in the European Union and is therefore a reference to work that I produced that was used to influence economic policy in the United Kingdom and the Euro Area. As the book is considered a resource the EUI holds to support the Euro and as it has been referenced as a source of information in the Global Financial/Economic Crisis, there is evidence the work has been used, referenced, cited and acknowledgement of this has been accredited to me the author Peter James Rhys Morgan. Before you knock it, it is listed as a resource of the European University Institute to support the Euro.
Where are you .... where? where? There you are. Among dozens and dozens of others. Kinda like a sports team with everyone including press agents and lawyers and the bus driver getting a mention The European Monetary Union: Europe at the crossroads by Nicola Acocella (2020) Fiscal Consolidation in the Euro Crisis: politico-economic and institutional causes by Kai Guthmann (2020) Europe's Crisis of Legitimacy: governing by rules and ruling by numbers in the Eurozone by Vivien A. Schmidt (2020) Accountability in the Economic and Monetary Union: foundations, policy and governance by Menelaos Markakis (2020) Central Bank Independence and the Future of the Euro by Panicos Demetriades (2020) The Pursuit of Stability of the Euro Area as a Whole: the reform of the European economic union and perspectives of fiscal integration by Luca Lionello (2020) European Cross-Border Banking and Banking Supervision by Dalvinder Singh (2020) European Central Banking Law: the role of the European Central Bank and national central banks under European law by Christos V. Gortsos (2020) Risk and Regulation in Euro Area Banks: completing the Banking Union by Francesca Arnaboldi (2019) The Political Economy of Adjustment Throughout and Beyond the Eurozone Crisis edited by Michele Chang et al (2019) The Future of the Euro Currency by Paul-Jacques Lehmann (2019) The Crisis Behind the Eurocrisis: the eurocrisis as a multidimensional systemic crisis of the EU edited by Eva Nanopoulos and Fotis Vergis (2019) Europe's New Fiscal Union by Pierre Schlosser (2019) Macroeconomc Theory and the Eurozone Crisis edited by Alain Alcouffe et al (2019) The European Periphery and the Eurozone Crisis: capitalist diversity and Europeanisation by Neil Dooley (2019) Leadership in the Eurozone: the role of Germany and EU institutions by Magnus G. Schoeller (2019) Revisiting the Economic Case for Fiscal Union in the Euro Area [IMF Departmental Paper] by Helge Berger et al (2018) Economics of Monetary Union (12th) by Paul de Grauwe (2018) Legal Foundations of EU Economic Governance by Antonio Estella (2018) Pierre Werner and Europe: the family archives behind the Werner Report by Elena Danescu (2018) Monetary and Financial Policy in the Euro Area: an introduction by Maximilian Fandl (2018) Can the Euro be Saved? by Malcolm Sawyer (2018) The EMU after the Euro Crisis, Lessons and Possibilities: findings and proposals from the Horizon 2020 ADEMU project edited by Ramon Marimon and Thomas Cooley (2018) Rethinking Economic and Monetary Union in Europe: a Post-Keynesian alternative by Philip B. Whyman (2018) Eurocritical: a crisis of the Euro currency by Roderick Macdonald (2018) Report on the State of the European Union (Vol.5): the Euro at 20 and the futures of Europe edited by Jérôme Creel, Éloi Laurent, Jacques Le Cacheux (2018) Fiscal Policies in High Debt Euro-Area Countries by Antonella Cavallo et al (2018) Economic Imbalances and Institutional Changes to the Euro and the European Union edited by Rajmund Mirdala and Rosaria Rita Canale (2017) Monetary Integration in Europe: the European Monetary Union after the Financial Crisis by Horst Tomann (2017) The European Union and the Eurozone under Stress: challenges and solutions for repairing fault lines in the European Project by John Theodore et al (2017) Financial Underpinnings of Europe's Financial Crisis: liberalization, integration and asymmetric state power by Nina Eichacker (2017) The Political Economy of the Eurozone edited by Ivano Cardinale et al (2017) Eurobondage: the political costs of monetary union in Europe by Jonathon Moses (2017) The Political Economy of Monetary Solidarity: understanding the euro experiment by Waltraud Schelkle (2017) The Political Economy of Italy in the Euro by Leila Simona Talani (2017) Adults In the Room: my battle with Europe’s deep establishment by Yanis Varoufakis (2017) Tangled Governance: international regime complexity, the Troika, and the Euro crisis by C. Randall Henning (2017) Europe and the Euro: integration, crisis and policies by Enrico Marelli and Marcello Signorelli (2017) The Euro and the Crisis: perspectives for the Eurozone as a monetary and budgetary union edited by Nazaré da Costa Cabral et al (2017) Managing the Euro Crisis: national EU policy coordination in the debtor countries edited by Sabrina Ragone (2017) Modern Monetary Theory and European Macroeconomics by Dirk H. Ehnts (2017) Crisi dell'euro e crisi dell'Europa: la nuova governance economica europea e il futuro dell’integrazione by Roberto Di Quirico (2017) Constitutional Change through Euro-crisis Law edited by Thomas Beukers et al (2017) The Euro Crisis and European Identities: political and media discourse in Germany, Ireland and Poland by Charlotte Galpin (2017) A Diary of the Euro Crisis in Cyprus: lessons for bank recovery and resolution by Panicos Demetriades (2017) The Political Economy of European Banking Union by David Howarth and Lucia Quaglia (2016) A Monetary Hope for Europe: the Euro and the struggle for the creation of a new global currency edited by Max Guderzo and Andrea Bosco (2016) Governance of the European Monetary Union: recasting political, fiscal and financial integration edited by Erik Jones and Francisco Torres (2016) Architects of the Euro: intellectuals in the making of European Monetary Union by Kenneth Dyson and Ivo Maes (2016) The Sovereign Debt Crisis, the EU and welfare state reform edited by Caroline de la Porte and Elke Heins (2016) The Euro and the Battle of Ideas by Markus K. Brunnermeier et al (2016) Multi-level Finance and the Euro Crisis: causes and effects edited by Ehtisham Ahmad et al (2016) From Convergence to Crisis: labor markets and the instability of the Euro by Alison Johnston (2016) Greek Tragedy, European Odyssey: the politics and economics of the eurozone crisis by Robert Godby and Stephanie B. Anderson (2016) The Incomplete Currency: the future of the Euro and solutions for the eurozone edited by Marcello Minenna et al (2016) The Political and Economic Dynamics of the Eurozone Crisis by James A. Caporaso and Martin Rhodes (2016) The Euro Experiment by Paul Wallace (2016) The European Banking Union: supervision and resolution by Giuseppe Boccuzzi (2016) European Bank Restructuring During the Global Financial Crisis edited by Małgorzata Iwanicz-Drozdowska (2016) Financial Regulation in the European Union edited by Rainer Kattel et al (2016) Europe's New Supervisory Toolkit: data, benchmarking and stress testing for banks and their regulators edited by Mario Quagliariello (2015) Banking Union as a Shock Absorber: lessons for the Eurozone from the US by Daniel Gros and Ansgar Belke (2015) Beyond the Crisis: the governance of Europe's economic, political and legal transformation by Mark Dawson et al (2015) From Saviour to Guarantor: EU member states' economic intervention during the Financial Crisis by Fabio Bassan and Carlo D. Mottura (2015) The Great Financial Plumbing: from Northern Rock to Banking Union by Karel Lannoo (2015) The New Financial Architecture in the Eurozone by Franklin allen, Elena Carletti and Joanna Gray (2015) Germany's Role in the Euro Crisis: Berlin's quest for a more perfect monetary union by Franz-Josef Meiers (2015) Eurozone Politics: perception and reality in Italy, the UK and Germany by Philip Giurlando (2016) The European Sovereign Debt Crisis and its Impacts on Financial Markets by Go Tamakoshi and Shigeyuki Hamori (2015) The Effects of the Eurozone Sovereign Debt Crisis: differentiated integration between the centre and the new peripheries of the EU edited by Christian Schweiger and José M. Magone (2015) European Banking Union edited by Danny Busch and Guido Ferrarini (2015) The Post-Crisis EU Financial Regulatory Framework: do the pieces fit? House of Lords [UK] European Union Committee (2014) Against the Troika: crisis and austerity in the Eurozone by Heiner Flassbeck and Costas Lapavitsas (2015) Europe Managing the Crisis: the politics of fiscal consolidation by Walter J.M. Kickert and Tiina Randma-Liiv (2015) The Restructuring of Banks and Financial Systems in the Euro Area and the Financing of SMEs edited by Filippo Luca Calciano et al (2015) European Populism in the Shadow of the Great Recession edited by Hanspeter Kriesi and Takis S. Pappas (2015) La Banque centrale européenne et l'Eurosystème: recherches sur le renouvellement d’une méthode d’intégration by Sébastien Adalid (2015) Eurozone Dystopia: groupthink and denial on a grand scale by William Mitchell (2015) The Governance Report 2015: Eurozone crisis, economic governance, institutional dilemmas, constitutionalism and indicators [Hertie School of Governance] (2015) Financial Crisis, Austerity and Electoral Politics: European voter responses to the global economic collapse 2009-2013 edited by Pedro C. Magalhães (2015) The Future of the Euro edited by Matthias Matthijs and Mark Blyth (2015) The European Debt Crisis: the Greek case by Costas Simitis (2014) Crisis in the Eurozone: causes, dilemmas and solutions by Mark Baimbridge and Philip B. Whyman (2015) Managing Risks in the European Periphery Debt Crisis: lessons from the trade-off between economics, politics and the financial markets edited by George Christodoulakis (2015) Which European Union? Europe after the Euro crisis by Sergio Fabbrini (2015) Europe in Crisis: problems, chllenges and alternative perspectives edited by Aristidis Bitzenis et al (2015) Saving Europe: anatomy of a dream by Carlo Bastasin (2015) The European Union Beyond the Crisis: evolving governance, contested policies and disenchanted publics by Boyka M. Stefanova (2015) ECB Banking Supervision and Beyond by Karel Lannoo [CEPS Task Force report] (2014) Bearing the Losses from Bank and Sovereign Default in the Eurozone edited by Franklin Allen et al (2014) The Eurozone Crisis and the Transformation of EU Governance: internal and external implications edited by Maria João Rodrigues and Eleni Xiarchogiannopoulou (2014) Sovereign Risk and Public-Private Partnership During the Euro Crisis by Maura Campra et al (2014) The Euro, the Dollar and the Global Financial Crisis: currency challenges seen from emerging markets by Miguel Otero-Iglesias (2014) The Eurozone Crisis and the Future of Europe: the political economy of further integration and governance edited by Daniel Dăianu et al (2014) Economic Policy Coordination in the Euro Area by Armin Steinbach (2014) The Economics of the Monetary Union and the Eurozone Crisis Manuel Sanchis i Marco (2014) Europe and the Governance of Global Finance edited by Daniel Mügge (2014) The Debt Crisis in the Eurozone: social impacts edited by Nicholas P. Petropoulos and George O. Tsobanoglou (2014) Europe's Crisis, Europe's Future edited by Kemal Dervis and Jacques Mistral (2014) The Euro Crisis and its Aftermath by Jean Pisani-Ferry (2014) The Euro and International Financial Stability by Efthymios G. Tsionasx (2014) The Resolution of Cross-Border Banking Crises in the European Union: a legal study from the perspective of burden sharing by Seraina Neva Grünewald (2014) From Fragmentation to Financial Integration in Europe edited by Charles Enoch et al (2014) Legal Challenges in the Global Financial Crisis; bail-outs, the Euro and regulation edited by Wolf-Georg Ringe and Peter M. Huber (2014) Genuine Economic and Monetary Union and the implications for the UK, House of Lords European Union Committee report (2014) The Eurozone Crisis: a constitutional analysis by Kaarlo Tuori and Klaus Tuori (2014) Austerity: European democracies against the wall by Lorenzo Bini Smaghi (2014) The Economic Crisis and Governance in the European Union: a critical assessment by Javier Bilbao-Ubillos (2014) The European Union and the Euro: how to deal with a currency built on dreams by Hans Geeroms et al (2014) Emerging from the Euro Debt Crisis: making the single currency work by Michael Heise (2013) A Contemporary Concept of Monetary Sovereignty by Claus D. Zimmermann (2013) Dollars, Euros and Debt: how we got into the fiscal crisis, and how to get out of it by Vito Tanzi (2013) European Debt Restructuring Handbook by Kon Asimacopoulos and Justin Bickle (2013) The EU Economic and Social Model in the Global Crisis edited by Dagmar Schiek (2013) Trader's Guide to the Euro Area: economic indicators, the ECB and the Euro crisis by David J. Powell (2013) Public Sector Shock: the impact of policy retrenchment in Europe edited by Daniel Vaughan-Whitehead (2013) Europe in Crisis by Ivan T. Berend (2013) The Great Eurozone Disaster: from crisis to global new deal by Heikki Patomäki (2013) Europe's Deadlock by David Marsh (2013) Regulation of European Banks and Business Models: towards a new paradigm? by Rym Ayadi et al (2012) Governance for the Eurozone: integration of disintegration? edited by Franklin Allen et al (2012) The Euro Crisis edited by Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer (2012) Resolving the European Debt Crisis edited by William R. Cline and Guntram B. Wolff (2012) A Europe Made of Money: the emergence of the European Monetary System by Emmanuel Mourlon-Druol (2012) Euro Crisis: aggregate demand control is European single currency weakness by Peter James Rhys Morgan (2012) Euro Crash: the exit route from monetary failure in Europe by Brendan Brown (2012) La crisis del euro: de Atenas a Madrid by Josep Borrell and Andreu Missé (2012) The Tragedy of the Euro by Philipp Bagus (2011) A Comprehensive Approach to the Euro-area Debt Crisis by Zsolt Darvas (2011) Economic Crisis in Europe edited by Paul van den Noord and István P. Székely (2011) The Euro Area and the Financial Crisis edited by Miroslav Beblavý et al (2011) Governing the Euro Area in Good Times and Bad by Dermot Hodson (2011) Life in the Eurozone with or without Sovereign Default? edited by Franklin Allen et al (2011) Europe and the Financial Crisis edited by Pompeo Della Posta and Leila Simona Talani (2011) The Euro and its Rivals: currency and the construction of a transnational city by Gustav Peebles (2011) The End of the Euro: the uneasy future of the European Union by Johan van Overtveldt (2011) Dynamic Policy Interactions in a Monetary Union by Michael Carlberg (2011) Adjustment Difficulties and Debt Overhangs in the Eurozone Periphery by Cinzia Alcidi and Daniel Gros (2011) The Economic Crisis and European Integration edited by Wim Meeusen (2011) Governance of a Fragile Eurozone by Paul de Grauwe (2011) Europe Will Work: but it needs to strengthen its governance, fix its banks and reform its structural policies Nomura Global Economics (2011) The Crisis of the Eurozone by Dorothee Bohle (2010) The Euro in the 21st Century: economic crisis and financial uproar by María Lorca-Susino (2010) Europe and the Euro edited by Alberto Alesina and Francesco Giavazzi (2010) The Concrete Euro: implementing monetary policy in the Euro area edited by Paul Mercier and Francesco Papadia (2010) The Euro: the first decade edited by Marco Buti et al (2010) European Economic Governance and Policies by Kenneth Dyson and Lucia Quaglia (2010) Introduction of the Euro and the Monetary Policy of the European Central Bank by Shigeyuki Hamori and Naoko Hamori (2010) The Euro and Economic Stability: focus on Central, Eastern and South-Eastern Europe edited by Ewald Nowotny et al (2010) The Euro: the politics of the new global currency (2nd ed) by David Marsh (2009)
This is going to be same for everything referenced anywhere. There is going to be a long list of other books referenced, that is standard. This is what you were asking for as evidence. However making this list is more than just being referenced in a book or paper, it is the list of books used to contribute to the European Universities Institute's resources for the Euro. The book is not just referenced it is considered a resource used by the European Union. This is better than a simple reference or citation. Like you I do not consider references or citations of that much importance. What I view as important is the legal ownership of work that has been used, reviewed and approved for publication by the government and has permission to include various contents, which originated from the paper that now needs approval to be contained in the publication due to its use in governmental technical papers. You asked for evidence of the use of my work as a resource governments use and you wanted evidence of references, I have provided you with this. References by the nature of what they are will include many other books and papers. Think about how many books are written and all of the references they have individually, then think of how many of those will make it on to a list of resources recognised as being a resources used by the European University Institute. This is the short list and it is the list of books considered the bibliography and resources of the Euro. I can't see what more you can want as evidence of the use of the European government using my work and considering it a resource that they use. You wanted citations and references, I gave you it. You wanted a governmental citation and reference of using my work as a resource in influencing policy, I have given you it. Not that I view it as important proof.
You too can self-publish anything and if you submit it to the European University Institute a librarian will dutifully catalog it and include it in their online and physical library. I looked at ten of those listings and they were everything from books to two page policy briefs. https://www.eui.eu/Research/Library/AboutTheLibrary Make your donations here: https://www.eui.eu/Research/Library/AboutTheLibrary/BookDonations
Multiple topics have claimed major influence of economic policy and to back it up you post a miiiiiiile long list in which you one of mannnnnnnny authors. Something doesn't add up. Not even to minor influence.
https://www.ecb.europa.eu/home/search/html/index.en.html?search=peter+james+rhys+morgan+ Ooops, no bueno. https://www.ecb.europa.eu/pub/html/index.en.html https://europa.eu/european-union/about-eu/agencies/eba_en No bueno Working papers have not been peer-reviewed, but they let the reader know about the current trends in economic research. http://www.oecd.org/economy/economicsdepartmentworkingpapers.htm https://bfi.uchicago.edu/working-papers/ https://www.nber.org/research
I did not donate my book there, they must have purchased a copy and listed it. The page is described as the European University Institute's list of information resources and bibliography. It also lists The ECB, Eurostat and other institutions at the top of the page that are also considered resources of the Euro, then it lists the books below that it contains in its list of resources. The page my work is listed on is the Euro Resources and Bibliography. The donations process is not what I went through and it does not mean the work is contained on the list of Euro resources and bibliography, they said in the link you showed above that there is a process for donation that has to be reviewed and approved, then the book can be disregarded and given away if it is not passed by this process. My book was listed and is still listed as a Euro resource and bibliography. According to the About the library page the library has the status of European Documentation Centre (EDC), an official depository of EU publications and documents. The key point the book is considered an EU publication or document and a level of status has to be given to the library to be able to list EU publications or documents. This is its acknowledged as being an EU publication and resource for the Euro and referenced and accredited appropriately along with the other resources used to support the Euro. This is what you asked me to provide you with. https://www.eui.eu/Research/Library/AboutTheLibrary
You seems to reject the most important thing the government's use of my work and the right to publish my work with their approval. Now you have disregarded two reference listings.