John Milios | |
Native Name: | Γιάννης Μηλιός |
Native Name Lang: | el |
Office: | Chief Economic Adviser for Syriza |
Leader: | Alexis Tsipras |
Term Start: | 2012 |
Term End: | March 2015 |
Successor: | Alekos Kalyvis |
Birth Place: | Athens, Greece |
Party: | Independent left |
Alma Mater: | TU Darmstadt University of Osnabrück NTU Athens |
Website: | http://users.ntua.gr/jmilios/en/index.html |
John Milios (in Greek, Modern (1453-); pronounced as /ˈʝanis miˈʎos/; born 1952) is a Greek social scientist and Marxian economics scholar. He is Professor of Political Economy and the History of Economic Thought at the National Technical University of Athens. An author of several scholarly books, Milios is also director of the quarterly journal of economic theory Theseis.
He was chief economic adviser of the Greek leftist party SYRIZA until March 2015.
John Milios was born in 1952, in Athens[1] as the son of a lawyer and a dentist. Having attended Athens College, he graduated in the same class with former prime minister George Papandreou, before studying mechanical engineering at TU Darmstadt, Germany, and Athens, where he received his Ph.D. in 1981.
During his studies, Milios became interested in political economics, founding the quarterly journal of economic theory Theseis in 1982. In 1988, he received his second Ph.D. in Social and Economic Studies at the University of Osnabrück, Germany.[2]
Since at least 2012[3] until March 2015 he was the chief economic adviser to Syriza.[4] Syriza leader Alexis Tsipras leads a coalition government (Cabinet Tsipras) since the election on 25 January 2015. In February, Milios proposed a scheme to kick start struggling European economies. It involved the European Central Bank buying debt from Euro zone countries. It would hold the debt until the countries Gross domestic product (GDP) rose to five times its value. ("GDP-linked bond") Milios had proposed similar ideas in 2014.[5]
Regarding the Marxian concept of value-form, Milios argues for a monetary theory of value, where "Money is the necessary form of appearance of value (and of capital) in the sense that prices constitute the only form of appearance of the value of commodities."[6]
Milios has authored more than two hundred papers published in refereed journals (in Greek, English, German, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and Turkish) and has authored or co-authored more than ten scholarly books on Marxian economics.