Noch Fragen? 0800 / 33 82 637

The Demand for Money

Theoretical and Empirical Approaches

Produktform: E-Buch Text Elektronisches Buch in proprietärem

Almost half a century has elapsed since the demand for money began to attract widespread attention from economists and econometricians, and it has been a topic of ongoing controversy and research ever since. Interest in the topic stemmed from three principal sources. Firstofall,therewasthematter oftheinternaldynamicsofmacr- conomics, to which Harry Johnson drew attention in his 1971 Ely Lecture on “The Keynesian Revolution and the Monetarist Counter- Revolution,” American Economic Review 61 (May 1971). The main lesson about money that had been drawn from the so-called “Key- sian Revolution” was — rightly or wrongly — that it didn’t matter all that much. The inherited wisdom that undergraduates absorbed in the 1950s was that macroeconomics was above all about the determination of income and employment, that the critical factors here were saving and investment decisions, and that monetary factors, to the extent that they mattered at all, only had an in?uence on these all important variables through a rather narrow range of market interest rates. C- ventional wisdom never goes unchallenged in economics, except where its creators manage to control access to graduate schools and the jo- nals,anditiswithnocynicalintentthatIcon?rmJohnson’ssuggestion that those of us who embarked on academic careers in the ’60s found in this wisdom a ready-made target.weiterlesen

Elektronisches Format: PDF

Sprache(n): Englisch

ISBN: 978-0-387-71727-2 / 978-0387717272 / 9780387717272

Verlag: Springer US

Erscheinungsdatum: 08.06.2007

Seiten: 382

Auflage: 2

Autor(en): Apostolos Serletis

149,79 € inkl. MwSt.
Recommended Retail Price
kostenloser Versand

lieferbar - Lieferzeit 10-15 Werktage

zurück