Fr. 120.00

Monetary Theory and Policy From Hume and Smith to Wicksell - Money, Credit, and the Economy

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Arie Arnon is Associate Professor of Economics at Ben-Gurion University and Head of the Economics and Society Program at Van Leer Jerusalem Institute! Israel. Professor Arnon's areas of research include the history of economic thought! macroeconomics and monetary theory. His books include Thomas Tooke: A Pioneer of Monetary Theory (1991)! The Palestinian Economy: Between Imposed Integration and Voluntary Separation (1997! coauthored with I. Luski! A. Spivak and J. Weinblatt) and The Open Economy Macromodel: Past! Present! and Future (2002! coedited with W. Young). Professor Arnon has published articles in History of Political Economy! the Oxford Economic Papers! the Economic Journal and the Middle East Journal. He has served on the editorial boards of the European Journal of the History of Economic Thought! Economic Quarterly and Social Security: Journal of Welfare and Social Security Studies. He has held visiting positions at the University of California! Berkeley! Stanford University! the University of Pennsylvania! The New School and the School of Oriental and African Studies! University of London. He has also served as a Senior Economist in the Research Department of the Bank of Israel and as a consultant to the World Bank. Since 2002 Professor Arnon has been the coordinator of the Israeli team in the Aix Group! where experts from the Palestinian Authority! Israel! and the international community discuss various economic aspects of the conflict and develop scenarios and policy alternatives for a permanent peace settlement. A recent publication of the group is entitled Economic Dimensions of a Two State Agreement Between Israel and Palestine (2007). Klappentext This book provides a survey of the major developments in monetary theory and policy from Hume and Smith to Wicksell. Zusammenfassung This book provides a comprehensive survey of the major developments in monetary theory and policy from David Hume and Adam Smith to Walter Bagehot and Knut Wicksell. In particular! it seeks to explain why it took so long for a theory of central banking to penetrate mainstream thought. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction; Part I. Analytical and Historical Foundations: 1. Monetary theory circa 1750: David Hume; 2. Mid-eighteenth-century British financial system; 3. Adam Smith: the case for laissez faire in money and banking; 4. 'Monetary theories of credit' in exchange; Part II. Debating Monetary Theory under Inconvertibility: 5. New reality: the restriction period, 1797-1821; 6. Boyd versus Baring: the early round in the bullion debate; 7. Henry Thornton: ahead of his times; 8. Ricardo versus Bosanquet: the famous round in the Bullion debate; 9. 'Credit theories of money' in exchange and intermediation; Part III. Debating: Laissez Faire, Rules and Discretion: 10. From the resumption to 1837: more crises; 11. The currency school trio: Loyd, Torrens, Norman; 12. The banking school trio: Tooke, Fullarton, Wilson; 13. Neither discretion nor rules: Joplin and the free banking school; Part IV. The Road to Defensive Central Banking: 14. Bagehot and a new conventional wisdom; 15. Does Karl Marx fit in?; 16. Marshall and bi-metallism; Part V. A New Beginning: Towards Active Central Banking: 17. Wicksell's innovative monetary theory; 18. The puzzling slow rise of a theory of central banking: between the lender of last resort, passive and active monetary policy....

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