Advances in Monetary Economics Routledge Revivals Series
Coordonnateur : Currie David
First published in 1985, Advances in Monetary Economics draws together papers given at the 1984 Money Study Group Conference and additional papers presented in seminars of the same year.
The book includes papers on theoretical, empirical and institutional aspects of monetary economics. Each chapter displays a concern with policy in the monetary sphere, both with regards to macroeconomic questions of monetary and fiscal management, and issues of policy at the microeconomic level towards financial institutions and markets. In doing so, the book highlights the importance of monetary economics in policy issues.
Advances in Monetary Economics has enduring relevance for those with an interest in the history and development of monetary economics.
1: Policy Credibility and Unemployment in the UK, David Backus and John Driffill; 2: Debt Neutrality in Disequilibrium, Neil Rankin; 3: Fiscal Policy and the Real Exchange Rate, Francesco Giavazzi and Jeffrey Sheen; 4: Optimal Policy under Model Uncertainty, Robin Becker, Barry Dwolatzky, Elias Karakitsos and Berc Rustem; 5: The Financial Sector of the London Business School Model, Giles Keating; 6: Portfolio Selection and Interest Rate Setting by the Dutch Banking System, Peter D. van Loo; 7: A Markowitz Approach to Regulation: the Case of French Open Mutual Funds, Georges Gallais-Hamonno; 8: The Demand for Long-Term Government Securities in the UK by the Non-Bank Private Sector, Glenn Hoggarth and Paul Ormerod; 9: Insurance Regulation in the United Kingdom and Federal Republic of Germany, Elizabeth Hammond and John Kay; 10: Asymmetric Information and Credit Rationing: Another View of Industrial Bank Lending and Britain's Economic Problem, John Cable and Paul Turner; References
Date de parution : 04-2023
15.6x23.4 cm
Date de parution : 12-2021
15.6x23.4 cm
Thèmes d’Advances in Monetary Economics :
Mots-clés :
NI Model; West Germany; monetary; Perfect Foresight; economics; Short Term Government Debt; Combined Objective Function; Risk Return Space; UK Bond; Net Foreign Assets; Short Term Bank Loans; Asset Substitutability; Real Exchange Rate; Ignoring Model Uncertainty; Non-bank Private Sector; Objective Function Cost; Expected Capital Gain; Long Term Government Securities; Asset Demand Equations; Balance Sheet Items; Interest Rate Setting Behaviour; Gilt Sales; Net Domestic Assets; Hm Treasury; Premium Income; Weak Efficiency; Savings Deposits