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008 230315b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9780367695651
082 _a332.4
_bHAW
245 _aMonetary economics, banking and policy:
_bexpanding economic thought to meet contemporary challenges
260 _bRoutledge
_aNew York
_c2023
300 _axvi, 242 p.
365 _aGBP
_b120.00
504 _aTable of Contents Introduction 1. Macroprudential institutionalism: The Bank of England’s Financial Policy Committee and the contemporary limits of central bank policy Jamie Morgan 2. Central Bank Independence: are the glory days over? Charles Goodhar 3. The efficacy of monetary policy in an age of financialisation and climate change Malcolm Sawyer 4. Keynes on Individual Behavior and the Possibility of Involuntary Unemployment Equilibrium Roy Rotheim 5. Keynes’s Chapter 2 definition of involuntary unemployment Christopher Torr 6. What Keynes learnt from Kalecki – A brief introduction to the Fiscal theory of Debt Management Jan Toporowsk 7. Payment vs. Funding: The Law of Reflux for Today Perry Mehrling 8. "Revolution and counter-revolution in UK banks"’ asset composition since 1945, and why they matter to the debate about horizontalism Tim Congdon 9. The endogeneity of the money supply in the General Theory G.C. Harcourt and Peter Kriesler 10. Liquidity preference and the digital financial inclusion illusion Penelope Hawkins 11. The rising importance of liquidity-premium analysis: towards a regeneration of liquidity-preference theory Theodore Koutsobinas 12. "Regional finance": beyond theory and dualism Carlos J. Rodríguez-Fuentes 13. Money in the Early Years of the Soviet Union: Barter and Back Again - A Short-lived Experiment of Transformation Kobil Ruziev 14. The practicality of pluralism in the economic analysis of the least developed countries Daniel Gay 15. The Body of work of Sheila Dow – Publications from 1980 to 2022
520 _aThis edited collection seeks to advance thinking on money and the monetary nature of the economy, macroeconomic analysis and economic policy, setting it within the context of current scholarship and global socioeconomic concerns, and the crisis in the economics discipline. A key aim is to highlight the central contribution that Sheila Dow has made to these fields. Bringing together an impressive panel of contributors, this volume explores topics including central bank independence, liquidity preferences, money supply endogeneity, financial regulation, regional finance and public debt. The essays in this first collection of two will be thought-provoking reading for advanced students and scholars of macroeconomics, monetary economics, central banking and heterodox economics. Contributors have a broad range of professional experience at universities, central banks, business, development institutions and policy advisories.
650 _aMonetary policy
_92120
650 _aBanks and banking
_9442
650 _aMacroeconomics
_91161
650 _aMoney supply
_912252
700 _aHawkins, Penelope
_911985
942 _2ddc
_cBK