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Subject
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History of economic thought 10 Ökonomische Ideengeschichte 10 Geldpolitik 9 Geldtheorie 9 Monetary policy 9 Monetary theory 9 Gold standard 7 Goldstandard 7 Business cycle 6 Konjunktur 6 Classical economics 5 Klassische Ökonomie 5 Price-specie-flow mechanism 5 Quantity theory 5 Classical monetary theory 4 Deflation 4 Economic crisis 4 Hawtrey, R. G. 4 Wirtschaftskrise 4 Bankenkrise 3 Banking crisis 3 Central bank 3 Great Depression 3 Hayek, F. A. 3 Keynes, J. M. 3 Law of reflux 3 Overissue 3 Quantity theory of money 3 Quantitätstheorie 3 Theorie 3 Theory 3 Zentralbank 3 Bank of France 2 Cassel, G. 2 Convertibility 2 Federal Reserve 2 France 2 Frankreich 2 Friedman, M. 2 Geldgeschichte 2
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Undetermined 16
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Article 16
Type of publication (narrower categories)
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Aufsatz im Buch 16 Book section 16
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English 16
Author
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Glasner, David 16 Batchelder, Ronald W. 2 Zimmerman, Paul R. 1
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Studies in the history of monetary theory : controversies and clarifications 16
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ECONIS (ZBW) 16
Showing 1 - 10 of 16
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A reinterpretation of classical monetary theory
Glasner, David - In: Studies in the history of monetary theory : …, (pp. 21-50). 2021
This chapter suggests that a model of a costlessly produced, competitively supplied, convertible money is compatible with a macroeconomic model with a determinate price level, a classical dichotomy between the real and monetary sectors, in which Say's Law (Identity) is valid, the latter being...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012705217
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On some classical monetary controversies
Glasner, David - In: Studies in the history of monetary theory : …, (pp. 51-83). 2021
This chapter uses the classical money model introduced in Chapter 2 to explain the different views of Adam Smith and David Hume on banking and the price-specie-flow mechanism (PSFM). These differences reappeared in the debates between the Banking School and the Currency School over Peel's Bank...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012705218
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The real-bills doctrine in the light of the law of reflux
Glasner, David - In: Studies in the history of monetary theory : …, (pp. 85-112). 2021
This chapter considers the law of reflux and its alternative interpretations: (1) as a monetary policy rule for stabilizing the price level and (2) as rule for individual banks to follow to remain liquid. The chapter argues that Adam Smith endorsed only the second interpretation, and that the...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012705224
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Classical monetary theory and the quantity theory
Glasner, David - In: Studies in the history of monetary theory : …, (pp. 113-134). 2021
This chapter responds to criticisms by (Blaug, M. (1995). Why is the quantity theory the oldest surviving theory in economics? In M. Blaug (Ed.), The quantity theory of money: From Locke to Keynes and Friedman. Edward Elgar.) and (O’Brien, D.P. (1995). Long-run equilibrium and cyclical...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012705225
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Monetary disequilibrium and the demand for money in Ricardo and Thornton
Glasner, David - In: Studies in the history of monetary theory : …, (pp. 135-153). 2021
This chapter explores the different explanations of Ricardo and Thornton for the depreciation of sterling after convertibility of sterling into gold was suspended during the Napoleonic Wars. Ricardo held that only overissue by the Bank of England could have caused depreciation of sterling while...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012705227
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The Humean and Smithian traditions in monetary theory
Glasner, David - In: Studies in the history of monetary theory : …, (pp. 155-194). 2021
This chapter discusses four areas of monetary theory on which the ideas of Smith and Hume have left their imprint: (1) the overissue of bank liabilities, (2) the price-specie-flow mechanism (PSFM), (3) the need for a lender of last resort in a competitive banking system, (4) real-bills doctrine...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012705228
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Rules versus discretion in monetary policy historically contemplated
Glasner, David - In: Studies in the history of monetary theory : …, (pp. 195-237). 2021
Monetary-policy rules arise when the value of a medium of exchange exceeds its cost of production. Two classes of monetary rules can be identified: (1) price rules that target the value of money in terms of a real commodity, e.g., gold, or in terms of an index of prices, and (2) quantity rules...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012705229
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Say's law and the classical theory of depressions
Glasner, David - In: Studies in the history of monetary theory : …, (pp. 239-259). 2021
Say's Law occupies a prominent, but equivocal, position in the history of economics, the object of repeated controversies about its meaning and significance since first propounded in the nineteenth century. This chapter proposes a unifying interpretation of Say's Law based on the idea that the...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012705231
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Hawtrey's good and bad trade : a centenary retrospective
Glasner, David - In: Studies in the history of monetary theory : …, (pp. 263-296). 2021
Ralph Hawtrey, a leading economist of the interwar period, published his first work in economics, Good and Bad Trade, in 1913. The book presents the key elements of the theoretical model Hawtrey developed and refined over the next quarter century. Though he was remarkably consistent in...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012705232
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Where Keynes went wrong
Glasner, David - In: Studies in the history of monetary theory : …, (pp. 313-330). 2021
This chapter examines the development of Keynes's monetary thought in the context of Britain's return to the gold standard (opposed by Keynes) in 1925 and his unsuccessful attempt to develop a theory of macroeconomic fluctuations in his Treatise on Money. Keynes, who had predicted that rejoining...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012705234
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