Product details
- Categories: Monetary Policy & Euro
- Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
- ISBN: 9780521177009
- Publication Date: 01/07/2011
- Binding: Paperback
- Number of pages: 360
- Language: English
Summary
This textbook is designed to be used in an advanced undergraduate course. The approach of this text is to teach monetary economics using the classical paradigm of rational agents in a market setting. Too often monetary economics has been taught as a collection of facts about existing institutions for students to memorize. By teaching from first principles instead, the authors aim to instruct students not only in the monetary policies and institutions that exist today in the United States and Canada, but also in what policies and institutions may or should exist tomorrow and elsewhere. The text builds on a simple, clear monetary model and applies this framework consistently to a wide variety of monetary questions. The authors have added in this third edition new material on money as a means of replacing imperfect social record keeping, the role of currency in banking panics and a description of the policies implemented to deal with the banking crises that began in 2007.
Table of contents
Preface
Part I. Money: 1. A simple model of money
2. Barter and commodity money
3. Inflation
4. International monetary systems
5. Price surprises
Part II. Banking: 6. Capital
7. Liquidity and financial intermediation
8. Central banking and the money supply
9. Money stock fluctuations
10. Fully backed central bank money
11. The payments system
12. Bank risk
13. Liquidity risk and bank panics
Part III. Government Debt: 14. Deficits and the national debt
15. Savings and investment
16. The effect of the national debt on capital and savings
17. The temptation of inflation.