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E-raamat: Money Interest and the Public Interest: American Monetary Thought, 1920-1970

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Harvard Economic Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-May-2010
  • Kirjastus: Harvard University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780674059610
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Harvard Economic Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-May-2010
  • Kirjastus: Harvard University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780674059610

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The years 1920-1970 saw revolutionary change in the character of the monetary system as a consequence of depression, war, and finally prosperity. The same years saw equally revolutionary change in the character of economic ideas as the rise of statistics, Keynesian economics, and then Walrasian economics transformed the style of economic explanation. The two lines of change reinforced one another, as monetary events posed new questions that required new conceptual approaches, and as monetary ideas suggested possible directions for monetary policy.

Against this background of change, Perry Mehrling tells a story of continuity around the crucial question of the role of money in American democracy, a question associated generally with the Progressive tradition and its legacy, and more particularly with the institutionalist tradition in American economic thought. In this story, which he tells through the ideas and lives of three prominent institutionalists, Allyn Young, Alvin Hansen, and Edward Shaw, progress is measured not by the swings of fashion between two polar traditions of monetary thought--quantity theory and anti-quantity theory--but rather by the success with which each succeeding generation finds its footing on the shifting middle ground between the two extremes.

More than a simple history of monetary doctrine, the book makes a case for the continuing influence of a distinctly American tradition on the evolution of economic thought in general. In this tradition, monetary and financial institutions are shaped by historical forces and adapt to the changing needs of the economy.

Arvustused

This warm and humane biography of three monetary economists whose careers spanned the last 100 yearsAllyn Young, Alvin Hansen, and Edward Shawhas a great deal to say about action away from the ball. In this case it is the efforts of three practical men to construe and fashion monetary policy during the revolution and counterrevolution of John Maynard Keynes and Milton Friedman. -- David Warsh * Boston Globe * Mehrling has written a history of American monetary thought covering the 1920s to the 1960s in the form of intellectual biographies of three economists: Allyn Young, Alvin Hansen, and Edward S. Shaw. All three, he argues, were products of the Progressive or institutionalist strand of American economic thought, and each represented the most significant engagement of the Progressive mind with the monetary events of their generation. -- D. E. Moggridge * Choice *

Preface ix(4)
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1(12)
I Allyn Abbott Young (1876-1929) 13(72)
1. Intellectual Formation
13(18)
Richard T. Ely and English Political Economy
19(5)
John Dewey and the Logic of Scientific Inquiry
24(4)
Economic Theory and Statistics
28(3)
2. Early Monetary Ideas
31(15)
J. Laurence Laughlin versus the Quantity Theory
33(6)
Irving Fisher and the Quantity Theory
39(7)
3. War and Reconstruction
46(16)
War Finance and Monetary Disorder
48(6)
The Monetary Standard
54(3)
Why Gold?
57(5)
4. Monetary Management in the Twenties
62(23)
Index Numbers and Price Stabilization
66(3)
Production and Speculation
69(3)
Ralph Hawtrey and the Control of Business Cycles
72(5)
The Limits of Monetary Policy
77(8)
II Alvin Harvey Hansen (1887-1975) 85(74)
5. Intellectual Formation
85(18)
Money and Technology
92(4)
Continental Business Cycle Theory
96(3)
Money, Income, and Albert Aftalion
99(4)
6. Depression
103(15)
Money and Depression
104(3)
The Depression as a Business Cycle
107(3)
Hansen's Monetary Thought
110(4)
Social Control versus Laissez-Faire
114(4)
7. Stagnation
118(19)
The New Frontier
119(4)
Big Government
123(3)
Money and Sound Finance
126(4)
Hansen and Keynes
130(7)
8. The Golden Age
137(22)
The Making of American Keynesianism
140(6)
Keynesianism versus Institutionalism
146(4)
The New Economics and Money
150(4)
The Origin of Monetary Walrasianism
154(5)
III Edward Stone Shaw (1908-1994) 159(62)
9. Intellectual Formation
159(20)
John B. Canning and Ralph Hawtrey
166(3)
London, Robertson, and Keynes
169(5)
Money in a Theory of Banking
174(5)
10. From Money to Finance
179(22)
Money in a Theory of Finance
184(3)
Finance and U.S. Economic Development
187(5)
A Theory for Policymakers
192(3)
A Theory for Academics
195(6)
11. Financial Structure and Economic Development
201(20)
Financial Deepening
205(6)
A Theory for Policymakers
211(4)
A Theory for Academics
215(6)
Conclusion 221(8)
Notes 229(16)
Bibliography 245(36)
Index 281
Perry G. Mehrling is Associate Professor of Economics at Barnard College of Columbia University.