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  • Stabi Berlin  (6)
  • Berlin International  (4)
  • Kreisbibliothek Havelland Rathenow
  • Hertie School
  • Stiftung FVV
  • Edward Elgar Publishing
  • 1
    UID:
    b3kat_BV047923688
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (xiii, 170 Seiten) , ill
    ISBN: 9781847201843
    Note: A collection of papers presented at the sixth conference of the Cournot Centre for Economic Studies, "Public Sector, Private Sector: New National and International Frontiers," held on 2-3 October 2003. - Includes bibliographical references and index , 1. Public goods : a positive analysis / Inge Kaul -- 2. For-profit, state and non-profit : how to cut the pie among the three sectors / Avner Ben-Ner -- 3. Services of general interest in a competitive multinational space / Philippe Herzog -- 4. Funding public services in Europe : state banks or public-private partnerships (PPPs)? / Patrick Artus -- 5. New public institutional design / Xavier Greffe -- 6. Knowledge as global public good : production conditions and preconditions / Claude Henry -- 7. Global public goods and global finance : does global governance ensure that the global public interest is served? / Joseph E. Stiglitz , The studies cover topics in the conceptualization, classification and stratification of public goods. Also examined are public institutional design, global economic institutions and partnership typologies. Individual papers address the financing, regulatory, organizational and legal aspects relating to services of general interest in Europe. The dynamics of global public good production, including monopolies, patents, scientific uncertainty and market failures, are discussed. Empirical research on the state, profit and non-profit sectors is presented. Providing numerous examples of specific public goods, the contributions also highlight the impact of macroeconomic policies on provision. The book presents a broad diversity of new approaches to global public goods within the framework of mixed economies, beyond the standard economic analysis of public services
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druckausgabe ISBN 1845427181
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druckausgabe ISBN 184542719X
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druckausgabe ISBN 9781845427184
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druckausgabe ISBN 9781845427191
    Language: English
    Subjects: Economics
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Öffentliches Gut ; Konferenzschrift ; Konferenzschrift ; Konferenzschrift
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    URL: FULL  ((Currently Only Available on Campus))
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_1879443775
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (lvi, 588 pages) , illustrations
    ISBN: 9781781008416
    Content: This book unites diverse heterodox traditions in the study of endogenous money - which until now have been confined to their own academic quarters - and explores their similarities and differences from both sides of the Atlantic. Bringing together perspectives from post-Keynesians, Circuitists and the Dijon School, the book continues the tradition of Keynes's and Kalecki's analysis of a monetary production economy, emphasising the similarities between the various approaches, and expanding the analytical breadth of the theory of endogenous money. The authors open new avenues for monetary research in order to fuel a renewed interest in the nature and role of money in capitalist economies, which is, the authors argue, one of the most controversial, and therefore fascinating, areas of economics. Providing new theoretical and empirical grounds for the construction of a general, policy oriented theory of money, this thought-provoking collection will appeal to academics, researchers and students interested in monetary economics. It will also be welcomed by monetary policymakers and central bank officials
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and indexes , Contents: Introduction -- Part I: The post Keynesian monetary approach -- Part II: The theory of the monetary circuit -- Part III: The theory of money emissions -- Part IV: Further contributions to monetary analysis -- Index.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781840647891
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781845422301
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als ISBN 9781840647891
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als ISBN 9781845422301
    Additional Edition: Elektronische Reproduktion von Modern theories of money Cheltenham [u.a.] : Elgar, 2003 ISBN 1840647892
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1840647892
    Language: English
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  • 3
    UID:
    gbv_1879443171
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (xxi, 271 pages) , illustrations
    ISBN: 9781035305650
    Series Statement: New directions in modern economics series
    Content: This book provides an enlightening glimpse into the deep theoretical traditions of post-Keynesian theory whilst also illuminating the richness and uniqueness of post-Keynesian economic policy. The editors have gathered together leading scholars and researchers to push the boundaries of post-Keynesian thinking. They address a number of important issues dealing with wage determination, income distribution and central bank governance. Many of these chapters share a common theme including a criticism of the usefulness of monetary policy in fighting or targeting inflation and the questions this raises for central bank governance. The book also focuses on open economy issues such as capital flows, globalization, FDI and the Washington Consensus. Monetary Policy and Financial Stability is required reading for students, scholars and researchers of economics, and for policymakers seeking rational alternatives to the current neo-classical orthodoxy
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and indexes , Wage bargaining and monetary policy in a Kaleckian monetary distribution and growth model : making sense of the NAIRU / Eckhard Hein -- Price and wage determination and the inflation barrier : moving beyond the Phillips curve / Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer -- Central bank governance, the euthanasia of the rentier and interest rate policy : a note on post-Keynesian monetary policy after Taylor / Louis-Philippe Rochon -- The macroeconomic governance of the European Monetary Union : a Keynesian perspective / Angel Asensio -- Inflation targeting and monetary policy governance : the case of the European Central Bank / Sergio Rossi -- Enforcing the IMF in the global economy : an institutional analysis / Jean-Pierre Allegret and Philippe Dulbecco -- Too much consensus could be harmful : assessing the degree of implementation of stabilization and structural policies and their impact on growth / Eric Berr, François Combarnous and Eric Rougier -- The political economy of global economic disgovernance / Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira -- Tobin, globalization and capital flows / Robert W. Dimand -- The impact of FDI on capital formation : the case of Mexico / Claudia Maya -- Financial liberalization, economic growth and rents / Domenica Tropeano -- The Argentine Jefes program : from a post-financial crisis emergency safety net to a long-run policy promoting development / Corinne Pastoret.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781848440692
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als ISBN 9781848440692
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Monetary policy and financial stability Cheltenham [u.a.] : Edward Elgar, 2009 ISBN 1848440693
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781848440692
    Language: English
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  • 4
    UID:
    gbv_187944271X
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (xxvi, 267 pages) , illustrations
    ISBN: 9781781958674
    Content: Combining critical perspectives with a positive contribution to economic policy, both national and international, this book considers the causes and consequences of recent financial crises presenting cutting-edge material. The editors bring together a number of well-known scholars to offer their views and elaborate on alternative solutions with respect to the Washington Consensus on how to restructure the monetary and financial system in order to avoid financial crises in the future. The book deals with a number of issues, such as the Asian financial crises of the 1990s, exchange rate arrangements, financial liberalization and capital controls. The contributors take a critical approach, providing the elements for a new analysis of monetary and exchange rate issues in the modern world. Monetary and Exchange Rate Systems will be extremely useful for researchers and policymakers interested in monetary macroeconomics and in the international financial system
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index , Contents: Introduction / Louis-Philippe Rochon and Sergio Rossi -- Part I: Financial liberalization and financial crises -- 1. International financial instability in a world of currencies hierarchy / Andrea Terzi -- 2. Dollarization and the hegemonic status of the us dollar / Jean-François Ponsot -- 3. Reform and structural change in Latin America: Financial systems and instability / Eugenia Correa and Gregorio Vidal -- 4. East Asian monetary and financial cooperation: The long road ahead / Kok-Fay Chin -- 5. Does financial liberalization affect the distribution of income between wages and profits? / Domenica Tropeano -- 6. Crisis avoidance: The post-washington consensus agenda / Louis-Philippe Rochon -- Part II: From financial instability to macroeconomic performance / 7. Reforming the International Payment System: An Assessment / Claude Gnos -- 8. Is there a role for capital controls? / Philip Arestis, Jesús Ferreiro and Carmen Gómez -- 9. Liberalization or regulating international capital flows? / Paul Davidson -- 10. Cross-border transactions and exchange rate stability / Sergio Rossi -- 11. To fix or to float: Theoretical and pragmatic considerations / L. Randall Wray -- 12. Exchange rate arrangements and EU enlargement / Jesper Jespersen -- Index.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781845423841
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781847207326
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als ISBN 9781845423841
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als ISBN 9781847207326
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Monetary and exchange rate systems Cheltenham [u.a.] : Elgar, 2006 ISBN 1845423844
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781845423841
    Language: English
    URL: Inhaltsverzeichnis  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 5
    UID:
    gbv_1879441020
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (x, 341 pages) , illustrations
    ISBN: 9781781959596
    Content: This thought-provoking book clearly and systematically analyses the post-Keynesian approaches to endogenous money and, in doing so, provides an informed critique of the development of post-Keynesian economics. Using a horizontalist perspective the author offers an historical overview of the post-Keynesian and circuit approaches to endogenous money, starting with a comprehensive survey of the Franco-Italian circuit school. He argues that rather than emphasizing the early writings of Minsky, Kaldor and Tobin in the 1950s and of Davidson and Rousseas later, post-Keynesians ought to have followed the writings of Joan Robinson and Richard Kahn who offered far better theories of credit-money. The author then compares the current post-Keynesian structuralist theory with New Keynesian monetary thought. In conclusion, he develops an innovative theory of banking based on Keynesian uncertainty and consistent with the horizontalist tradition taking into account credit restraints, crunches and creditworthiness. This book will be illuminating to scholars of post-Keynesian economics, macroeconomics, and history of economic thought
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (pages 301-329) and index , Contents: Preface -- Introduction -- 1. The franco-italian circuitists: Credit, money and production -- 2. Credit, money and post-Keynesian theory: Clarifications of familiar themes -- 3. The early views of "endogenous" money: Minsky, kaldor and tobin -- 4. The early views of "endogenous" money revisited: Davidson and rousseas versus robinson and kahn -- 5. Horizontalists and structuralists: Credit and endogenous "money" -- 6. Post-Keynesians and orthodoxy: "neo" post-Keynesians? -- 7. New Keynesian monetary theory and the transmission mechanism: A comparison with post-Keynesian theory -- 8. A post-Keynesian/circuitist theory of banks: Uncertainty, creditworthiness, and the supply of credit -- Bibliography -- Index.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781858988955
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als ISBN 9781858988955
    Additional Edition: Elektronische Reproduktion von Rochon, Louis-Philippe Credit, money and production Cheltenham [u.a.] : Elgar, 1999 ISBN 1858988950
    Language: English
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  • 6
    UID:
    gbv_1879440784
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (296 pages)
    ISBN: 9781782542827
    Content: The horizontalist perspective is an extension of the post-Keynesian approach, that has hitherto focused on a theory of credit and money. This book extends horizontalism beyond its traditional boundaries and makes it consistent with the post-Keynesian theories of output and the open economy. The authors compare and contrast the horizontalist position with various orthodox and non-orthodox views on money. They argue that horizontalism is perfectly compatible with liquidity preference, credit constraints, and a flexible interest-rate mark-up, and address recent developments in banking that reinforce the validity of a horizontal schedule of credit-money. The overall intention is to place horizontalism within the current heterodox tradition as a general theory of the creation of money that is consistent with the post-Keynesian view on macroeconomic policy. Credit, Interest Rates and the Open Economy is essential reading for those who wish to expand their theoretical understanding of international financial issues and will be of great interest to those involved in macroeconomics, money and banking and radical economics
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index , Contents: Preface: Anthony thirlwall -- Introduction -- Part I: Setting the record straight -- 1. Some reflections on endogenous money -- 2. Horizontalism -- Part II: Debates on horizontalism -- 3. Money without scarcity -- 4. Money endogeneity and monetary non-neutrality -- 5. Horizontalism and new Keynesian economics -- Part III: Horizontalism and history of thought issues -- 6. The German balance of payments school and the Latin American neo-structuralists -- 7. Horizontalism and inflation accommodation -- 8. Notes on hicks on money and monetary theory -- 9. Bank creation of money and endogenous money supply as the outcome of the evolution of the banking system -- Part IV: Horizontalism and the open economy -- 10. The reflux mechanism and the open economy -- 11. Monetary autonomy and financial integration -- 12. Foreign exchange, interest and prices -- Index.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781840640984
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als ISBN 9781840640984
    Additional Edition: Elektronische Reproduktion von Credit, interest rates and the open economy Cheltenham [u.a.] : Edward Elgar, 2001 ISBN 1840640987
    Language: English
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Pub. Ltd
    UID:
    kobvindex_INTNLM01090557X
    Format: 1 online resource (544 p)
    ISBN: 9781782547440
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Content: The Encyclopedia of Central Banking provides definitive and comprehensive encylopedic coverage on central banking and monetary theory and policy. Containing close to 250 entries from specially commissioned experts in their fields, elements of past and current monetary policies are described and a critical assessment of central bank practices is presented. Since the global financial crisis of 2008-09, all major central banks have intervened to avert the collapse of the global economy, bringing monetary policy to the forefront. Rochon and Rossi give an up to date, critical understanding of central banking, at both theoretical and policy-oriented levels. This Encyclopedia explains the complexity of monetary-policy interventions, their conceptual and institutional frameworks, and their own limits and drawbacks. The reader is provided with the body of knowledge necessary to understand central banks' decisions in the aftermath of the global financial crisis and controversial explanations of the crisis are illuminated from a historical perspective. Academics and students of economics will find this an indispensible reference tool, offering current and necessary insight into central banking and monetary policy. Practitioners in the financial sector will also benefit from this refreshed insight into such a fundamental topic
    Additional Edition: Available in another form ISBN 9781782547433(hardback)
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781782547433
    Language: English
    URL: FULL  ((Currently Only Available on Campus))
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Pub
    UID:
    kobvindex_INTNLM010885927
    Format: 1 online resource (464 p)
    ISBN: 9781783472246
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Content: Contents: Introduction: The need to discuss endogenous money again / Louis-Philippe Rochon and Sergio Rossi -- Part I Endogenous money in the real world -- 1. Money endogeneity before central banking: perspectives from monetary history / Jane Knodell -- 2. Modern central bank operations: the general principles / Scott T. Fullwiler -- 3. The theory of endogenous money and the LM schedule: prelude to a reconstruction of IS-LM / Thomas I. Palley -- 4. Money and interest rate determination in a system with no reserve requirements / Sergio Rossi -- 5. New insights on the money-supply-endogeneity debate and the new 'equity' multiplier: some evidence from the euro area / Yannis Panagopoulos and Aristotelis Spiliotis -- 6. Liquidity, finance, and economic growth: some unresolved issues for developing economies / Noemi Levy-Orlik -- Part II Endogenous money in the economic thought -- 7. Money endogeneity and the quantity theory: the case of commodity-money / Allin Cottrell -- 8. Nicholas Kaldor and the war on monetarism / John E. King -- 9. The principle of effective demand and the state of post-Keynesian monetary economics / Colin Rogers -- 10. Endogenous money and the tyranny of demand and supply / Malcolm Sawyer -- 11. An evolutionary-institutionalist re-appraisal of the endogenous-money-supply theory / Christopher J. Niggle -- 12. Interest rate determination and endogenous money / John Smithin -- Part III Endogenous money in post-Keynesian analysis -- 13. The analytical role of endogenous money and the horizontalist-structuralist debate / Peter Docherty -- 14. The horizontalist debate: lessons from New Zealand / Paul Dalziel -- 15. The rate of interest as a macroeconomic distribution parameter: horizontalism and post-Keynesian models of distribution and growth / Eckhard Hein -- 16. Assessing some structuralist claims through a coherent stock-flow framework / Marc Lavoie -- 17. Horizontalism and structuralism: a suggested re-interpretation / Louis-Philippe Rochon and Sergio Rossi -- 18. An essay on horizontalism, structuralism and historical time / Mark Setterfield -- 19. A revisitation of the debate between the horizontalist and structuralist analyses of endogenous money: single-period analysis versus continuation analysis / Giuseppe Fontana -- Index
    Content: The endogenous nature of money is a fact that has been recognized rather late in monetary economics. Today, it is explained most comprehensively by post-Keynesian economic analysis. This book revisits the nature of money and its endogeneity, featuring a number of the protagonists who took part in the original debates in the 1980s and 1990s, as well as new voices and analyses. Expert contributors revisit long-standing discussions from the position of both horizontalism and structuralism, and prescribe new areas of research and debate for post-Keynesian scholars to explore. Louis-Philippe Rochon and Sergio Rossi eloquently situate the nature of money and its endogeneity in an historical context, before bringing together an engaging array of chapters written by contemporary leading scholars. These chapters put forth detailed analyses of money creation; central bank operations and the role of monetary authorities; a link between interest rates and income distribution; a stock-flow analysis of monetary economies of production; and finally, a reinterpretation of horizontalism and structuralism. Post-Keynesian and heterodox economists, institutionalist economists, scholars of money and finance, and graduate students studying economics will all find this an enlightening read
    Note: Includes index
    Additional Edition: Available in another form ISBN 9781845429430(hardback)
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781845429430
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books
    URL: FULL  ((Currently Only Available on Campus))
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Pub
    UID:
    kobvindex_INTNLM010885595
    Format: 1 online resource (3 volumes, circa 2,520 p) , cm
    ISBN: 9781785363573
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive 322
    Content: Louis-Philippe Rochon and Mark Setterfield (2008), 'The Political Economy of Interest-Rate Setting, Inflation, and Income Distribution', International Journal of Political Economy, 37 (2), Summer, 5-25 -- Mark Setterfield (2009), 'Macroeconomics without the LM Curve: An Alternative View', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 33 (2), March, 273-93 -- Scott T. Fullwiler (2013), 'An Endogenous Money Perspective on the Post-Crisis Monetary Policy Debate', Review of Keynesian Economics, 1 (2), Summer, 171-94 -- Amitava Krishna Dutt (1984), 'Stagnation, Income Distribution and Monopoly Power', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 8 (1), March, 25-40 -- Massimo Pivetti (1985), 'On the Monetary Explanation of Distribution', Political Economy: Studies in the Surplus Approach, 1 (2), 73-103 -- Amit Bhaduri and Stephen Marglin (1990), 'Unemployment and the Real Wage: The Economic Basis for Contesting Political Ideologies', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 14 (4), December, 375-93 -- Amitava Krishna Dutt (1992), 'Conflict Inflation, Distribution, Cyclical Accumulation and Crises', European Journal of Political Economy, 8 (4), December, 579-97 -- Steven Pressman and Robert Scott (2009), 'Consumer Debt and the Measurement of Poverty and Inequality in the US', Review of Social Economy, LXVII (2), June, 127-48 -- Aldo Barba and Massimo Pivetti (2009), 'Rising Household Debt: Its Causes and Macroeconomic Implications - a Long-Period Analysis', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 33 (1), January, 113-37 -- Robert A. Blecker (1989), 'International Competition, Income Distribution and Economic Growth', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 13 (3), September, 395-412 -- Marc Lavoie (1995), 'Interest Rates in Post-Keynesian Models of Growth and Distribution', Metroeconomica, 46 (2), June, 146-77 -- Robert Boyer (2005), 'From Shareholder Value to CEO Power: The Paradox of the 1990s', Competition and Change, 9 (1), March, 7-47 -- Eckhard Hein (2007), 'Interest Rate, Debt, Distribution and Capital Accumulation in a Post-Kaleckian Model', Metroeconomica, 58 (2), May, 310-39 -- Amit Bhaduri (2008), 'On the Dynamics of Profit-Led and Wage-Led Growth', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 32 (1), January, 147-60 -- Engelbert Stockhammer and Özlem Onaran (2013), 'Wage-Led Growth: Theory, Evidence, Policy', Review of Keynesian Economics, 1 (1), Spring, 61-78 -- Sebastian Dullien (2012), 'Is New Always Better than Old? On the Treatment of Fiscal Policy in Keynesian Models', Review of Keynesian Economics: Inaugural Issue, 0 (1), Autumn, 5-23 -- Hassan Bougrine (2012), 'Fiscal Austerity, the Great Recession and the Rise of New Dictatorships', Review of Keynesian Economics: Inaugural Issue, 0 (1), Autumn, 109-25 -- Philip Arestis (2012), 'Fiscal Policy: A Strong Macroeconomic Role', Review of Keynesian Economics: Inaugural Issue, 0 (1), Autumn, 93-108 -- Nathan Perry and Matías Vernengo (2014), 'What Ended the Great Depression? Re-evaluating the Role of Fiscal Policy', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 38 (2), March, 349-67
    Content: Nicholas Kaldor and James A. Trevithick (1981), 'A Keynesian Perspective on Money', Lloyds Bank Review, 139, January, 1-19 -- Allin Cottrell (1986), 'The Endogeneity of Money and Money-Income Causality', Scottish Journal of Political Economy, 33 (1), February, 2-27 -- Basil J. Moore (1991), 'Money Supply Endogeneity: "Reserve Price Setting" or "Reserve Quantity Setting"?', Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 13 (3), Spring, 404-13 -- Robert Pollin (1991), 'Two Theories of Money Supply Endogeneity: Some Empirical Evidence', Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 13 (3), Spring, 366-96 -- Thomas I. Palley (1994), 'Competing Views of the Money Supply Process: Theory and Evidence', Metroeconomica, 45 (1), February, 67-88 -- Sheila C. Dow (1996), 'Horizontalism: A Critique', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 20 (4), July, 497-508 -- Marc Lavoie (1996), 'Horizontalism, Structuralism, Liquidity Preference and the Principle of Increasing Risk', Scottish Journal of Political Economy, 43 (3), August, 275-300 -- Marc Lavoie (1999), 'The Credit-Led Supply of Deposits and the Demand for Money: Kaldor's Reflux Mechanism as Previously Endorsed by Joan Robinson', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 23 (1), January, 103-13 -- Mario Seccareccia (2003), 'Pricing, Investment and the Financing of Production within the Framework of the Monetary Circuit: Some Preliminary Evidence', in Louis-Philippe Rochon and Sergio Rossi (eds), Modern Theories of Money: The Nature and Role of Money in Capitalist Economies, Chapter 9, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 173-97 -- Giuseppe Fontana (2004), 'Rethinking Endogenous Money: A Constructive Interpretation of the Debate between Horizontalists and Structuralists', Metroeconomica, 55 (4), November, 367-85 -- Warren Mosler (1997-98), 'Full Employment and Price Stability', Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 20 (2), Winter, 167-82 -- Sergio Rossi (1999), 'Review of "Understanding Modern Money"', Kyklos, 52 (3), August, 483-485 -- Stephanie Bell (2000), 'Do Taxes and Bonds Finance Government Spending?' Journal of Economic Issues, XXXIV (3), September, 603-20 -- Louis-Philippe Rochon and Matías Vernengo (2003), 'State Money and the Real World: Or Chartalism and its Discontents', Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 26 (1), Fall, 57-67 -- Claude Gnos and Louis-Philippe Rochon (2002), 'Money Creation and the State: A Critical Assessment of Chartalism', International Journal of Political Economy, 32 (3), Fall, 41-57 -- Marc Lavoie (2013), 'The Monetary and Fiscal Nexus of Neo-Chartalism: A Friendly Critique', Journal of Economic Issues, XLVII (1), March, 1-31 -- Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer (2004), 'On the Effectiveness of Monetary Policy and of Fiscal Policy', Review of Social Economy, LXII (4), December, 441-63 -- Giuseppe Fontana and Alfonso Palacio-Vera (2007), 'Are Long-Run Price Stability and Short-Run Output Stabilization All That Monetary Policy Can Aim For?', Metroeconomica, 58 (2), May, 269-98 -- Louis-Philippe Rochon and Sergio Rossi (2007), 'Central Banking and Post-Keynesian Economics', Review of Political Economy, 19 (4), October, 539-54
    Content: Paul Davidson (1965), 'Keynes's Finance Motive', Oxford Economic Papers, 17 (1), March, 47-65 -- A. Asimakopulos (1983), 'Kalečki and Keynes on Finance, Investment and Saving', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 7 (3-4), September-December, 221-33 -- Augusto Graziani (1984), 'The Debate on Keynes' Finance Motive', Economic Notes, 13 (1), 5-33 -- Jörg Bibow (1995), 'Some Reflections on Keynes's "Finance Motive" for the Demand for Money', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 19 (5), October, 647-66 -- Louis-Philippe Rochon (1997), 'Keynes's Finance Motive: A Re-assessment. Credit, Liquidity Preference and the Rate of Interest', Review of Political Economy, 9 (3), 277-93 -- Marc Lavoie (1984), 'The Endogenous Flow of Credit and the Post Keynesian Theory of Money', Journal of Economic Issues, XVIII (3), September, 771-97 -- Philip Arestis (1987), 'Post-Keynesian Theory of Money, Credit and Finance', Thames Papers in Political Economy, Spring, 1-22 -- Louis-Philippe Rochon and Sergio Rossi (2013), 'Endogenous Money: The Evolutionary versus Revolutionary Views', Review of Keynesian Economics, 1 (2), Summer, 210-29 -- Edward J. Nell (1967), 'Wicksell's Theory of Circulation', Journal of Political Economy, 75 (4), August, 386-94 -- Augusto Graziani (1989), 'The Theory of the Monetary Circuit', Thames Papers in Political Economy, Spring, 1-26 -- Riccardo Bellofiore (1992), 'Monetary Macroeconomics before the General Theory: The Circuit Theory of Money in Wicksell, Schumpeter and Keynes', Social Concept, 6 (2), 47-89 -- Jacques Le Bourva (1992), 'Money Creation and Credit Multipliers', Review of Political Economy, 4 (4), 447-66 -- Louis-Philippe Rochon (1999), 'The Creation and Circulation of Endogenous Money: A Circuit Dynamique Approach', Journal of Economic Issues, XXIII (1), March, 1-21 -- Alain Parguez and Mario Seccareccia (2000), 'The Credit Theory of Money: The Monetary Circuit Approach', in John Smithin (edition), What is Money?, Chapter 5, London, UK: Routledge, 101-23 -- Biagio Bossone (2001), 'Circuit Theory of Banking and Finance', Journal of Banking and Finance, 25 (5), May, 857-90 -- Sergio Rossi (2009), 'Monetary Circuit Theory and Money Emissions', in Jean-François Ponsot and Sergio Rossi (eds), The Political Economy of Monetary Circuits: Tradition and Change in Post-Keynesian Economics, Chapter 3, Basingstoke, UK and New York, NY, USA: Palgrave Macmillan, 36-55 -- Stephen W. Rousseas (1960), 'Velocity Changes and the Effectiveness of Monetary Policy, 1951-57', Review of Economics and Statistics, 42 (1), February, 27-36 -- Nicholas Kaldor (1970), 'The New Monetarism', Lloyds Bank Review, 97, July, 1-18 -- Paul Davidson and Sidney Weintraub (1973), 'Money as Cause and Effect', Economic Journal, 83 (332), December, 1117-32
    Content: Paul Davidson (1992-1993), 'Reforming the World's Money', Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 15 (2), Winter, 153-79 -- Jane D'Arista (2004), 'Dollars, Debt, and Dependence: The Case for International Monetary Reform', Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 26 (4), Summer, 557-72 -- Robert Skidelsky (2005), 'Keynes, Globalisation and the Bretton Woods Institutions in the Light of Changing Ideas about Markets', World Economics, 6 (1), January-March, 15-30 -- Pietro Alessandrini and Michele Fratianni (2009), 'Resurrecting Keynes to Stabilize the International Monetary System', Open Economies Review, 20 (3), July, 339-58 -- Lilia Costabile (2009), 'Current Global Imbalances and the Keynes Plan: A Keynesian Approach for Reforming the International Monetary System', Structural Change and Economic Dynamics, 20 (2), June, 79-89 -- Nadia F. Piffaretti (2009), 'Reshaping the International Monetary Architecture: Lessons from the Keynes Plan', Banks and Bank Systems, 4 (1), 45-54 -- Sergio Rossi (2009), 'International Payment Finality Requires a Supranational Central-Bank Money: Reforming the International Monetary Architecture in the Spirit of Keynes', China-USA Business Review, 8 (11), November, 1-20 -- Anna M. Carabelli and Mario A. Cedrini (2010), 'Global Imbalances, Monetary Disorder, and Shrinking Policy Space: Keynes's Legacy for our Troubled World', European Journal of Economics and Economic Policies: Intervention, 7 (2), November, 303-23 -- Alvaro Cencini (2010), 'For a New System of International Payments', Banks and Bank Systems, 5 (1), 47-57
    Content: Recommended readings (Machine generated): Sheila C. Dow (1988), 'Post Keynesian Economics: Conceptual Underpinnings', British Review of Economic Issues, 10 (3), Autumn, 1-18 -- O. F. Hamouda and G. C. Harcourt (1988), 'Post Keynesianism: From Criticism to Coherence?', Bulletin of Economic Research, 40 (1), January, 1-33 -- Sheila C. Dow (1990), 'Post-Keynesianism as Political Economy: A Methodological Discussion', Review of Political Economy, 2 (3), 345-58 -- Victoria Chick (1995), 'Is There a Case for Post Keynesian Economics?', Scottish Journal of Political Economy, 42 (1), February, 20-36 -- Philip Arestis (1996), 'Post-Keynesian Economics: Towards Coherence', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 20 (1), January, 111-35 -- Sheila C. Dow (2000), 'Prospects for the Progress of Heterodox Economics', Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 22 (2), 157-70 -- Victoria Chick (2004), 'On Open Systems', Brazilian Journal of Political Economy, 24 (1), January-March, 3-16 -- Tony Lawson (2006), 'The Nature of Heterodox Economics', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 30 (4), July, 483-505 -- John B. Davis (2006), 'The Nature of Heterodox Economics', Post-Autistic Economics Review: Symposium on Reorienting Economics, 40 (1), December, 23-30 -- Edward Nell (1990), 'Keynes and Sraffa: Marshallian or Classical Foundations?', in Krishna Bharadwaj and Bertram Schefold (eds), Essays on Piero Sraffa: Critical Perspectives on the Revival of Classical Theory, Part II, Chapter 10, London, UK: Unwin Hyman, 352-57 -- Marc Lavoie (1992), 'Towards a New Research Programme for Post-Keynesianism and Neo-Ricardianism', Review of Political Economy, 4 (1), 37-78 -- Tony Lawson (1994), 'The Nature of Post Keynesianism and its Links to Other Traditions: A Realist Perspective', Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 16 (4), Summer, 503-38 -- Marc Lavoie (2003), 'The Tight Links between Post-Keynesian and Feminist Economics', in Edward Fullbrook (edition), The Crisis in Economics, The Post Autistic Economics Movement: The First 600 Days, Part 3, London, UK: Routledge, 189-92 -- Marc Lavoie (2006), 'Do Heterodox Theories Have Anything in Common? A Post-Keynesian Point of View', European Journal of Economics and Economic Policies: Intervention, 3 (1), May, 87-112 -- J. E. King (2012), 'Post Keynesians and Others', Review of Political Economy, 24 (2), April, 305-19 -- John E. King (2013), 'Should Post-Keynesians Make a Behavioural Turn?', European Journal of Economics and Economic Policies: Intervention, 10 (2), September, 231-42 -- Victoria Chick (1998), 'On Knowing One's Place: The Role of Formalism in Economics', Economic Journal, 108 (451), November, 1859-69 -- Sheila C. Dow (1999), 'Post Keynesianism and Critical Realism: What is the Connection?', Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 22 (1), Fall, 15-33 -- Mark Setterfield (2003), 'Critical Realism and Formal Modelling: Incompatible Bedfellows?', in Paul Downward (edition), Applied Economics and the Critical Realist Critique, Part IIA, Chapter 5, London, UK: Routledge, 71-88
    Content: Richard P. F. Holt (2005), 'Post-Keynesian Economics and Sustainable Development', International Journal of Environment, Workplace and Employment, 1 (2), 174-86 -- Giuseppe Fontana and Malcolm Sawyer (2013), 'Post-Keynesian and Kaleckian Thoughts on Ecological Macroeconomics', European Journal of Economics and Economic Policies: Intervention, 10 (2), September, 256-67 -- Neil Perry (2013), 'Environmental Economics and Policy', in G. C. Harcourt and Peter Kriesler (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Post-Keynesian Economics, Volume 2: Critiques and Methodology, Chapter 18, New York, NY, USA: Oxford University Press, 391-411 -- Armon Rezai, Lance Taylor and Reinhard Mechler (2013), 'Ecological Macroeconomics: An Application to Climate Change', Ecological Economics, 85, January, 69-76 -- Hyman P. Minsky (1977), 'The Financial Instability Hypothesis: An Interpretation of Keynes and an Alternative to "Standard" Theory', Challenge, 20 (1), March-April, 20-27 -- James R. Crotty (1990), 'Owner-Manager Conflict and Financial Theories of Investment Instability: A Critical Assessment of Keynes, Tobin, and Minsky', Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 12 (4), Summer, 519-42 -- Martin H. Wolfson (1996), 'A Post Keynesian Theory of Credit Rationing', Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 18 (3), Spring, 443-70 -- Scott T. Fullwiler (2003), 'Timeliness and the Fed's Daily Tactics', Journal of Economic Issues, XXXVII (4), December, 851-80 -- Jan Toporowski (2008), 'Minsky's "Induced Investment and Business Cycles"', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 32 (5), September, 725-37 -- Sergio Rossi (2010), 'The 2007-9 Financial Crisis: An Endogenous-Money View', Studi e Note di Economia, XV (3), 413-30 -- Sergio Rossi (2015), 'Structural Reforms in Payment Systems to Avoid Another Systemic Crisis', Review of Keynesian Economics, 3 (2), Summer, 213-25 -- Engelbert Stockhammer (2004), 'Financialisation and the Slowdown of Accumulation', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 28 (5), September, 719-41 -- Gennaro Zezza (2008), 'U.S. Growth, the Housing Market, and the Distribution of Income', Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 30 (3), Spring, 375-401 -- Yongbok Jeon and Matías Vernengo (2008), 'Puzzles, Paradoxes, and Regularities: Cyclical and Structural Productivity in the United States (1950-2005)', Review of Radical Political Economics, 40 (3), Summer, 237-43 -- Robert Guttmann (2009), 'Asset Bubbles, Debt Deflation, and Global Imbalances', International Journal of Political Economy, 38 (2), Summer, 45-68 -- Dirk J. Bezemer (2010), 'Understanding Financial Crisis through Accounting Models', Accounting, Organizations and Society, 35 (7), October, 676-88 -- Özgür Orhangazi (2012), '"Financial" vs. "Real": An Overview of the Contradictory Role of Finance', Research in Political Economy: Revitalizing Marxist Theory for Today's Capitalism, 27, 121-48 -- Engelbert Stockhammer (2012), 'Financialization, Income Distribution and the Crisis', Investigación Económica, LXXI (279), January-March, 39-70 -- Riccardo Bellofiore (2013), 'Endogenous Money, Financial Keynesianism and Beyond', Review of Keynesian Economics, 1 (2), Summer, 153-70
    Content: Therese Jefferson and John E. King (2011), 'Michal Kalecki and Critical Realism', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 35 (5), September, 957-72 -- G. C. Harcourt and Peter Kenyon (1976), 'Pricing and the Investment Decision', Kyklos, 29 (3), January, 449-77 -- Alfred S. Eichner (1983), 'The Micro Foundations of the Corporate Economy', Managerial and Decision Economics, 4 (3), September, 136-52 -- E. Agliardi (1988), 'Microeconomic Foundations of Macroeconomics in the Post-Keynesian Approach', Metroeconomica, 39 (3), October, 275-97 -- Marc Lavoie (1994), 'A Post Keynesian Approach to Consumer Choice', Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 16 (4), Summer, 539-62 -- Marc Lavoie (1996), 'Mark-up Pricing versus Normal Cost Pricing in Post-Keynesian Models', Review of Political Economy, 8 (1), January, 57-66 -- Paul Downward (2000), 'A Realist Appraisal of Post-Keynesian Pricing Theory', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 24 (2), March, 211-24 -- Claudio Sardoni (2002), 'On the Microeconomic Foundations of Macroeconomics: A Keynesian Perspective', in Philip Arestis, Meghnad Desai and Sheila Dow (eds), Methodology, Micrcoeconomics and Keynes: Essays in Honour of Victoria Chick, Volume Two, Chapter 2, London, UK: Routledge, 4-14 -- John E. King (2009), 'Microfoundations?' in Eckhard Hein, Torsten Niechoj and Engelbert Stockhammer (eds), Macroeconomic Policies on Shaky Foundations: Whither Mainstream Economics?, Part I, Marburg, Germany: Metropolis-Verlag, 33-53 -- Frederic S. Lee (2010), 'A Heterodox Teaching of Neoclassical Microeconomic Theory', International Journal of Pluralism and Economics Education, 1 (3), 203-35 -- Philip Arestis, Stephen P. Dunn and Malcolm Sawyer (1999), 'Post Keynesian Economics and its Critics', Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 21 (4), Summer, 527-49 -- Bernard Walters and David Young (1999), 'Is Critical Realism the Appropriate Basis for Post Keynesianism?', Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 22 (1), Fall, 105-23 -- Philip Arestis, Stephen P. Dunn and Malcolm Sawyer (1999), 'On the Coherence of Post-Keynesian Economics: A Comment on Walters and Young', Scottish Journal of Political Economy, 46 (3), August, 339-45 -- Frederic S. Lee (2012), 'Heterodox Economics and its Critics', Review of Political Economy, 24 (2), April, 337-51 -- Giuseppe Fontana (2003), 'Reflections on the Development of Post Keynesian Economics', History of Economic Ideas, XI (3), 87-94 -- Giuseppe Fontana and Bill Gerrard (2006), 'The Future of Post Keynesian Economics', Banca Nazionale del Lavoro Quarterly Review, LIX (236), March, 49-80 -- Engelbert Stockhammer and Paul Ramskogler (2009), 'Post-Keynesian Economics - How to Move Forward', European Journal of Economics and Economic Policies: Intervention, 6 (2), November, 227-46 -- Matías Vernengo (2013), 'Conversation or Monologue? On Advising Heterodox Economists, with Addendum', in Frederic S. Lee and Marc Lavoie (eds), In Defense of Post-Keynesian and Heterodox Economics: Responses to their Critics, Chapter 8, Abingdon, UK: Routledge, 158-71 -- Marc Lavoie (2013), 'After the Crisis: Perspectives for Post-Keynesian Economics', in Frederic S. Lee and Marc Lavoie (eds), In Defense of Post-Keynesian and Heterodox Economics: Responses to their Critics, Chapter 2, Abingdon, UK: Routledge, 18-41
    Content: This research review offers an examination and discussion of the seminal contributions by many prominent scholars in the heterodox tradition of post-Keynesian economic thought. The authors explore methodological issues; showing the contrast with orthodox thinking on fundamental grounds, concepts such as credit, money and production; which are crucial to understanding the working of our economic systems, as well as several interrelated macroeconomic issues including employment, distribution, growth, development, asset bubbles, and financial crises. The review provides a unique opportunity to appraise and appreciate the depth and variety of post-Keynesian economics at both theoretical and policy-oriented level
    Note: Includes index , The recommended readings are available in the print version, or may be available via the link to your library's holdings
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books
    URL: FULL  ((Currently Only Available on Campus))
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