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Books > Business & Economics > Economics > Macroeconomics > Monetary economics
What do you need to know about financial innovation, financial liberalisation and deregulation? Do you know what purpose monetary policy serves in the economy? What is the role of interest rates?
The second edition of Monetary Economics will look into these matters and other topical issues such as the subprime crisis. The text uses a step-by-step approach to technical areas such as formulae and graphs.
The book takes a look at South African as a developing country within the wider global arena. Monetary Economics is written in a concise and accessible level for Economics students at senior undergraduate and Honours level.
Supporting the economy, paying for healthcare, creating new jobs, preventing a climate apocalypse: how can we pay for it all?
Leading economic thinker Stephanie Kelton, shows how misguided that question is, and how a radical new approach can maximise our potential as a society. Everything that we've been led to believe about deficits and the role of money and government spending is wrong.
Rather than asking the self-defeating question of how to pay for the crucial improvements our society needs, Kelton guides us to ask: which deficits actually matter?
The Future of the Euro is an attempt by political economists to
analyze the fundamental causes of the euro crisis, determine how it
can be fixed, and consider what likely futures lie ahead for the
currency. The book makes three interrelated arguments that
emphasize the primacy of political over economic factors. First,
the 'euro problem' is discussed as the result of the single
currency's fundamental lack of institutional embeddedness, insofar
as its original design omitted three 'forgotten unions' alongside
of monetary union: a financial and banking union, mutually
supporting institutions of fiscal union and economic government,
and a political union holding similar legitimacy to the
nation-state. Second, the 'euro experience' shows how the euro's
unfinished design led to economic divergence - quietly altering the
existing distribution of economic and political power within Europe
prior to the crisis - which in turn determined the EU's crisis
response. The book highlights how the euro's four most important
members - Germany, France, Italy and Spain - each changed once they
adopted the euro, why the crisis affected them so differently, and
how each has since struggled to live with the commitments the euro
necessitates. Third, the book examines three possible 'euro
futures' through the lens of the politics of its reluctant leader
Germany; through the lens of the EU's capacity to 'move forward'
through crises; and through the geopolitical lens of the
international monetary system. The book concludes that any
successful long-term solution to the euro's predicament needs to
start with the political foundations of markets.
Both studies of political power and Europeanization studies have
tended to neglect central banks. As the age of the euro reaches its
10th anniversary, it is timely to reflect on what it means for
central banks, which have been at the forefront of the
establishment of Economic and Monetary Union in the European Union.
Central banks have been caught up in a major historic political
project. What does it mean for them? What does the age of the euro
tell us about the power of central banks, their Europeanization and
whether they are coming to resemble each other more closely?
This book brings together a range of recognized academic
specialists to examine the main political aspects of this question.
How, and in what ways, has the euro Europeanized central banks
(members and non-members of the Euro Area)? What have been its
effects on the power of central banks and their use of power? Has
the euro generated convergence or divergence in central banking?
The book offers the first, in-depth and systematic political
analysis of central banks in the first decade of the euro. It
places the euro in its global and European contexts, including the
US Fed and the Australasian central banks, patterns of
differentiated integration in European central banking, and the
European Central Bank. It offers a set of case studies of its
effects on a representative sample of EU central banks (euro
'insiders' and 'outsiders') and looks at four main thematic areas
(monetary policy, financial market supervision, accountability and
transparency, and research).
The book contributes to Europeanization studies, comparative
political economy, and studies of Economic and Monetary Union. It
will be of major interest to students of the European Union and
European integration, comparative European politics, and area and
'country' studies. More generally, it will interest all those
interested in central banking and their pivotal and problematic
position between politics and markets.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
The corporate world is typically structured in silos. Managers
urgently need to overcome this "silo" effect by fusing ideas across
different functional areas in the firm. In Fusion for Profit,
Sharan Jagpal, a well-known and highly respected multidisciplinary
researcher and business consultant, explains in simple language
using real-world examples how managers can use sophisticated
concepts to fuse different functional areas in the firm, especially
marketing and finance, to increase the firm's value. The author
provides novel solutions to a wide range of complex business
problems ranging from choosing pricing and bundling strategies, to
positioning and messaging strategies, to measuring brand equity, to
measuring advertising productivity in a mixed media plan including
Internet advertising, to compensating a multiproduct sales force,
to measuring the potential gains and risks from mergers and
acquisitions. These concepts are illustrated using case studies
from a variety of firms in different industries, including
AT&T, Coca-Cola, Continental Airlines, General Electric, Home
Depot, Southwest Airlines, and Verizon.
FinTech has revolutionized the way financial services are delivered
and consumed in the modern world and the use of central bank
digital currencies is gaining traction. With these new
advancements, further study is required to ensure they are utilized
appropriately and reach their full potential. Exploring the Dark
Side of FinTech and Implications of Monetary Policy examines recent
advancements in central bank digital currency and many FinTech
applications and discusses FinTech trends, possibilities, and
challenges as well as different moral, ethical, and social issues.
Covering key topics such as digital economy, monetary policy, and
sustainability, this reference work is ideal for managers, industry
professionals, business owners, entrepreneurs, policymakers,
researchers, scholars, practitioners, instructors, and students.
A myth-busting explanation of inflation, the desperate gullibility
of central bankers and finance ministers-and our abject failure to
learn from history From investors and monetary authorities to
governments and policy makers, almost everyone had assumed
inflation was dead and buried. But now people the world over are
confronting a poisonous new economic reality and, with it, the
prospect of vast and increasing wealth inequality. How have we
arrived in this situation? And what, if anything, can we do about
it? Celebrated economist Stephen D. King-one of the few to warn
ahead of time about the latest inflationary upheaval-identifies key
lessons from the history of inflation that policy makers chose not
to heed. From ancient Rome through the American Civil War and up to
the asset bubbles of today, inflation stems from policy error,
sovereign greed, and a collective loss of faith in currencies. We
Need to Talk About Inflation cuts through centuries of bad judgment
and misunderstanding, offering a means to intervene now-so we can
begin to tackle the political and social upheaval unleashed by
inflation.
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