Alan S. Blinder offers the dual perspective of a leading
academic macroeconomist who served a stint as Vice-Chairman of the
Federal Reserve Board--one who practiced what he had long preached
and then returned to academia to write about it. He tells central
bankers how they might better incorporate academic knowledge and
thinking into the conduct of monetary policy, and he tells scholars
how they might reorient their research to be more attuned to
reality and thus more useful to central bankers.Based on the 1996
Lionel Robbins Lectures, this readable book deals succinctly, in a
nontechnical manner, with a wide variety of issues in monetary
policy. The book also includes the author's suggested solution to
an age-old problem in monetary theory: what it means for monetary
policy to be "neutral."
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