This ground-breaking book introduces macro accounting. Most
modern money emerges out of accounting documentation of private
executory debt contracts within exchange processes.
Money-information markers are basically negotiable (exchangeable
for value) debt instruments. Macro accounting techniques provide
sufficient detail to examine the complex coupling relations and the
resulting constraints among exchanges of good, services, and
money-information markers of various sorts.
The book begins with a discussion of the fundamental concepts of
trades, exchanges, and the accounting basis of money. Accounting is
then described as an aspect of empirical science--a means of
observing concrete processes. Drawing on these basic ideas, Swanson
extends organizational accounting to societies and supranational
systems. The last four chapters simulate economic processes. The
book should be read by serious students of economics, accounting,
and political science as well as societal policy markers and the
international banking community.
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