Intellectual time lags exist in every field of science. So it is
that even today one often hears the same old "common knowledge"
nonsense and simplistic analysis from the early post-Keynesian era
when students learned about some of the monetary and fiscal
policies applicable to the U.K. and its institutions (Keynes) on
the premise that they are also applicable to the U.S. Many are not.
The result has all too often been inflation or massive unemployment
that continues even though it could be quickly ended without fiscal
changes or new laws.
This is a re-presentation of Professor Lindauer's early
ground-breaking work from the 1960s. It explains why not all
Keynesian and neo-classical theory and monetary and fiscal policies
are applicable to the unique structure and institutions of the
United States and how the current United States' malaise can be
quickly ended - via a new approach to monetary policy, long ago
explained by Lindauer and adopted by other countries.
It was while at Claremont as professor of economics that
Lindauer first modeled the concept of aggregate supply and related
it with the concept of aggregate demand to develop many of the
macroeconomic theories presented herein and integrate them into the
then-existing theories of inflation and unemployment.
Importantly in these days of high unemployment, the unique and
quickly effective monetary policies he suggested years ago to end
recessions and depressions without causing inflation or
exacerbating government deficits are today immediately available
without requiring fiscal changes or the passage of new laws and
regulations.
Professor Lindauer's other publications include "Land Taxation
and Indian Economic Development" (with Sarjit Singh); various
editions of his "Macroeconomics" series; and his early
ground-breaking journal articles such as ""Stabilization Inflation
and the Inflation-Unemployment Trade-off."" A non-technical version
of this work is available as "Inflations, Unemployment, and
Government Deficits: End Them." It is suitable for journalists,
laymen, and lawyers serving as Federal Reserve governors.
Lindauer's books have been translated into Japanese, Spanish,
Portugese, Korean, Hindi, and Chinese and the policies his theories
suggest implemented by central banks around the world. He has
additionally served as a visiting professor at Sussex University,
the University of California (SD), and Punjab University. He lives
in Scottsdale and Chicago. His teaching is limited to lectures and
visiting professorships.
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