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Monetary Policy and Macroeconomic Stabilization - The Roles of Optimum Currency Areas, Sacrifice Ratios, and Labor Market Adjustment (Paperback)
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Monetary Policy and Macroeconomic Stabilization - The Roles of Optimum Currency Areas, Sacrifice Ratios, and Labor Market Adjustment (Paperback)
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As a fundamental review and critique of activist economic policies,
this book is a unique contribution to classical political economy.
"Monetary Policy and Macroeconomic Stabilization" is about
macroeconomic stabilization policy, with emphasis on the value of a
distinct national monetary policy to growth. Ole Bjorn Roste's
argument is for public officials to restrain themselves in the
pursuit of policy. As the author notes: when you know less, you
should do less.The history of modern macroeconomics started in 1936
with the publication of Keynes' "General Theory of Employment,
Interest, and Money". The problems of the Great depression of the
1930s paved the way for a change of focus, from the long run to
economic fluctuations in the short run, and from nominal to real
variables, such as unemployment and aggregate output.Keynes offered
clear policy implications in tune with the times. Because economic
adjustment was slow, waiting for the economy to recover by itself
was irresponsible. Particularly fiscal policy was essential to
return to high employment. Monetary policy could affect aggregate
demand through Interest rates, but was less important. Roste
discusses the role of monetary policy, starting out with the
implications of the theory of optimum currency areas (OCAs). This
is followed by estimates of the output loss associated with
disinflation policy (the sacrifice ratio) for six OECD economies.
Further, Roste models the dynamic adjustment to negative, local
labor-market shocks, with particular relevance to Scandinavia, in a
final section.The idea that governments should pursue stabilizing
fiscal or monetary policies with regard to real variables is often
taken for granted by the public, if not by economists. Among the
reasons for skepticism, is the presence of differing views on how
economies really work, that the state of a given economy becomes
known only after a time lag, and that economic agents react to
policy and expectations of policy. For these reasons, the effects
of policy are generally uncertain. This book explains why the role
of history is critical to the study of macroeconomics.p>
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