|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
This challenging book examines the origins and dynamics of
financial-economic crises. Its wide theoretical scope incorporates
the theories of Marx, Keynes and various other Post Keynesian
scholars of endogenous money, and provides a grand synthesis of
these theoretical lineages, as well as a powerful critique of
prevailing neoclassical/monetarist theories of money. Bill
Lucarelli provides detailed historical analyses of the causes of
the current international financial crisis, and offers alternative
heterodox theories with more coherent and rigorous theoretical
frameworks than existing economic orthodoxies. He illustrates that
the very assumptions of neoclassical theory - informed by the
efficient markets hypothesis - tend to rule out the very
possibility of endogenous financial crises. Consequently, he
argues, the endogenous causes of these crises are either ignored or
simply treated as random, extraneous historical events. In stark
contrast to these neoclassical/monetarist views, this book seeks to
explain the recurrence of these financial crises as a result of the
inner workings of the capitalist system. The Economics of Financial
Turbulence will prove an invaluable contribution to modern
heterodox theories of endogenous money, and as such will be
essential reading for academics and students with an interest in
economics, heterodox economics and money, finance and banking.
Economic and financial policymakers will also find the book to be a
fascinating read. Contents: Introduction; Part I: Marxian
Perspectives; 1. A Monetary Theory of Production; 2. A Marxian
Theory of Money, Credit and Crisis; Part II: Heterodox Theories of
Endogenous Money; 3. Money and Keynesian Uncertainty; 4. Endogenous
Money: Heterodox Controversies; 5. Towards a Theory of Endogenous
Financial Instability and Debt-Deflation; Part III: The Roots of
the Current Crisis; 6. Financialization: Prelude to Crisis; 7.
Faustian Finance and the American Dream; Conclusion; Bibliography
First published in 1999, this work of economic history explores the
evolution of the single market and of economic and political
integration in Europe since World War II. Beginning with European
integration and the genesis of the Customs Union, Bill Lucarelli
then proceeds through the Trans-Atlantic Rivalry, the European
Monetary Union (EMU) the European Monetary System (EMS) and on to
Maastricht. The study intends to be a critique of the prevailing
theories of negative integration, weighting economic integration
against political integration, with a particular focus on the
concept of 'spill-over'. Lucarelli argues against prevailing
functionalist and neo-liberal interpretations of the process of
economic integration. The conclusion is critical of the strategy
toward European Monetary Union. The book is informed by Marxian and
Post-Keynesian Economic theories.
First published in 1999, this work of economic history explores the
evolution of the single market and of economic and political
integration in Europe since World War II. Beginning with European
integration and the genesis of the Customs Union, Bill Lucarelli
then proceeds through the Trans-Atlantic Rivalry, the European
Monetary Union (EMU) the European Monetary System (EMS) and on to
Maastricht. The study intends to be a critique of the prevailing
theories of negative integration, weighting economic integration
against political integration, with a particular focus on the
concept of 'spill-over'. Lucarelli argues against prevailing
functionalist and neo-liberal interpretations of the process of
economic integration. The conclusion is critical of the strategy
toward European Monetary Union. The book is informed by Marxian and
Post-Keynesian Economic theories.
|
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.