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The present volume contains the texts of the papers and criti cal
commentary presented at the one-day conference "Financing the world
economy in the nineties" at Tilburg University (23 March 1988).
This conference was organized by the Post-graduate School of
Banking and Finance of "The Tilburg Institute of Advanced Studies"
(T .I.A.S.) which is closely associated to Tilburg University. It
should be borne in mind that all the chapters were written before
March 1988. Although some were revised later, none of the authors
has been asked to include develop ments which have occurred since.
To achieve a better understanding of the current financial
imbalances in the world economy and its consequences and to discuss
the alternatives to correct these imbalances, this conference
brought to gether outstanding authorities from the academic world,
from the inter national supervisors, and from the industrial
companies and the banks. After the editor's introduction about the
external disequilib ria in the world economy and the burden of
economic adjustment, Chapter 1 is the text of the opening address
by Dr. Witteveen. He calls atten tion to the central issue, which
financing needs that we can see now may persist into the nineties
and how can they be met? In this context he mentions the
U.S.-current account deficit, the need for stable exchange rates
and the international debt problem."
The present volume contains the texts of the papers and criti cal
commentary presented at the one-day conference "Financing the world
economy in the nineties" at Tilburg University (23 March 1988).
This conference was organized by the Post-graduate School of
Banking and Finance of "The Tilburg Institute of Advanced Studies"
(T .I.A.S.) which is closely associated to Tilburg University. It
should be borne in mind that all the chapters were written before
March 1988. Although some were revised later, none of the authors
has been asked to include develop ments which have occurred since.
To achieve a better understanding of the current financial
imbalances in the world economy and its consequences and to discuss
the alternatives to correct these imbalances, this conference
brought to gether outstanding authorities from the academic world,
from the inter national supervisors, and from the industrial
companies and the banks. After the editor's introduction about the
external disequilib ria in the world economy and the burden of
economic adjustment, Chapter 1 is the text of the opening address
by Dr. Witteveen. He calls atten tion to the central issue, which
financing needs that we can see now may persist into the nineties
and how can they be met? In this context he mentions the
U.S.-current account deficit, the need for stable exchange rates
and the international debt problem.
In monetary theory the paramount problem posed by many eco nomists
was always whether monetary variables had a certain influence on
the real variables in the economy, so that money would not be
neutral but influence the economic process. In this way the outcome
would differ from that of a barter economy. The outcome of this
development was that money could no longer be regarded as an
accommodating item like in many out-dated text-books but as an
autonomous factor, the influence of which is explicitly ana lyzed.
When, after the Second World War, the 'real' side of eco nomics
developed into growth economics, it was quite natural that efforts
were made to integrate both lines of thought so that the effect of
the rate of increase of money on the rate of growth of real
national income could be studied. Dr. Sijben gives the full and
thorough story of these efforts in a way that enables economists to
compare the different approaches more easily than was possible up
to now. More specifically the various models are made comparable by
the use of the same sym bols for the same variables allover the
book. After the introductory chapter Tobin's outside-money model in
a neo-classical framework is discussed. What is income in this
respect? Tobin argues that real disposable income is real net
national income plus the real value of the increase in monetary
balances."
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