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The past few decades have witnessed the emergence of economic
imbalances at the world level and within the euro zone. The failure
of mainstream economics to accurately predict financial crises, or
model the effects of finance-led growth, highlights the need for
alternative frameworks. A key text, Global Imbalances and Financial
Capitalism: Stock-Flow-Consistent Modelling demonstrates that
Stock-Flow-Consistent models are well adapted to study this growth
regime due to their ability to analyse the real and financial sides
of the economy in an integrated way. This approach is combined with
an analysis of exchange rate misalignments using the Fundamental
Equilibrium Exchange Rate (FEER) methodology, which serves to give
a synthetic view of international imbalances. Together, these
models describe how global and regional imbalances are created, as
well as suggest appropriate tools through which they may be
reduced. The book also considers alternative economic policies in
the euro zone (international risk sharing, fiscal federalism,
eurobonds, European investments, a multispeed euro zone) alongside
alternative monetary policies. In particular, it examines the
possibilities of using SDR (Special Drawing Rights) as a reserve
asset to be issued to fight a global recession, to support the
development of low-income countries, or as an anchor to improve
global monetary stability. This text will be of interest to
students, scholars, and researchers of economic theory and
international monetary economics. It will also appeal to
professional organisations who supervise international relations.
The past few decades have witnessed the emergence of economic
imbalances at the world level and within the euro zone. The failure
of mainstream economics to accurately predict financial crises, or
model the effects of finance-led growth, highlights the need for
alternative frameworks. A key text, Global Imbalances and Financial
Capitalism: Stock-Flow-Consistent Modelling demonstrates that
Stock-Flow-Consistent models are well adapted to study this growth
regime due to their ability to analyse the real and financial sides
of the economy in an integrated way. This approach is combined with
an analysis of exchange rate misalignments using the Fundamental
Equilibrium Exchange Rate (FEER) methodology, which serves to give
a synthetic view of international imbalances. Together, these
models describe how global and regional imbalances are created, as
well as suggest appropriate tools through which they may be
reduced. The book also considers alternative economic policies in
the euro zone (international risk sharing, fiscal federalism,
eurobonds, European investments, a multispeed euro zone) alongside
alternative monetary policies. In particular, it examines the
possibilities of using SDR (Special Drawing Rights) as a reserve
asset to be issued to fight a global recession, to support the
development of low-income countries, or as an anchor to improve
global monetary stability. This text will be of interest to
students, scholars, and researchers of economic theory and
international monetary economics. It will also appeal to
professional organisations who supervise international relations.
This work represents the French Regulation School approach to the
study of economics. Regulationists focus on the long-term evolution
of capitalist economies with a strong emphasis on cross-country
comparisons. Their theory centers on the notion of "accumulation
regimes", a concept that analyzes long-wave growth patterns and how
those patterns were shaped by five key regulatory mechanisms: 1)
forms of competition; 2) the socio-technical system covering all
aspects of the capital-labor relation; 3) money; 4) forms of state
intervention; and 5) arrangements regulating international economic
relations. Methodologically, their approach is very flexible and
innovative, ranging from econometric models to interdisciplinary
studies.
This work represents the French Regulation School approach to the
study of economics. Regulationists focus on the long-term evolution
of capitalist economies with a strong emphasis on cross-country
comparisons. Their theory centers on the notion of "accumulation
regimes", a concept that analyzes long-wave growth patterns and how
those patterns were shaped by five key regulatory mechanisms: 1)
forms of competition; 2) the socio-technical system covering all
aspects of the capital-labor relation; 3) money; 4) forms of state
intervention; and 5) arrangements regulating international economic
relations. Methodologically, their approach is very flexible and
innovative, ranging from econometric models to interdisciplinary
studies.
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