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The microeconomic foundation of the theory of money has long
represented a puzzle to economic theory. Why is there Money?
derives the foundations of monetary theory from advanced price
theory in a mathematically precise family of trading post models.
It has long been recognized that the fundamental theoretical
analysis of a market economy is embodied in the Arrow-Debreu-Walras
mathematical general equilibrium model, with one great deficiency:
the analysis cannot accommodate money and financial institutions.
In this groundbreaking book, Ross M. Starr addresses this problem
directly, by expanding the Arrow-Debreu model to include a
multiplicity of trading opportunities, with the resultant
endogenous derivation of money as the carrier of value among them.
This fundamental breakthrough is achieved while maintaining the
Walrasian general equilibrium price-theoretic structure, augmented
primarily by the introduction of separate bid and ask prices
reflecting transaction costs. The result is foundations of monetary
theory consistent with and derived from modern price theory. This
fascinating book will provide a stimulating and thought-provoking
read for academics and postgraduate students focusing on economics,
macroeconomics, macroeconomic policy and finance, money and
banking. Central bankers will also find much to interest them
within this book. Contents: Introduction: Why is There No Money? 1.
Why is There Money? 2. An Economy Without Money 3. The Trading Post
Model 4. An Elementary Linear Example: Liquidity Creates Money 5.
Absence of Double Coincidence of Wants is Essential to Monetization
in a Linear Economy 6. Uniqueness of Money: Scale Economy and
Network Externality 7. Monetization of General Equilibrium 8.
Government-Issued Fiat Money 9. Efficient Structure of Exchange 10.
Microfoundations of Jevons's Double Coincidence Condition 11.
Commodity Money Equilibrium in a Convex Trading Post Economy 12.
Efficiency of Commodity Money Equilibrium 13. Alternative Models
14. Conclusion and a Research Agenda Bibliography Index
The 2007-09 financial crisis and economic downturn inflicted
considerable hardship on the U.S. population. This book argues that
the financial crisis and ensuing recession reflected not just a
malfunctioning of the financial system -- but also inequalities and
insecurities in access to livelihoods that favor well-off groups
and leave ordinary people shouldering undue burdens of downside
risk. This book, a collection of original papers by leading social
economists and scholars in related fields, examines social,
distributional, and ethical dimensions of the downturn. It should
be of broad interest to the social-science and economic-policy
communities.
Professor Kenneth J. Arrow is one of the most distinguished
economic theorists. He has played a major role in shaping the
subject and is honoured by the publication of three volumes of
essays on economic theory. Each volume deals with a different area
of economic theory. The books include contributions by some of the
best economic theorists from the United Stated, Japan, Israel and
Europe. This second volume is entitled Equilibrium Analysis and is
divided into sections on general equilibrium and on the
microfoundations of macroeconomics.
The microeconomic foundation of the theory of money has long
represented a puzzle to economic theory. Why is there Money?
derives the foundations of monetary theory from advanced price
theory in a mathematically precise family of trading post models.
It has long been recognized that the fundamental theoretical
analysis of a market economy is embodied in the Arrow-Debreu-Walras
mathematical general equilibrium model, with one great deficiency:
the analysis cannot accommodate money and financial institutions.
In this groundbreaking book, Ross M. Starr addresses this problem
directly, by expanding the Arrow-Debreu model to include a
multiplicity of trading opportunities, with the resultant
endogenous derivation of money as the carrier of value among them.
This fundamental breakthrough is achieved while maintaining the
Walrasian general equilibrium price-theoretic structure, augmented
primarily by the introduction of separate bid and ask prices
reflecting transaction costs. The result is foundations of monetary
theory consistent with and derived from modern price theory. This
fascinating book will provide a stimulating and thought-provoking
read for academics and postgraduate students focusing on economics,
macroeconomics, macroeconomic policy and finance, money and
banking. Central bankers will also find much to interest them
within this book. Contents: Introduction: Why is There No Money? 1.
Why is There Money? 2. An Economy Without Money 3. The Trading Post
Model 4. An Elementary Linear Example: Liquidity Creates Money 5.
Absence of Double Coincidence of Wants is Essential to Monetization
in a Linear Economy 6. Uniqueness of Money: Scale Economy and
Network Externality 7. Monetization of General Equilibrium 8.
Government-Issued Fiat Money 9. Efficient Structure of Exchange 10.
Microfoundations of Jevons's Double Coincidence Condition 11.
Commodity Money Equilibrium in a Convex Trading Post Economy 12.
Efficiency of Commodity Money Equilibrium 13. Alternative Models
14. Conclusion and a Research Agenda Bibliography Index
Professor Kenneth J. Arrow is one of the most distinguished
economic theorists. He has played a major role in shaping the
present state of the subject and now is to be honoured by the
publication of three volumes of essays on economic theory. Each
volume deals with a different area of economic theory. The books
include contributions by some of the best economic theorists from
the United States, Japan, Israel, and Europe.
General Equilibrium Theory: An Introduction presents the
mathematical economic theory of price determination and resource
allocation from elementary to advanced levels, suitable for
advanced undergraduates and graduate students of economics. This
Arrow-Debreu model (known for two of its most prominent founders,
both Nobel Laureates) is the basis of modern price theory and of a
wide range of applications. The text starts with elementary models:
Robinson Crusoe, the Edgeworth Box, and a 2-commodity 2-household
2-firm model. It gives a brief introduction to the mathematics used
in the field (continuity, convexity, separation theorems, Brouwer
fixed-point theorem, point-to-set mappings, and Shapley-Folkman
theorem). It then presents the mathematical general equilibrium
model in progressively more general settings, including
point-valued, set-valued, and nonconvex set-valued demand and
supply. Existence of general equilibrium, fundamental theorems of
welfare economics, core convergence, and futures markets with time
and uncertainty are treated fully. The new edition updates
discussion throughout and expands the number and variety of
exercises. It offers a revised and extended treatment of core
convergence, including the case of non-convex preferences, and
introduces the investigation of approximate equilibrium with
U-shaped curves and non-convex preferences.
Professor Kenneth J. Arrow is one of the most distinguished
economic theorists. He has played a major role in shaping the
subject and is honoured by the publication of three volumes of
essays on economic theory. Each volume deals with a different area
of economic theory. The books include contributions by some of the
best economic theorists from the United States, Japan, Israel and
Europe.
Professor Kenneth J. Arrow is one of the most distinguished
economic theorists. He has played a major role in shaping the
subject and is honoured by the publication of three volumes of
essays on economic theory. Each volume deals with a different area
of economic theory. The books include contributions by some of the
best economic theorists from the United Stated, Japan, Israel and
Europe. This second volume is entitled Equilibrium Analysis and is
divided into sections on general equilibrium and on the
microfoundations of macroeconomics.
Professor Kenneth J. Arrow is one of the most distinguished
economic theorists. He has played a major role in shaping the
subject and is honoured by the publication of three volumes of
essays on economic theory. Each volume deals with a different area
of economic theory. The books include contributions by some of the
best economic theorists from the United Stated, Japan, Israel and
Europe. This third volume is entitled Uncertainty, Information, and
Communication.
Professor Kenneth J. Arrow has played a major role in shaping the
present state of economics as a subject, and receives recognition
for this with the publication in his honour of three volumes of
essays on economic theory. Each volume deals with a different area
of economic theory, and all include contributions by some of the
major economic theorists from the US, Japan, Israel and Europe.
This third volume covers the uncertainties connected with
information and communication.
General Equilibrium Theory: An Introduction presents the
mathematical economic theory of price determination and resource
allocation from elementary to advanced levels, suitable for
advanced undergraduates and graduate students of economics. This
Arrow-Debreu model (known for two of its most prominent founders,
both Nobel Laureates) is the basis of modern price theory and of a
wide range of applications. The text starts with elementary models:
Robinson Crusoe, the Edgeworth Box, and a 2-commodity 2-household
2-firm model. It gives a brief introduction to the mathematics used
in the field (continuity, convexity, separation theorems, Brouwer
fixed-point theorem, point-to-set mappings, and Shapley-Folkman
theorem). It then presents the mathematical general equilibrium
model in progressively more general settings, including
point-valued, set-valued, and nonconvex set-valued demand and
supply. Existence of general equilibrium, fundamental theorems of
welfare economics, core convergence, and futures markets with time
and uncertainty are treated fully. The new edition updates
discussion throughout and expands the number and variety of
exercises. It offers a revised and extended treatment of core
convergence, including the case of non-convex preferences, and
introduces the investigation of approximate equilibrium with
U-shaped curves and non-convex preferences.
This is a memoir of my life it is about the abuse I suffered as a
child at the hands of my moms husband and her suffering as well.
Also the racism I dealt with coming up me being from a multiracial
back ground and I speak about my mothers drug addiction and death
and how these things changed my life and how I coped with
everything this is story of my life and it is know fairy tale but I
believe there is a lot to be learned from me telling it.
Two teenagers, Collin and Carmin, that are best friends and are
fascinated with vampires; end up having two vampire friends, Edwind
and Esmerella, that are married. But the fact is that Carmin and
Collin are actually in love with each other. So a few weeks from
graduation Collin gets in a major car crash and Edwin and Esmerella
save him by making a big decision. He either becomes one of
them...or dies. Read this book and figure out what Collin and
Carmin do to protect there secret from the mortals that are their
bestfriends. Are they making a big mistake or are they doing what
they think is right? Figure out what they do to go througt
graduation day and an unknown horror that shows up out of no where.
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