|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
This book reconstructs Keynesian macroeconomics so that it is
compatible with the neoclassical dynamic microeconomic theory. This
theory adopts three postulates: rational expectations, perfect
price flexibility, and exclusion of the money in utility function
(MIU). Based on the new theoretical finding that the Lucas model
(1972) contains multiple equilibria, the author unifies Keynesian
and monetarist theories within the same framework. The book applies
the above basic theory to international macroeconomics and economic
growth theory. New Keynesian theory contains logical
inconsistencies: menu costs that have no close relationship with
microeconomics and MIU, which implies that the money accumulated as
wealth is never spent. These two assumptions do not proximate the
real world. In this volume, the author discusses how various
segregated theoretical approaches in macroeconomics relate to one
another and proposes how to integrate them.
The deflationary Japanese economy is a spurious observation and a
precarious political propaganda, which tacitly connects with the
fanatic diagnosis urging an inflation-prompting macroeconomic
policy. This book provides an overview of the prolonged stagnation
of the current Japanese economy. It also examines the
politico-economic implications concerning the precarious conversion
of Japanese monetary policy and focuses on the vulnerability of the
price-sustaining policy concerning the public debt. The book also
analyzes and suggests against the acceleration of inflation under
the current Japanese foreign exchange system and also suggests that
the surge of foreign direct investment towards East Asia is the
acute cause of Japanese economy stagnation. The book concludes that
to rebuild the economic potential of the Japanese economy,
education and fostering the youths are the keys. This book will
definitely interest those who are keen to learn more about the
relationship between Bank of Japan and the Japanese political
parties.
The deflationary Japanese economy is a spurious observation and a
precarious political propaganda, which tacitly connects with the
fanatic diagnosis urging an inflation-prompting macroeconomic
policy. This book provides an overview of the prolonged stagnation
of the current Japanese economy. It also examines the
politico-economic implications concerning the precarious conversion
of Japanese monetary policy and focuses on the vulnerability of the
price-sustaining policy concerning the public debt. The book also
analyzes and suggests against the acceleration of inflation under
the current Japanese foreign exchange system and also suggests that
the surge of foreign direct investment towards East Asia is the
acute cause of Japanese economy stagnation. The book concludes that
to rebuild the economic potential of the Japanese economy,
education and fostering the youths are the keys. This book will
definitely interest those who are keen to learn more about the
relationship between Bank of Japan and the Japanese political
parties.
Speculative Bubbles and Monetary Policy works at the intersection
of economic theory history. While the consistent and penetrating
perspective of theory is necessary for interpreting economic
history, existing macroeconomic theories are fragile an ineffective
at narrating an economic history that covers a relatively long
period. Such fragility comes from arbitrariness in deployed
economic theory as well as structural changes within an economy.
This book presents a Keynesian theory with a rigorous dynamic
microeconomic foundation that entirely differs from new Keynesian
theory and applies it to the Japanese economic history from the
1980s to 2010s. It considers two primary incidents in the country's
economic history: the bubble boom from the late 1980s to the early
1990s, and the country's immersion in neoliberalism at the turn of
the century.
This book reconstructs Keynesian macroeconomics so that it is
compatible with the neoclassical dynamic microeconomic theory. This
theory adopts three postulates: rational expectations, perfect
price flexibility, and exclusion of the money in utility function
(MIU). Based on the new theoretical finding that the Lucas model
(1972) contains multiple equilibria, the author unifies Keynesian
and monetarist theories within the same framework. The book applies
the above basic theory to international macroeconomics and economic
growth theory. New Keynesian theory contains logical
inconsistencies: menu costs that have no close relationship with
microeconomics and MIU, which implies that the money accumulated as
wealth is never spent. These two assumptions do not proximate the
real world. In this volume, the author discusses how various
segregated theoretical approaches in macroeconomics relate to one
another and proposes how to integrate them.
This book elucidates the economic conditions and policies during
the post War Japanese economy from the view point of an influential
policy maker. Dr. Osamu Shimomura is one of the most eminent
economists in Japan. He entered the Ministry of Finance and played
a crucial role in actualizing the High-Growth era from the late
1950s to the early 70s. "The Doubling Income Plan", which is issued
by the Ikeda cabinet, originates from him. It should be noted that
while most economists held pessimistic view on the future,
Shimomura is brave and foresighted. Shimomura's theory is not
merely one of the pioneer works in macroeconomics, but also suits
the economic conditions of Japan. Shimomura extends the principle
of effective demand, which means that his theory includes effects
of capital accumulation to production capacity. While one may argue
that Harrod (1939) and Domar (1946) have already achieved that,
Shimomura's theory centers policy recommendations for sustaining
the high economic growth against the productivity growth that would
cause excess supply in the market. Succinctly, Shimomura is a
Keynesian who believes the vigor in its private sector but
recognizes that Japanese economy urgently needs the government's
auxiliary macroeconomic policies. This book emphasizes that the
rapid Japanese growth owes mainly to affluent entrepreneurship
filled in the economy not to the sheer government's planning. Dr.
Shimomura's theory endorses our assertion.
This book reconsiders Keynes's The General Theory of Employment,
Interest and Money and establishes a new interpretation. In
contrast to the existing models, this book finds that the
stickiness in the nominal wage is not crucial for his theory.
Moreover, the author has also succeeds in capturing the concept of
liquidity in a rigorous mathematical model. In conjunction with the
development of the concept of liquidity, the separation of the
decision between savings and capital investment, which plays a key
role in the principle of effective demand and denies Say's law, is
exactly and originally formulated. The theory thus developed is
applicable to elucidating some serious political economic causes
that entrap the long-stagnated Japanese economy. For example, an
analytical explanation is provided about why disinflation/deflation
incessantly progresses despite the exorbitant expansionary monetary
policy (ijigen kin-yuu seisaku) by the Bank of Japan. This
phenomenon is an unsolvable question from the quantity-theoretic
approaches (e.g., monetarism and new Keynesianism) which, although
they differ in assumptions concerning the length of adjustment
periods, commonly assume that the price level sooner or later rises
in proportion to the quantity of money. Owing much to Keynes, the
author's approach considers that the price level is mainly governed
by its marginal prime cost which is equal to the nominal wage as a
first approximation. As such, the drastically sagging wages during
the past 10 years provoke serious disinflation/deflation. It should
be noted that this discussion never depends on the quantity of
money.
|
|