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Comprising Wage-Fixing (first published 1982), and Demand
Management (first published 1983) this two volume reissued set is a
vital and stimulating analysis of the causes and consequences of
stagflation ? a paralysing combination of mass unemployment and
rapid inflation which affected a variety of economies across the
developed world in the 1970s and early 1980s.
Wage-Fixing, written by James Meade, deals primarily with the
needed reform of wage-fixing institutions, contrasting the Great
Depression of the 1930s with the Great Stagflation of the 1970s.
Meanwhile Demand Management is devoted to the design of fiscal,
monetary and foreign exchange-rate policies for the control of the
money demand for the products of labour. This volume deals with the
theory of demand management, feedback control and the creation of a
dynamic model of the UK economy.
Written in clear and accessible language, this reissue will
appeal to the general reader as well as students of economics and
professional economists. It should be required reading for all
those who wish to learn the lessons of the Great Stagflation of the
1970s to avoid a repetition in the current economic climate.
This analysis of macroeconomic policy, originally published in
1989, argues that key government objectives, such as reduced
inflation, decreased unemployment and an adequate level of national
saving can be achieved only by employing both monetary and fiscal
policies, in conjunction with supply-side policies expressly
designed to improve the workings of the labour market. Part 1 is a
comparative analysis showing the effects of monetary and fiscal
policy on the economy. Real-wage rigidity in the labour market is
shown to have important consequences for the working of both types
of policy, because it conditions the economy's response to tax
changes. Part 2 presents an econometric model which combines
consistent stock-flow accounts with a full range of expectational
effects. Part 3 presents an innovative technique for solving
rational expectations models with the need for arbitary terminal
conditions.
This analysis of macroeconomic policy, originally published in
1989, argues that key government objectives, such as reduced
inflation, decreased unemployment and an adequate level of national
saving can be achieved only by employing both monetary and fiscal
policies, in conjunction with supply-side policies expressly
designed to improve the workings of the labour market. Part 1 is a
comparative analysis showing the effects of monetary and fiscal
policy on the economy. Real-wage rigidity in the labour market is
shown to have important consequences for the working of both types
of policy, because it conditions the economy's response to tax
changes. Part 2 presents an econometric model which combines
consistent stock-flow accounts with a full range of expectational
effects. Part 3 presents an innovative technique for solving
rational expectations models with the need for arbitary terminal
conditions.
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