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This book applies finance to the field of capital theory. While
financial economics is a well-established field of study, the
specific application of finance to capital theory remains
unexplored. It is the first book to comprehensively study this
financial application, which also includes modern financial tools
such as Economic Value Added (EVA (R)). A financial application to
the problem of the average period of production includes two
discussions that unfold naturally from this application. The first
one relates to the dual meaning of capital, one as a monetary fund
and the other one as physical (capital) goods. The second concerns
its implications for business-cycle theories. This second topic (1)
provides a solid financial microeconomic foundation for business
cycles and, also (2) makes it easy to compare different
business-cycle theories across the average period of production
dimension. By clarifying the obscure concept of average period of
production, the authors make it easier to analyze the similarities
with and differences from other business-cycle theories. By
connecting finance with capital theory, they provide a new point of
view and analysis of the long-standing problems in capital theory
as well as other related topics such as the use of neoclassical
production functions and theorizing about business cycles. Finally,
they emphasize that the relevance of their application rests on
both its policy implications and its contributions to contemporary
economic theory.
This book examines the case of nominal income targeting as a
monetary policy rule. In recent years the most well-known nominal
income targeting rule has been NGDP (level) Targeting, associated
with a group of economists referred to as market monetarists (Scott
Sumner, David Beckworth, and Lars Christensen among others).
Nominal income targeting, though not new in monetary theory, was
relegated in economic theory following the Keynesian revolution, up
until the financial crisis of 2008, when it began to receive
renewed attention. This book fills a gap in the literature
available to researchers, academics, and policy makers on the
benefits of nominal income targeting against alternative monetary
rules. It starts with the theoretical foundations of monetary
equilibrium. With this foundation laid, it then deals with nominal
income targeting as a monetary policy rule. What are the
differences between NGDP Targeting and Hayek's rule? How do these
rules stand up against other monetary rules like inflation
targeting, the Taylor rule, or Friedman's k-percent? Nominal income
targeting is a rule which is better equipped to avoid monetary
disequilibrium when there is no inflation. Therefore, a book that
explores the theoretical foundation of nominal income targeting,
comparing it with other monetary rules, using the 2008 crisis to
assess it and laying out monetary policy reforms towards a nominal
income targeting rule will be timely and of interest to both
academics and policy makers.
This book applies finance to the field of capital theory. While
financial economics is a well-established field of study, the
specific application of finance to capital theory remains
unexplored. It is the first book to comprehensively study this
financial application, which also includes modern financial tools
such as Economic Value Added (EVA (R)). A financial application to
the problem of the average period of production includes two
discussions that unfold naturally from this application. The first
one relates to the dual meaning of capital, one as a monetary fund
and the other one as physical (capital) goods. The second concerns
its implications for business-cycle theories. This second topic (1)
provides a solid financial microeconomic foundation for business
cycles and, also (2) makes it easy to compare different
business-cycle theories across the average period of production
dimension. By clarifying the obscure concept of average period of
production, the authors make it easier to analyze the similarities
with and differences from other business-cycle theories. By
connecting finance with capital theory, they provide a new point of
view and analysis of the long-standing problems in capital theory
as well as other related topics such as the use of neoclassical
production functions and theorizing about business cycles. Finally,
they emphasize that the relevance of their application rests on
both its policy implications and its contributions to contemporary
economic theory.
This book examines the case of nominal income targeting as a
monetary policy rule. In recent years the most well-known nominal
income targeting rule has been NGDP (level) Targeting, associated
with a group of economists referred to as market monetarists (Scott
Sumner, David Beckworth, and Lars Christensen among others).
Nominal income targeting, though not new in monetary theory, was
relegated in economic theory following the Keynesian revolution, up
until the financial crisis of 2008, when it began to receive
renewed attention. This book fills a gap in the literature
available to researchers, academics, and policy makers on the
benefits of nominal income targeting against alternative monetary
rules. It starts with the theoretical foundations of monetary
equilibrium. With this foundation laid, it then deals with nominal
income targeting as a monetary policy rule. What are the
differences between NGDP Targeting and Hayek's rule? How do these
rules stand up against other monetary rules like inflation
targeting, the Taylor rule, or Friedman's k-percent? Nominal income
targeting is a rule which is better equipped to avoid monetary
disequilibrium when there is no inflation. Therefore, a book that
explores the theoretical foundation of nominal income targeting,
comparing it with other monetary rules, using the 2008 crisis to
assess it and laying out monetary policy reforms towards a nominal
income targeting rule will be timely and of interest to both
academics and policy makers.
This Element presents a new framework for Austrian capital theory,
starting from the notion that capital is value. Capital is the
value attributed by the valuer at any moment in time to the
combination of production-goods and labor available for production.
Capital is the result obtained by calculating the current value of
a business-unit or business-project that employs resources over
time. It is the result of a (subjective) entrepreneurial
calculation process that relates the flow of consumptions goods to
the value of the productive resources that will produce those
consumptions goods. The entrepreneur is a ubiquitous calculating
presence. In a review of the development of Austrian capital
theory, by Carl Menger, Eugen von Boehm-Bawerk, Ludwig von Mises,
Friedrich Hayek, Ludwig Lachmann as well as recent contributions,
the Element incorporates the seminal contributions into the new
framework in order to provide a more accessible perspective on
Austrian capital theory.
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