Inflation and the Theory of Money

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A01=R. J. Ball
Author_R. J. Ball
balances
cash
Category=KC
Category=KCBM
closed economy models
cost push theory
demand side inflation
Economic Journal
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Excess Demand
Fr Iedman
general
income
Income Velocity
incomes
inflationary process framework
level
macroeconomic equilibrium
monetary policy analysis
Money Barrier
Money Income
Money Wage
Money Wage Level
Net Worth
nominal
Nominal Money
Nominal Money Supply
Nominal Stock
Non-bank Financial Intermediaries
Non-bank Intermediaries
Nonbank Intermediaries
price
Price Level
Quantity Theory
real
Real Cash Balances
Real Stock
Short Period Equilibrium
Simple Keynesian Model
Spending Units
Time Deposits
velocity
Wage Bargain
wage price dynamics
Wage Unit

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138526075
  • Weight: 566g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Jul 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Martin Bronfenbrenner in the Journal of Finance had this to say when the book was first released "A thoughtful, scholarly, and systematic treatise on the economics of inflation. If this reviewer were asked to hang a course on inflation theory upon one single text, it would almost certainly be this one."

The principal concern of this book is to set out the elements that enter into problems of analyzing inflation. This detailed, readable review of contemporary theory on the problems of inflation fills an important gap in the literature on macro-economics that: 1) assesses the implications of inflationary processes for economic policy; 2) synthesizes a general framework within which to illustrate inflationary processes; 3) reconciles the approaches of "demand inflation" and "cost inflation"; and 4) analyzes the determination and behavior of the general price level in an exchange economy.

The first part of the book reviews neo-classical and "Keynesian" type models of the closed macro-economy, analyzes determination of the general price level, and introduces a restatement of conventional employment theory with emphasis on the general price level.

The second part considers the problems of price and wage determinations and the demand for money in more detail, synthesizing the analyses into a model of the macro-economy and discussing the implications of this model and the preceding analysis for economic policy. Describing alternative approaches to the theory of inflation, each of which has resulted in partial theories, the book avoids fragmentary explanations by setting the entire discussion in the context of a macro-economic general equilibrium framework.

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