Macroeconomics After the Financial Crisis

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Aggregate Demand Factors
Animal Spirits
Asset Based Reserve Requirements
Base Line Model
Capital Market Interest Rate
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Claude Gnos
Debt Gdp Ratio
DSGE Model
Economic Policy
Economic Theory
Engelbert Stockhammer
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Eric Berr
EU Policy Regime
Financial Crisis
Finn Olesen
Foundation of Macroeconomics
Functional Finance
Gdp Growth Rate
Gdp Reduction
James Galbraith
Jesper Jespersen
Joachim Guntzel
Jonathan Perraton
Lars Palsson Syll
Methodology
Negative Interest Rate
Nordic Economies
OLG Models
Outward FDI
Peter Skott
Post Keynesian Macroeconomics
Post-war Golden Age
Profit Led Demand Regimes
Public Sector Budget
Rational Degree
Real Exchange Economy
Representative Agents Models
Rising Household Debt
Savings Glut Hypothesis
Steady State Equilibrium Conditions
Tom Neugebauer
Ulrich van Suntum
Wage Bargaining Systems

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138124486
  • Weight: 560g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Apr 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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How should Europe cope with the negative and still unfolding economic consequences of the current economic crisis? And why does Europe seem to be more conservative than the USA in dealing with the crisis?

Since the outbreak of the current international economic crisis in 2008, the USA and many of the European countries have been tormented by high levels of unemployment and low levels of inflation, interest rates close to zero and fiscal policies of austerity. As such, the modern economic mainstream has been challenged by these empirical facts. Today, several years after the outbreak of the international economic crisis, supply side effects do not seem to be increasing employment as the modern mainstream claimed they would. Aggregate demand has to play a more important role in macroeconomic analysis than hitherto. That is, there is a need for alternative explanations of how a modern macro economy is expected to function and how the macroeconomic outcome could be manipulated by the right economic policy proposals. As expressed by the contents of the present book, a Post Keynesian understanding proposes such an alternative theoretically, methodologically and in terms of policy measures.

This book will present new materials and approaches, especially new evidence and new views on the potential problems of public debt, the European Union and the present crisis, Central Banking, hysteresis in an agent based framework, the foundations of macroeconomics and the problems of uncertainty.

Mogens Ove Madsen is Associate Professor at the Department of Business and Management, Aalborg University, Denmark Finn Olesen is Professor at the Department of Business and Management, Aalborg University, Denmark