Macroeconomics and Monetary Theory

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A01=Harry G. Johnson
advanced monetary economics research
Author_Harry G. Johnson
Cash Balance Mechanics
Category=KCB
classical monetary theory
consumption function
Desired Capital Stock
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eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Excess Demand
Excess Supplies
Federal Reserve
Friedman's Permanent Income
Friedman's Permanent Income Hypothesis
Friedman's Restatement
Friedman’s Permanent Income
Friedman’s Permanent Income Hypothesis
Friedman’s Restatement
G. Johnson Harry
Harry G. Johnson
income multiplier
Indifference Curves
inflation policy analysis
Inside Money
Interest Rate Mechanics
Keynesian economics
Liquidity Preference
Lm Curve
macroeconomic equilibrium
Market Excess Demand Functions
Money Wage Rate
Permanent Income
Phillips Curve
Precautionary Demand
Quantity Theory
Quantity Theory Approach
Real Balance Effect
Real Balances
Transactions Demand
UK Banking System
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9780202308654
  • Weight: 317g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Jul 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Macroeconomics is an outgrowth from the main stream of classical monetary theory following Keynes. Keynes changed the emphasis from determination of the level of money prices to determination of the level of output and employment. He also changed the key relationship from demand and supply of money as determining the price level to the relationship between consumption expenditure and income, in conjunction with private investment expenditure, as determining the level of output and therefore employment demanded. The income multiplier replaced the velocity of circulation as the key concept of monetary theory. The tendency of the past twenty-five years has been to reintegrate Keynesian and classical monetary theory into one general system of analysis. Moreover, as inflation has succeeded mass unemployment as a major policy problem, interest in classical monetary theory has revived, while Keynesians have increasingly' emphasized the monetary aspects of Keynesian theory. The proper contemporary distinction is not between two separate branches of economic theory, but between two areas of application or contexts of the theory of rational maximizing behavior. In the one (the microeconomic) context, it is assumed either that the overall workings of the economic system can be disregarded, or that the macroeconomic relationships are in full general equilibrium. In the other (the macroeconomic) context, it is assumed that the maximizing decisions of individual economic units (firms and households) will not necessarily add up to a macroeconomic equilibrium, but will produce a disequilibrium situation that will in the course of time produce changes in the individual decisions.

Harry G. Johnson was Professor of Economics at the London School of Economics and the University of Chicago.

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