Political Economy of U.S. Monetary Policy

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A01=Edwin Dickens
American Economic History
and Banking
Author_Edwin Dickens
Bank Clearinghouses
Capital in the Twenty First Centrury
Category=KC
Category=KFFK
Category=KJ
central bank independence
class conflict economics
Credit
Crop Lien System
Current Neoliberal Era
Discount Rate Increases
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Euro-dollar Deposits
Euro-dollar Market
Eurodollar Market
Eurodollar market dynamics
Federal Funds Rate
Federal Reserve
Federal Reserve System
Federal Reserve's Behavior
Federal Reserve’s Behavior
financial instability hypothesis
FOMC
FR
gold standard history
High Interest Rate Policy
Hyman Minsky
Interest Rate Ceilings
Intra-class Conflict
Large Regional Banks
Macroeconomics
Monetary Theory
Money
neoliberal era analysis
Political Economy
progressive monetary policy critique
Thomas Piketty
Tight Monetary Policy
Treasury Bill Rate
Treasury Federal Reserve Accord
United Steel Workers
Voluntary Foreign Credit Restraint Program
Wage Price Spiral
West Germany
York Banks

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138495463
  • Weight: 360g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Jan 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Mainstream economists explain the Federal Reserve’s behavior over its one hundred years of existence as (usually failed) attempts to stabilize the economy on a non-inflationary growth path. The most important monetary event during those first one hundred years was the replacement of fixed exchange rates, based on a gold-exchange standard, with flexible exchange rates.

In this book, Dickens explains how flexible exchange rates became necessary to accommodate the Federal Reserve’s relentless efforts to prevent progressive social change. It is argued that the Federal Reserve is an institutionalized alliance of the large New York banks and the large regional banks. When these two groups of banks are united, they constitute an unassailable force in the class conflict. However, when the large regional banks are at loggerheads with the large New York banks over the proper role of bank clearinghouses during the populist period, along with the proper role of the Eurodollar market during the social democratic period, there is an opening for progressive social reforms.

This book builds upon Hyman Minsky’s financial instability hypothesis as well as the Marxian model constructed by Thomas Piketty. It follows Piketty’s historical method of deepening our understanding of the current Neoliberal Era (1980-2014) of global financial capitalism by comparing and contrasting it with the first era of global financial capitalism—the Gilded Age (1880-1914). In contrast with Piketty, however, this book incorporates monetary factors, including monetary policy, into the set of determinants of the long-run rate of economic growth. This book is suitable for those who study political economy, banking as well as macroeconomics.

Edwin Dickens is Professor and Chair at the Department of Economics and Finance at Saint Peter’s University, New Jersey, U.S.

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