Keynes on Monetary Policy, Finance and Uncertainty: Liquidity Preference Theory and the Global Financial Crisis

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Routledge, Mar 1, 2013 - Business & Economics - 272 pages

This book provides a reassessment of Keynes’ theory of liquidity preference. It argues that the failure of the Keynesian revolution to be made in either theory or practice owes importantly to the fact that the role of liquidity preference theory as a pivotal element in Keynes’ General Theory has remained underexplored and indeed widely misunderstood even among Keynes’ followers and until today. The book elaborates on and extends Keynes’ conceptual framework, moving it from the closed economy to the global economy context, and applies liquidity preference theory to current events and prominent hypotheses in global finance.

Jörg Bibow presents Keynes’ liquidity preference theory as a distinctive and highly relevant approach to monetary theory offering a conceptual framework of general applicability for explaining the role and functioning of the financial system. He argues that, in a dynamic context, liquidity preference theory may best be understood as a theory of financial intermediation. Through applications to current events and prominent hypotheses in global finance, this book underlines the richness, continued relevance, and superiority of Keynes’ theory of liquidity preference; with Hyman Minsky standing out for developing Keynes’ vision of financial capitalism.

 

Contents

The key role of liquidity preference theory in Keynes heresy
1
2 Some reflections on Keynes finance motive for the demand for money
27
Exercises in the analysis of disequilibrium
44
4 On Keynesian theories of liquidity preference
71
The Pandoras box kept shut in Keynes theory of liquidity preference?
95
6 Keynes on central banking and the structure of monetary policy
124
Keynes ideas and global vision
148
8 On what became of Keynes vision at Bretton Woods and some recent issues in global finance
165
9 Taking liquidity preference theory seriously
192
Notes
196
Bibliography
225
Index
245
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About the author (2013)

Jorg Bibow is Associate Professor of Economics at Skidmore College, New York, USA and Research Associate at the Levy Economics Institute of Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, USA

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