Central Banking in the Modern World: Alternative Perspectives

Front Cover
Marc Lavoie, Mario Seccareccia
Edward Elgar, 2004 - Business & Economics - 296 pages
Monetarism is dead! Central bankers are all Wicksellians now! They target low inflation rates, with no regard to monetary aggregates whatsoever, by acting upon short-term real rates of interest. This is the New Consensus in monetary economics, or simply the New Keynesian Synthesis. Yet, this synthesis still hinges on variants of the long-run vertical Phillips curve originally proposed by Milton Friedman, the father of old-line monetarism.

Contributors to the volume question this New Consensus. While they agree that the money supply should be conceived as endogenous, they carefully examine the procedures pursued by central banks, the monetary policy transmission mechanisms suggested by central bankers themselves, and the assumptions imbedded in the New Consensus. They propose alternative analyses that clearly demonstrate the limits of modern central banking and point to the possible instability of monetary economies.

Heterodox and orthodox monetary macroeconomists alike will find this illuminating book of great interest.

From inside the book

Contents

Interest Rate Operating Procedures and Income Distribution
57
Going Beyond
70
Setting the Agenda
112
Copyright

9 other sections not shown

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information