000 | 05628nam a2200241Ia 4500 | ||
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003 | OSt | ||
005 | 20241125162404.0 | ||
008 | 240314s9999 xx 000 0 und d | ||
020 | _a9783662522486 | ||
040 | _c. | ||
082 |
_a339 _bDOR |
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100 | _aDorman, Peter | ||
245 | 0 |
_aMacroeconomics: _bA Fresh Start/ _cby Peter Dorman |
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260 |
_aLondon: _bSpringer, _c2014. |
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300 |
_a446p.; _c23cm. |
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505 | _aPart I: Background 1: Introduction: Economic Growth and Development in Historical Perspective 1.1 The Long View 1.2 Accounting for Growth 1.3 Development as Well as Growth 1.4 Theories of National Economic Development Reference 2: Some Relevant Microeconomics 2.1 Why Micro and Macro? 2.2 The Core Assumptions of Microeconomics 2.3 Supply and Demand Analysis 2.4 The Normative Interpretation of Markets 2.5 Market Failure 2.6 Economic Institutions 2.7 General Equilibrium Theory Part II: The Terrain of Macroeconomics 3: Accounts and Measurements 3.1 The Circular Flow of Income and Credit 3.2 The National Income and Product Accounts 3.3 Flow of Funds Accounts 3.4 The Balance of Payments Accounts 3.5 Economic Measurement and Human Well-Being 4: The Fundamental Macroeconomic Identities 4.1 NIPA and the Relationship of the Parts to the Whole 4.2 Financial Balances and Trade 5: Macroeconomic Issues: Output, Employment, Inflation, Stability 5.1 Output 5.2 Employment 5.3 Inflation 5.4 Financial Stability 6: Macroeconomic Adjustment 6.1 Varieties of Adjustment 6.2 Adjustment to Reduce Inflation: The Case of the United States, 1978-1982 6.3 Adjustment to Raise Income and Employment: The Case of the United States, 1982-1983 6.4 Adjustment to Overcome a Financial Crisis: The Case of Argentina, 2001-2002 6.5 Some Observations About Adjustment 7: An Introduction to Money, Banks and Financial Systems 7.1 Why Societies Create Money 7.2 Money and Liquidity 7.3 Measuring Money 7.4 Banks: Private Profit and Public Function 7.5 Banks as Guardians and Creators of Money 7.6 How to Make Money: A Step-by-Step Guide 7.7 An Overview of the Financial Industry 7.8 Central Banks 7.9 The Paradox of Risk 8: International Finance: A World of Many Moneys 8.1 The Rise and Fall of the Gold Standard 8.2 The Retreat from Gold: The Gold-Dollar Standard of Bretton Woods 8.3 Floating Exchange Rates and Foreign Exchange Markets 8.4 The Role of Reserve Currencies 8.5 International Financial Instability from 1982 to the Present 9: International Trade in an Interdependent World 9.1 Introduction: Disaster and Disruption in an Interconnected World 9.2 Patterns of International Trade 9.3 What Is International Trade? 9.4 Mercantilism, Liberalism and the Debate Over Trade 9.5 Ricardo´s Theory of Comparative Advantage in International Trade 9.6 Friendly Amendments to Ricardo´s Theory of International Trade 9.7 Limitations of Standard Trade Theory Part III: Macroeconomic Theories in Conflict 10: Classical Economics and the Keynesian Challenge 10.1 The Classical View of Output and Employment 10.2 The Keynesian Challenge 11: Equilibrium National Income and Financial Balances in a Keynesian World 11.1 Step 1: The Consume Everything Economy 11.2 Step 2: Add Savings 11.3 Step 3: Add Investment 11.4 Step 4: Add Taxes and Government Spending 11.5 Step 5: Add Imports and Exports 11.5.1 A Word on Macroeconomic Models 11.5.2 Equilibrium National Income and Financial Balances 12: Keynesian Fiscal Policy 12.1 The Political Economy of Keynesian Fiscal Policy 12.2 The Economic Basis of Keynesian Fiscal Policy 12.3 Taxes or Spending? 12.4 Autonomous Versus Discretionary Fiscal Policy 12.5 Should the Government Try to Balance Its Budget? 12.6 How Large a Deficit? 12.7 Fiscal Space 13: Central Banks and Monetary Policy 13.1 The Purposes of a Central Bank 13.2 The Wizard´s Wand: Open Market Operations 13.3 Monetary Policy Principles 13.4 Monetary Policy Versus Fiscal Policy 13.5 Monetary and Fiscal Policy Together Appendix: The IS-LM Model 14: Business Cycles 14.1 Some Empirical Evidence 14.2 Investment Cycles 14.3 Policy Cycles 14.4 Financial Cycles 14.5 Summing Up 15: The Crucible of the 1970s 15.1 The Life and Times of the Keynesian Consensus 15.2 Resistance to Keynesian Policy at the Beginning of the 1970s: Monetarism 15.3 The Role of Time in Economic Models 15.4 Adaptive Versus Rational Expectations 15.5 From Market Failure to Government Failure 15.6 Rethinking Unemployment 15.7 Stagflation and the Counterrevolution in Economic Theory 15.8 The Short Run Phillips Curve and the Natural Rate of Unemployment 16: The Rise and Fall of the Great Moderation 16.1 What´s Moderate About the Great Moderation? 16.2 Splitting the Difference: The Short Run and the Long Run 16.3 Macroeconomic Modeling During the Great Moderation 16.4 Policy Precepts During the Great Moderation 16.5 Teaching the New Macroeconomics: The Aggregate Demand-Aggregate Supply Model 16.6 Using AS-AD: Supply Shocks, Policy Shocks and the Problem of the Long Run 16.7 Against the Grain: Keynesian Dissent from Mainstream Macroeconomics 16.8 The Great Moderation in Retrospect 17: The Financial Crisis of 2008 and Its Aftermath 17.1 The Great Unbalancing 17.2 Finance on the Brink 17.3 The Meltdown 17.4 Crisis Management 17.5 The Problems Continue 17.6 Crisis in the Eurozone 17.7 Did Economics Fail the Test? References Glossary Index | ||
650 | _aEconomics | ||
650 | _aMacroeconomics | ||
650 | _aManagement science | ||
650 | _aFinancial Economics | ||
650 | _aMonetary Economics | ||
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