The Demand for Money: Theories, Evidence, and ProblemsHarper & Row, 1985 - 178 síður |
From inside the book
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Síða vii
Theories, Evidence, and Problems David E. W. Laidler. IV The Empirical Evidence on the Demand for Money 115 9 An Overview of the Evidence 117 The Issues to be Addressed 117 A Summary of the Evidence 118 10 The Influence of the ...
Theories, Evidence, and Problems David E. W. Laidler. IV The Empirical Evidence on the Demand for Money 115 9 An Overview of the Evidence 117 The Issues to be Addressed 117 A Summary of the Evidence 118 10 The Influence of the ...
Síða 39
... evidence , for it seems reasonable to suppose that one could ask how much of the variation in the quantity of money ... evidence . Since such evidence is continually being generated , one never has all of it , and the notion of a theory ...
... evidence , for it seems reasonable to suppose that one could ask how much of the variation in the quantity of money ... evidence . Since such evidence is continually being generated , one never has all of it , and the notion of a theory ...
Síða 129
... evidence to suggest that there is any well - defined floor above zero for the value of the interest rate . Kostas and Khouja ( 1969 ) , using a method somewhat similar to that of Pifer , again on U.S. data , found some evidence that a ...
... evidence to suggest that there is any well - defined floor above zero for the value of the interest rate . Kostas and Khouja ( 1969 ) , using a method somewhat similar to that of Pifer , again on U.S. data , found some evidence that a ...
Efni
The Demand for Money in a Fixed Price Level | 8 |
Price Flexibility in the Macromodel | 22 |
A Brief Overview | 39 |
Höfundarréttur | |
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Common terms and phrases
adjustment aggregate demand analysis approach argued assets assumption behavior brokerage fee cash chapter consumption consumption function cost of holding definition of money demand curve demand deposits demand for money demand function demand-for demand-for-money function discussed economists effect empirical equal Equation evidence exogenous expected inflation factors Figure Friedman given holding money hypothesis implications important increase individual agent inflation rate interest rate involved lagged Laidler level of income level of real liquidity trap LM curve long-run M₁ macroeconomic matter measured money demanded money function money holding money supply nominal money nonhuman wealth opportunity cost output P₁ period permanent income precautionary balances precautionary demand price level problem proportion quantity of money rate of interest rate of return real income relationship relevant scale variable shift short-run speculative demand studies supply and demand theory tion transactions and precautionary transactions demand volume of transactions wealth effect Y₁ yield