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NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES Frederic S. Mishkin Working Paper 13566
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES Frederic S. Mishkin Working Paper 13566

... Over the past three decades, we have seen a remarkable change in the performance of monetary policy. By the end of the 1970s, inflation had risen to very high levels, with many countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) experiencing double-digit inflation rates ( ...
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Mankiw 5/e Chapter 13: Aggregate Supply

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Planned Investment and the Interest Rate

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... President Reagan’s government adopted an expansionary fiscal policy during the first half of the 1980s when it reduced personal taxes in 1981 and requested several times from Congress to increase the national debt limit. The Federal Reserve (Fed) on the contrary during the same period applied a cont ...
The characteristics of a monetary economy: a Keynes
The characteristics of a monetary economy: a Keynes

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... Phillips curve maybe a more reasonable approximation of the true relationship between inflation and output than the linear curve. ...
Exercise: The New Economy
Exercise: The New Economy

... charge each other for overnight loans. The discount rate is the interest rate that Federal Reserve Banks charge when they make collateralized loans—usually overnight—to depository institutions. The federal funds market The fed funds rate and the discount rate are two of the tools the Federal Reserve ...
Monetary Policy Statement September 2013 Contents
Monetary Policy Statement September 2013 Contents

... Source: Statistics New Zealand, RBNZ estimates. Note: Headline CPI includes the 2010 GST increase, whereas the ...
After studying this chapter, you will able to
After studying this chapter, you will able to

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Chapter 10: Classical Business Cycle Analysis: Market

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... Holders of cash will…bid up the price of assets. If the extra demand is initially directed at a particular class of assets, say, government securities, or commercial paper, or the like, the result will be to pull the prices of such assets out of line with other assets and thus widen the area into wh ...
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... • The effects of inflation depend upon the nature of inflation. • Factors such as the rate of inflation, whether the rate of inflation is stable , whether the inflation rate is anticipated or unanticipated and what is the domestic inflation rate as compared to the inflation rate in the trading partn ...
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... depreciating the yen & making Japanese goods e. Not change Not change cheaper which would increase Japan’s exports. ...
Mankiw 5/e Chapter 13: Aggregate Supply
Mankiw 5/e Chapter 13: Aggregate Supply

... Suppose two types of firms: • firms with flexible prices, set prices as above • firms with sticky prices, must set their price before they know how P and Y will turn out: ...
Mankiw 5/e Chapter 13: Aggregate Supply - CERGE-EI
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NBER RKING PAPER SERIES
NBER RKING PAPER SERIES

... prices, and to analyze how these gains depend on openness. The policies considered are wage indexation and monetary policy. The framework underlying the paper is that of a small economy, producing traded and non—traded goods. The analysis focuses on the role of the relative price of non—traded goods ...
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Optimal Monetary Policy in a Currency Area

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Política monetaria en un entorno de dos monedas

Scribner AP Macroeconomics Syllabus 2016-17
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... C. Distinguish between macroeconomics and microeconomics D. List the three basic economic questions E. Define comparative advantage F. Using both graphical and table analysis, show the benefit of employing comparative advantage G. Use a production possibilities curve to demonstrate opportunity cost ...
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QE in the future: the central bank`s balance sheet in a fiscal crisis

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Money supply

In economics, the money supply or money stock, is the total amount of monetary assets available in an economy at a specific time. There are several ways to define ""money,"" but standard measures usually include currency in circulation and demand deposits (depositors' easily accessed assets on the books of financial institutions).Money supply data are recorded and published, usually by the government or the central bank of the country. Public and private sector analysts have long monitored changes in money supply because of its effects on the price level, inflation, the exchange rate and the business cycle.That relation between money and prices is historically associated with the quantity theory of money. There is strong empirical evidence of a direct relation between money-supply growth and long-term price inflation, at least for rapid increases in the amount of money in the economy. For example, a country such as Zimbabwe which saw extremely rapid increases in its money supply also saw extremely rapid increases in prices (hyperinflation). This is one reason for the reliance on monetary policy as a means of controlling inflation.The nature of this causal chain is the subject of contention. Some heterodox economists argue that the money supply is endogenous (determined by the workings of the economy, not by the central bank) and that the sources of inflation must be found in the distributional structure of the economy.In addition, those economists seeing the central bank's control over the money supply as feeble say that there are two weak links between the growth of the money supply and the inflation rate. First, in the aftermath of a recession, when many resources are underutilized, an increase in the money supply can cause a sustained increase in real production instead of inflation. Second, if the velocity of money (i.e., the ratio between nominal GDP and money supply) changes, an increase in the money supply could have either no effect, an exaggerated effect, or an unpredictable effect on the growth of nominal GDP.
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