Search results for "Monetary hegemony"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

From the great depression to bretton woods: Jacob Viner and international monetary stabilization (1930-1945)

2009

This paper examines Jacob Viner's contribution to the debate and the policy decision-making concerning international monetary policy from the Great Depression to the Bretton Woods agreements. An outstanding member of the so-called 'early Chicago School of Political Economy', Viner was actively engaged in the debate over the causes and cures of the Depression, emphasizing the important role international economic problems played in producing its onset and in reinforcing its duration. During the 1930s Viner was an outspoken supporter of international monetary cooperation, set up to secure exchange rates stability, which he regarded as a paramount factor in restoring business confidence and fo…

Economics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)jel:E63Tripartite agreementGold stabilization actHistory and Philosophy of ScienceDepression (economics)Jacob vinerGreat Depression Gold Stabilization Act Tripartite Agreement Bretton Woods Jacob Viner.EconomicsGreat depressionTripartite Agreement of 1936jel:B31General Arts and HumanitiesKeynesian economicsMonetary policyInternational economicsMonetary hegemonyjel:F55Treasuryjel:F59Settore SECS-P/04 - Storia Del Pensiero Economicojel:N12Great DepressionBretton woodAdministration (government)Economic problem
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Interest rates, expectations and the credibility of the Bank of Spain

1995

The purpose of the paper is to pinpoint the date of the change of monetary policy regime which occurred in Spain during the year 1984, when it moved away from controlling monetary aggregates towards interest rate targeting. The most likely date for the change is estimated and, surprisingly, there is evidence that agents learned about the new intermediate target quite rapidly.A week after the change, the term structure of interest rates showed how market agents attributed much more informational content to interest rate changes than they had previously. Two types of transitions are tried: a one-step and a gradual logistic swithing function.

Economics and EconometricsInflation targetingmedia_common.quotation_subjectMonetary policyMonetary economicsMonetary hegemonyForward guidanceInterest rateCredit channelCredibilityEconomicssense organsYield curveskin and connective tissue diseasesmedia_commonApplied Economics
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Monetary policy and exchange rate dynamics in the Spanish economy

1999

As the Spanish economy gets more integrated in international markets, the real exchange rate becomes a key determinant of the monetary transmission. In this paper we trace out the dynamic response of prices, output and the exchange rate following a monetary policy shock. We estimate a structural VAR model whose identification scheme is based on the long run properties common to a large class of models. The results suggest that a small model with efficient asset markets plus nominal inertia and long run monetary neutrality, captures the essential features of the monetary transmission mechanism in Spain. The interest rate shock is well identified and the exchange rate overshoots its long run …

media_common.quotation_subjectjel:E40Monetary policyMonetary economicsjel:E52jel:E31Monetary hegemonyMarket liquidityInterest rateVector autoregressionCredit channelShock (economics)Exchange rateEconomyStructural VAR monetary shocks exchange rate overshootingEconomicsGeneral Economics Econometrics and Financemedia_common
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The Economics of Monetary Union: The Theory of Optimum Currency Areas

2013

In the 1960s, the theory of Optimum Currency Areas (OCAs) emerged as a by-product of the theoretical debate between fixed and flexible exchange rates. The OCAs approach singles out an economic characteristic to define an economic domain where there is exchange rate fixity erga intra, while there is exchange rate flexibility erga extra. In an optimum currency area, exchange rates fixity prevails internally without any type of internal or external disequilibrium. Each single characteristic ensures that floating or regular adjustments in nominal exchange rates are neither necessary, efficient nor desirable for stabilisation purposes. The literature proposes several economic criteria: factor mo…

Exchange rateCurrencyReserve currencyDevaluationEconomicsOptimum currency areaMonetary economicsExchange-rate flexibilityMonetary hegemonyMonetary base
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A Scholar in Action in Interwar America. John H. Williams' Contributions to Trade Theory and International Monetary Reform

2004

In this paper we analyse the scientific contributions of Harvard economist John H. Williams as international trade theorist and monetary reformer together with his activities as a Vice President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. In the first 2 Sections we first present a succinct overview of Williams' main contributions to international trade theory and to the interwar debate on the reform of the international monetary system. Particular attention will be devoted to his early academic writings which contained different critical arguments against the two main tenets of classical international economics: the Ricardian theory of comparative advantages and the gold standard. These critic…

NegotiationWhite (horse)EconomyCurrencymedia_common.quotation_subjectEconomicsEconomic historySign (semiotics)Monetary reformMonetary systemMonetary hegemonyComparative advantagemedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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