David Hume\u27s monetary theory has two standard yet inconsistent readings. As a forefather of the quantity theory of money, Hume sees money as neutral. As an inflationist, Hume sees an active positive role for monetary policy. This paper reads Hume consistently instead, by showing that for Hume money is endogenous and demand driven. Hume would read the money equation as reverse causation and the co-presence of inflation and output growth as driven by demand. The 18th century knowledge of monetary theory corroborates this reading
When Davidson and Weintraub (1973) first drew attention to the endogenous nature of the money creati...
The title of the paper alerts the reader to the fact that while the role of money in Keynes’s earlie...
Abstract: This paper examines the career and contribution of J. K. Gifford (1899-1987), the Foundati...
David Hume’s monetary theory has three standard yet inconsistent readings. As a forefather of the qu...
Monetary policy is a modern idea of which David Hume is generally considered a precursor. Moreover, ...
In his 1752 essay Of Money, David Hume proposes that a good policy for a magistrate would be to keep...
David Hume’s position in the history of economic thought has oscillated betweenprominenceandobscurit...
Hume’s contribution to modern economics is normally thought of in terms of his early statement of th...
For a class of standard and widely-used preferences, a one-shot money injection in a standard matchi...
David Hume's (1955 ) analysis of how a change in the quantity of money can have a temporary effect o...
David Hume opposes banks and favors hoarding. The only bank he reluctantly approves of is a public, ...
The theory of money supply is less developed than that of money demand, largely because 19th-century...
This paper is intended to be a contribution to a historico-critical analysis of some recent theories...
Since the days of David Hume (1711–1776), if not even earlier, economists have been studying monetar...
Money is the life-blood of any modern market-oriented economy.The level of money supply - the quanti...
When Davidson and Weintraub (1973) first drew attention to the endogenous nature of the money creati...
The title of the paper alerts the reader to the fact that while the role of money in Keynes’s earlie...
Abstract: This paper examines the career and contribution of J. K. Gifford (1899-1987), the Foundati...
David Hume’s monetary theory has three standard yet inconsistent readings. As a forefather of the qu...
Monetary policy is a modern idea of which David Hume is generally considered a precursor. Moreover, ...
In his 1752 essay Of Money, David Hume proposes that a good policy for a magistrate would be to keep...
David Hume’s position in the history of economic thought has oscillated betweenprominenceandobscurit...
Hume’s contribution to modern economics is normally thought of in terms of his early statement of th...
For a class of standard and widely-used preferences, a one-shot money injection in a standard matchi...
David Hume's (1955 ) analysis of how a change in the quantity of money can have a temporary effect o...
David Hume opposes banks and favors hoarding. The only bank he reluctantly approves of is a public, ...
The theory of money supply is less developed than that of money demand, largely because 19th-century...
This paper is intended to be a contribution to a historico-critical analysis of some recent theories...
Since the days of David Hume (1711–1776), if not even earlier, economists have been studying monetar...
Money is the life-blood of any modern market-oriented economy.The level of money supply - the quanti...
When Davidson and Weintraub (1973) first drew attention to the endogenous nature of the money creati...
The title of the paper alerts the reader to the fact that while the role of money in Keynes’s earlie...
Abstract: This paper examines the career and contribution of J. K. Gifford (1899-1987), the Foundati...