Recent financial instability has called into question the sufficiency of low inflation as a goal for monetary policy. This paper discusses inter-war literature bearing on this question. It begins with theories of the cycle based on the quantity theory, and their policy prescription of price stability supported by lender of last resort activities in the event of crises, arguing that their neglect of fluctuations in investment was a weakness. Other approaches are then taken up, particularly Austrian theory which stressed the banking system's capacity to generate relative price distortions and forced saving. This theory was discredited by its association with nihilistic policy prescriptions during the Great Depression. Nevertheless, its core i...
After summarizing the salient monetary characteristics of the German inflation of 1914 - 1923, the a...
During the 1990s, a consensus consolidated among policy makers and economists worldwide regarding th...
This study investigates the equilibrium demand for narrowly defined monetary aggregate during the Gr...
The historical account of American economic conditions before the Great Crash in A. D. Gayer's Monet...
This paper examines the international monetary system between the Wars. It confirms the generality o...
The interwar period was marked by the end of the classical gold standard regime and new levels of ma...
During the Second World War, prominent economists in Britain and the USA contributed to the formulat...
The price level, relative prices and economic stability: aspects of the interwar debate by David Lai...
This dissertation consists of a model of the monetary policy process, and an application of the mode...
The article reconstructs the opinions expressed by academic economists in front of the Radcliffe Com...
Federal Reserve policy in the early postwar years has frequently been described as an "engine of inf...
The literature has underlined the existence of widespread economic regularities in the stabilization...
Was the UK price level more stable and predictable before World War I or after\ud World War II? We a...
After summarizing the salient monetary characteristics of the German inflation of 1914 - 1923, the a...
During the 1990s, a consensus consolidated among policy makers and economists worldwide regarding th...
This study investigates the equilibrium demand for narrowly defined monetary aggregate during the Gr...
The historical account of American economic conditions before the Great Crash in A. D. Gayer's Monet...
This paper examines the international monetary system between the Wars. It confirms the generality o...
The interwar period was marked by the end of the classical gold standard regime and new levels of ma...
During the Second World War, prominent economists in Britain and the USA contributed to the formulat...
The price level, relative prices and economic stability: aspects of the interwar debate by David Lai...
This dissertation consists of a model of the monetary policy process, and an application of the mode...
The article reconstructs the opinions expressed by academic economists in front of the Radcliffe Com...
Federal Reserve policy in the early postwar years has frequently been described as an "engine of inf...
The literature has underlined the existence of widespread economic regularities in the stabilization...
Was the UK price level more stable and predictable before World War I or after\ud World War II? We a...
After summarizing the salient monetary characteristics of the German inflation of 1914 - 1923, the a...
During the 1990s, a consensus consolidated among policy makers and economists worldwide regarding th...
This study investigates the equilibrium demand for narrowly defined monetary aggregate during the Gr...