Among the thirteen original colonies, Pennsylvania was most successful at issuing paper money with only minimal effects on prices -- so much so that the colony's experience is sometimes seen as violating the classical quantity theory of money. Quantity theorists usually attribute this apparent anomaly to mismeasurement of the money stock. In contrast, I use data on money, prices, and real activity in Pennsylvania from 1723 to 1774 and for the United States as a whole from 1790 to 1850 (when the money stock is better measured) to show that the long-run behavior of money and prices is well explained by the quantity theory in both periods, despite the differences in institutional arrangements, once growth in monetized transactions is taken int...
In this paper cointegration analysis is used to examine the long−run relationship between money, pri...
The paper reconstructs the origins of the quantity theory of money and its applications. Against the...
T he quantity theory of money, dating back at least to the mid-sixteenth-century Spanish Scholastic ...
Colonial American currency has been cited as an example of the failure of the quantity theory. A cas...
In a long-standing controversy over monetary experiences in colonial America, the main substantive i...
A long-standing but unsettled controversy concerning monetary experiences in colonial America has re...
The quantity theory of money is applied to the paper money regimes of seven of the nine British Nort...
The efforts of some American colonials, who complained of monetary scarcity and advocated increased ...
EMPHASIS on empirical research has long been a hallmark of the American approach to the quantity the...
The old Quantity Theory of the Value of Money can be expressed as the "Equation of Exchange," MV=PT...
The theory of money supply is less developed than that of money demand, largely because 19th-century...
For an innocuous statement based on a trivial tautology, the quantity theory of money is sorely batt...
The aim of this paper is to analyze the state of the quantity theory in the United States prior to ...
We test the quantity theory of money (QTM) using a novel approach and a large new sample. We do not ...
The paper reconstructs the origins of the quantity theory of money and its applications. Against the...
In this paper cointegration analysis is used to examine the long−run relationship between money, pri...
The paper reconstructs the origins of the quantity theory of money and its applications. Against the...
T he quantity theory of money, dating back at least to the mid-sixteenth-century Spanish Scholastic ...
Colonial American currency has been cited as an example of the failure of the quantity theory. A cas...
In a long-standing controversy over monetary experiences in colonial America, the main substantive i...
A long-standing but unsettled controversy concerning monetary experiences in colonial America has re...
The quantity theory of money is applied to the paper money regimes of seven of the nine British Nort...
The efforts of some American colonials, who complained of monetary scarcity and advocated increased ...
EMPHASIS on empirical research has long been a hallmark of the American approach to the quantity the...
The old Quantity Theory of the Value of Money can be expressed as the "Equation of Exchange," MV=PT...
The theory of money supply is less developed than that of money demand, largely because 19th-century...
For an innocuous statement based on a trivial tautology, the quantity theory of money is sorely batt...
The aim of this paper is to analyze the state of the quantity theory in the United States prior to ...
We test the quantity theory of money (QTM) using a novel approach and a large new sample. We do not ...
The paper reconstructs the origins of the quantity theory of money and its applications. Against the...
In this paper cointegration analysis is used to examine the long−run relationship between money, pri...
The paper reconstructs the origins of the quantity theory of money and its applications. Against the...
T he quantity theory of money, dating back at least to the mid-sixteenth-century Spanish Scholastic ...