Category Macro
Medieval Monetary Thought
In my final class lecture this week on ancient and medieval economic thought, I discussed the work of Nicholas Oresme (1320 to 1382), a French Roman Catholic bishop who was also a philosopher, mathematician and an economic thinker. I found it interesting to see a career link between mathematics and economics so early on. More […]
My answers to Steven Landsburg’s two questions
Steven Landsburg asks two questions, in two related blog posts. I'm going to give my answers, taking the two questions in reverse order.
Research Project for Economics Student(s)
I don't have a comparative advantage in doing this, so why not see if I can find someone who does? If you are interested in Canadian monetary policy, and have basic econometric skills, you should be able to do this. And the answer you come up with might be interesting.
The Lucasian map is not the Hayekian territory
In defence of Lucas '72. Take any macroeconomic model of a market economy with inefficient aggregate fluctuations. In fact, take any economic model where something bad might happen. Assume that model is literally true. The people in that model are idiots.
Where’s the put?
People used to talk about a Greenspan put. It was a put on stocks. Now there's a Bernanke put, but it's a put on bonds. More precisely, it's a put on US government bonds, not on all bonds. Greece doesn't have its own central bank, and there isn't much of a Trichet put on Greek […]
What’s wrong with New Keynesian macroeconomics — an MM perspective
There are many things right with New Keynesian macroeconomics. It is a very good synthesis of many strands in Monetarist, Keynesian, and New Classical macroeconomics. But this post is not about what's right with New Keynesian macroeconomics. There are also many things wrong with current New Keynesian macroeconomics. New Keynesian macroeconomists are aware of many […]
The Euro, “less competitive countries”, and the neutrality of money
I'm not a great defender of the Euro. I think it was a mistake. But there's one argument against the Euro that I'm not happy with. It goes something like this: "Some of the Eurozone countries are just permanently less productive than others. The less productive countries just can't compete if they all share a […]
The Excess (constrained) Demand for Money
I noticed something a bit strange about the responses to my last post. For the last couple of years I have been writing lots posts saying (in various different ways) that recessions are always and everywhere a monetary phenomena. That Keynesian models do not make any sense except in a monetary exchange economy (which is […]
Net Worth, Wealth Effects and Recessions
According to a report by Bank of Nova Scotia economists Derek Holt and Karen Woods, Canadian businesses have begun to pull back on investment and accumulate inventories which may be a sign that the economy is about to head into another recession. After the surprise second quarter drop in GDP, if there is another drop, […]
A response to Paul Krugman
Paul Krugman has a lot in common with quasi-monetarists like me. [Update: I'm going to re-emphasise this. On reading Paul's post, it is now much clearer to me than it was in the past that there is a helluva lot in common between Paul Krugman and quasi-monetarism. So many economists just don't get the central […]
Recent Comments