Category Archives: monetary policy

Mark Carney chosen to head the Bank of England: Bold Decision Big Challenges Ahead

The Decision of the British government to appoint the Canadian central banker Mark Carney as the new Governor of the Bank of England , the crown jewel of central banks, is a bold decision by Chancellor George Osborne and PM … Continue reading

Posted in austerity, Canada, European debt crisis, European unemployment, fiscal policy, monetary policy, quantitative easing, treasury view, U.K. economy, Uncategorized, unemployment | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Poli 610:Macro-economic theory and policy after Keynes and the crash of 2008

Pol. 610  Macro-economic policy-making after Keynes Concordia University fall, 2012 Prof. H. Chorney tel. 848 2424 ext.2106  e mail Chorney@alcor.concordia.ca Office hours tba This course is an intensive examination of macro-economic policy-making and macro-economic theory in the light of recent … Continue reading

Posted in austerity, business cycles, Canada, classical economics, deficit hysteria, deficits and debt, European debt crisis, European unemployment, Federal Reserve, fiscal policy, France politics+economy, free trade and globalization, full employment, Hayek, J.M.Keynes, Keynesian multiplier, labour market clearing, Milton Friedman and NAIRU, monetary policy, natural rate of inflation, quantitative easing, quantity theory of money, Schumpeter, U.K. economy, U.S., Uncategorized, unemployment | Leave a comment

Supreme Court upholds Obama Care; Europe continues to debate how to rescue economy from bond market blackmail

The Supreme Court in a 5 to 4 decision with Chief Justice Roberts siding with the majority has upheld most of the Affordable Care Act by ruling its provisions constitutional under the federal powers of taxation. Four of the liberal … Continue reading

Posted in austerity, deficit hysteria, deficits and debt, European debt crisis, European financial stability fund, European unemployment, France politics+economy, Greek sovereign debt crisis, Italian debt crisis, monetary policy, quantitative easing, Uncategorized, unemployment | 1 Comment

Alvin Hansen, the right amount of money, deficit finance and the search for full employment.

Alvin  Hansen establishes early in his work, Monetary Theory and Fiscal policy that the power to create money is a force to be reckoned with. In the nineteenth century in the U.S.the private banks at the behest of their business … Continue reading

Posted in austerity, business cycles, classical economics, deficit hysteria, deficits and debt, Federal Reserve, fiscal policy, full employment, monetary policy, quantitative easing, quantity theory of money, treasury view, U.S., Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | 4 Comments

Monetary theory and fiscal policy:the insights of Alvin Hansen

One of the greatest interpreters of J.M.Keynes was the American economist Alvin Hansen whose A Guide to Keynes became a staple for beginning macro students during the 1950s and sixties. Hansen made several important errors of interpretation and the IS LM … Continue reading

Posted in austerity, business cycles, classical economics, Federal Reserve, fiscal policy, full employment, J.M.Keynes, Milton Friedman and NAIRU, monetary policy, quantity theory of money, U.S., Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Currency unions and balance of payments: what lies behind the Greek predicament

One of the relatively unexplored aspects of the Greek debt crisis involves balance of payments issues that are buried beneath the terms of trade upon which Greece entered the European union. Much has been said and written about failure to … Continue reading

Posted in austerity, balance of payments, classical economics, deficit hysteria, deficits and debt, European debt crisis, fiscal policy, full employment, Greek sovereign debt crisis, J.M.Keynes, monetary policy, quantity theory of money, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Keynes versus the monetarists 2

 Originally posted  SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2010 Keynes versus monetarists 2 Some additional distinctions : Keynes&monetaristsKeynes’ theory of investment depends upon what he calls the marginal efficiency of capital. He defines the mec as follows: that rate of discount from a … Continue reading

Posted in classical economics, deficits and debt, full employment, J.M.Keynes, labour market clearing, Milton Friedman and NAIRU, monetary policy, quantity theory of money, Schumpeter, unemployment | Leave a comment

Keynes versus the monetarists 1

Keynes versus the monetarists 1 A Quick Guide to Keynes and the monetarists  originally posted Dec 2, 2005 on my blogspot blog.Keynes: 1. Rejects Say’s law of markets that supply creates its own demand; he also doesn’t accept Walras’s law … Continue reading

Posted in business cycles, classical economics, deficits and debt, full employment, J.M.Keynes, Keynesian multiplier, labour market clearing, Milton Friedman and NAIRU, monetary policy, unemployment | Leave a comment

Papandreou reverses position:no referendum, confidence vote takes place this evening

Premier George Papandreou after coming under heavy pressure from European leaders and the perhaps temporary desertion of several of his Parliamentary colleagues  reversed his position on holding a referendum. In exchange, he may have persuaded some of the opposition party … Continue reading

Posted in austerity, business cycles, classical economics, deficit hysteria, deficits and debt, European debt crisis, European financial stability fund, Greek sovereign debt crisis, J.M.Keynes, monetary policy, quantitative easing, treasury view, Uncategorized, unemployment | Tagged | Leave a comment

The Deficit:Hysteria and the Current Crisis

DeficitPapers-Chapter 2 – This essay  originally written in 1983-84 and the introduction to it (1992) was reprinted in my book with Phillip Hansen Toward a Humanist Political Economy published in 1992. I am including it here because it contains analysis … Continue reading

Posted in austerity, business cycles, Canada, classical economics, deficit hysteria, deficits and debt, European debt crisis, Federal Reserve, fiscal policy, full employment, J.M.Keynes, monetary policy, quantitative easing, U.S., Uncategorized, unemployment | 2 Comments