Current Federal Reserve Policy Under the Lens of Economic History
Herausgeber: Humpage, Owen
Current Federal Reserve Policy Under the Lens of Economic History
Herausgeber: Humpage, Owen
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A retrospective on the Federal Reserve, these essays by leading historians and economists investigate how financial infrastructure shapes economic outcomes.
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A retrospective on the Federal Reserve, these essays by leading historians and economists investigate how financial infrastructure shapes economic outcomes.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 410
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Februar 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 816g
- ISBN-13: 9781107099098
- ISBN-10: 1107099099
- Artikelnr.: 42025736
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 410
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Februar 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 816g
- ISBN-13: 9781107099098
- ISBN-10: 1107099099
- Artikelnr.: 42025736
1. Introduction: context and content Owen Humpage; 2. The uses and misuses
of economic history Barry Eichengreen; 3. How and why the Fed must change
in its second century Allan H. Meltzer; 4. The lender of last resort:
lessons from the Fed's first 100 years Mark A. Carlson and David C.
Wheelock; 5. Close but not a central bank: the New York Clearing House and
issues of Clearing House loan certificates Jon Moen and Ellis Tallman; 6.
Central-bank independence: can it survive a crisis? Forrest Capie and
Geoffrey Wood; 7. Politics on the road to the US monetary union Peter L.
Rousseau; 8. US precedents for Europe Harold James; 9. The limits of
bimetallism Christopher M. Meissner; 10. The reserve pyramid and interbank
contagion during the Great Depression Kris Mitchener and Gary Richardson;
11. Would large-scale asset purchases have helped the 1930s? An
investigation of the responsiveness of bond yields from the 1930s to
changes in debt levels John Landon-Lane; 12. A tale of two countries and
two booms ¿ Canada and the United States in the 1920s and the 2000s: the
roles of monetary and financial stability policies Ehsan U. Choudhri and
Lawrence L. Schembri; 13. It is history, but it's no accident: differences
in residential mortgage markets in Canada and the United States Angela
Redish; 14. Monetary regimes and policy on a global scale: the oeuvre of
Michael D. Bordo Hugh Rockoff and Eugene N. White; 15. Reflections on the
history and future of central banking Michael D. Bordo.
of economic history Barry Eichengreen; 3. How and why the Fed must change
in its second century Allan H. Meltzer; 4. The lender of last resort:
lessons from the Fed's first 100 years Mark A. Carlson and David C.
Wheelock; 5. Close but not a central bank: the New York Clearing House and
issues of Clearing House loan certificates Jon Moen and Ellis Tallman; 6.
Central-bank independence: can it survive a crisis? Forrest Capie and
Geoffrey Wood; 7. Politics on the road to the US monetary union Peter L.
Rousseau; 8. US precedents for Europe Harold James; 9. The limits of
bimetallism Christopher M. Meissner; 10. The reserve pyramid and interbank
contagion during the Great Depression Kris Mitchener and Gary Richardson;
11. Would large-scale asset purchases have helped the 1930s? An
investigation of the responsiveness of bond yields from the 1930s to
changes in debt levels John Landon-Lane; 12. A tale of two countries and
two booms ¿ Canada and the United States in the 1920s and the 2000s: the
roles of monetary and financial stability policies Ehsan U. Choudhri and
Lawrence L. Schembri; 13. It is history, but it's no accident: differences
in residential mortgage markets in Canada and the United States Angela
Redish; 14. Monetary regimes and policy on a global scale: the oeuvre of
Michael D. Bordo Hugh Rockoff and Eugene N. White; 15. Reflections on the
history and future of central banking Michael D. Bordo.
1. Introduction: context and content Owen Humpage; 2. The uses and misuses
of economic history Barry Eichengreen; 3. How and why the Fed must change
in its second century Allan H. Meltzer; 4. The lender of last resort:
lessons from the Fed's first 100 years Mark A. Carlson and David C.
Wheelock; 5. Close but not a central bank: the New York Clearing House and
issues of Clearing House loan certificates Jon Moen and Ellis Tallman; 6.
Central-bank independence: can it survive a crisis? Forrest Capie and
Geoffrey Wood; 7. Politics on the road to the US monetary union Peter L.
Rousseau; 8. US precedents for Europe Harold James; 9. The limits of
bimetallism Christopher M. Meissner; 10. The reserve pyramid and interbank
contagion during the Great Depression Kris Mitchener and Gary Richardson;
11. Would large-scale asset purchases have helped the 1930s? An
investigation of the responsiveness of bond yields from the 1930s to
changes in debt levels John Landon-Lane; 12. A tale of two countries and
two booms ¿ Canada and the United States in the 1920s and the 2000s: the
roles of monetary and financial stability policies Ehsan U. Choudhri and
Lawrence L. Schembri; 13. It is history, but it's no accident: differences
in residential mortgage markets in Canada and the United States Angela
Redish; 14. Monetary regimes and policy on a global scale: the oeuvre of
Michael D. Bordo Hugh Rockoff and Eugene N. White; 15. Reflections on the
history and future of central banking Michael D. Bordo.
of economic history Barry Eichengreen; 3. How and why the Fed must change
in its second century Allan H. Meltzer; 4. The lender of last resort:
lessons from the Fed's first 100 years Mark A. Carlson and David C.
Wheelock; 5. Close but not a central bank: the New York Clearing House and
issues of Clearing House loan certificates Jon Moen and Ellis Tallman; 6.
Central-bank independence: can it survive a crisis? Forrest Capie and
Geoffrey Wood; 7. Politics on the road to the US monetary union Peter L.
Rousseau; 8. US precedents for Europe Harold James; 9. The limits of
bimetallism Christopher M. Meissner; 10. The reserve pyramid and interbank
contagion during the Great Depression Kris Mitchener and Gary Richardson;
11. Would large-scale asset purchases have helped the 1930s? An
investigation of the responsiveness of bond yields from the 1930s to
changes in debt levels John Landon-Lane; 12. A tale of two countries and
two booms ¿ Canada and the United States in the 1920s and the 2000s: the
roles of monetary and financial stability policies Ehsan U. Choudhri and
Lawrence L. Schembri; 13. It is history, but it's no accident: differences
in residential mortgage markets in Canada and the United States Angela
Redish; 14. Monetary regimes and policy on a global scale: the oeuvre of
Michael D. Bordo Hugh Rockoff and Eugene N. White; 15. Reflections on the
history and future of central banking Michael D. Bordo.