Bibliographic Information

Contemporary post Keynesian analysis

edited by L. Randall Wray, Mathew Forstater

Edward Elgar, c2004

Available at  / 32 libraries

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Note

"This volume collects a number of papers presented at the 7th International Post Keynesian Summer School and Workshop during the summer of 2002 at the University of Missouri, Kansas City"

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Original articles by leading scholars of post Keynesian economics make up this authoritative collection. Current topics of the greatest interest are covered, such as: perspectives on current economic policy; post Keynesian approaches to monetary theory and policy; economic development, growth and inflation; Kaleckian perspectives on distribution; economic methodology; and history of heterodox economic theory. The contributors explore a variety of prevailing issues including: wage bargaining and monetary policy in the EMU; the meaning of money in the internet age; stability conditions for small open economies; and economic policies of sustainable development in countries transitioning to a market economy. Other enduring matters are examined through the lens of economic theorists - Kaleckian dynamics and evolutionary life cycles; a comparison between Keynes's and Hayek's economic theories; and an analysis of the power of the firm based on the work of Joan Robinson, to name a few. Students and scholars of post Keynesian economics and those with an interest in other heterodox schools of thought will find this enlightening volume a valuable addition to their reading.

Table of Contents

Contents: Part I: Post Keynesian Perspectives on Current Economic Policy 1. Wage Bargaining and Monetary Policy in the EMU: A Post Keynesian Perspective 2. Public Debt and Private Wealth 3. Exploring the Economics of Euphoria: Using Post Keynesian Tools to Understand the US Bubble and its Aftermath Part II: Post Keynesian Approaches to Monetary Theory and Policy 4. Money in the Time of the Internet: Electronic Money and its Effects 5. Understanding the Implications of Money Being a Social Convention 6. Demand Management and the Monetary System: Do Currency Boards and Currency Unions Spell the End for Keynesian Policy? Part III: Post Keynesian Contributions on Development, Growth and Inflation 7. Stability Conditions for a Small Open Economy 8. Mexico: Strong Currency and Weak Economy 9. Economic Policy of Sustainable Development in the Countries of Transition Towards a Market Economy 10. Allied, German and Latin Perspectives on Inflation Part IV: Kaleckian Perspectives on Growth, Inflation and Distribution 11. Commodity Prices and the Dynamics of Inflation in Australia 12. Innovation and Investment in Capitalist Economies, 1870-2000: Kaleckian Dynamics and Evolutionary Life Cycles 13. Kalecki's Theory of Income Distribution: The Answer to a Maiden's Prayer? Part V: Methodology 14. On the Relation Between Individual and Collective Beliefs: A Comparison Between Keynes's and Heyek's Economic Theories 15. A Keynesian Critique of Recent Applications of Risk-Sensitive Control Theory in Macroeconomics 16. Presenting 'Demi-Regularities' of Pricing Behaviour: The Need for Triangulation Part VI: Issues in the History of Thought 17. Analysing and Fighting Recession with Reference to Keynes 18. From Say's Law to Keynes, from Keynes to Walras's Law: Some Ironies in the History of Economic Thought 19. Power of the Firm and New Mercantilism: An Analysis Based on Joan Robinson's Thought Index

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