
The global financial crisis, which began in August 2007 and continues with no end in sight, has thrown macroeconomics into turmoil. This book challenges the current mainstream macroeconomic tradition, rejecting the view that whatever shock hits the economy, the response is an automatic and rapid move towards market equilibrium that pulls the economy out of any kind of difficult situation.Engaging with the structural problems of our times, especially in the context of the global financial crisis, the essays not just engage with Keynesian economics, but also adapt and go beyond it as per the requirements of present conditions. The essays apply the 'Keynesian spirit' to cover four broad areas: effective demand in the crisis, economic theory in the context of world recession, money and international liquidity, and finance and international economic disorder. Suggesting an alternative future of macroeconomics, this volume inspires and provokes new economic thinking that is needed for the world today.
This volume investigates the failure of mainstream macroeconomic models to account for the persistent instability of the global financial crisis and proposes a renewed Keynesian framework to address modern economic disorder. The authors, Maria Cristina Marcuzzo, Perry Mehrling, and Toshiaki Hirai, utilize historical economic theory and contemporary financial analysis to critique the assumption of automatic market equilibrium. By synthesizing classical Keynesian principles with current structural realities, the text argues for a more adaptive approach to policy-making and international liquidity management.
What You Will Find
Experts recognize this collection as a significant contribution to heterodox economic literature, particularly for its focus on the intersection of monetary theory and financial instability. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a rigorous challenge to standard equilibrium-based macroeconomic models.
Page Count:
352
Publication Date:
2013-05-05
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0198092113
ISBN-13:
9780198092117
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