New light on Lauchlin Currie's monetary economics in the new deal and beyond /
The Editor's introduction to this special issue reviews the contributions of Lauchlin Currie (1902-1993) to monetary theory and policy over the six decades of his professional career. This is followed by 27 of Currie's hitherto unpublished papers and memoranda. These include Currie's...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Bradford, England :
Emerald Group Pub.,
©2004.
|
Colección: | Journal of Economic Studies.
v. 31. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Editorial advisory board; Editor's introduction; Lauchlin Currie: a biographical sketch; Lauchlin Currie's memoirs Chapter II: The Harvard years[1]; Lauchlin Currie's memoirs Chapter III: The New Deal; PhD thesis: "Bank assets and banking theory", Harvard University, January 1931[1]; PhD thesis Chapter IX: Bank assets and the business cycle[1]; PhD thesis Chapter XII: Conclusion; 1934 letter to FDR; Interview with Lauchlin Currie on the Great Depression[1]; Desirable changes in the administration of the Federal Reserve System[1]; The relation of government to monetary control[1]
- The objectives of the Banking Bill of 1935Federal income-increasing expenditures, 1932-1935[1]; Some monetary aspects of the excess reserves problem; Public spending as a means to recovery; Recent developments in international monetary relations[1]; Stabilization of purchasing power through the use of public credit[1]; Would a further expansion of money be "injurious"?; Proposals relating to the capital inflow problem; The decline in the Federal contribution to the growth in community expenditures; The economic distribution of demand deposits[1]
- Speech at the Chicago Forum of the American Institute of BankingSome aspects of business and banking developments in 1936 and 1937; The 100 percent reserve plan; The White House, Washington, Memorandum for the President: Personal; The White House, Washington, Memorandum for the President; Money and savings: how definitions affect policies[1]; Organization for monetary policy formulation[1]; A new hypothesis on the demand for money: the "accounting" motive and banks' costs[1]