Alan
Rabin argues that new Keynesian and new classical macroeconomics,
which have dominated the literature and textbooks, have crowded the
monetary-disequilibrium hypothesis, or orthodox monetarism, off the
intellectual stage. Trying to remedy this imbalance, the author
concentrates on what he judges to be the essentials of monetary
theory.
Emphasizing money’s fundamental role in lubricating
exchanges and promoting economic coordination, Alan Rabin argues that
when the lubricant goes awry, so do the processes being lubricated.
Monetary disequilibrium can have repercussions that last months and
even years.
The book presents the author’s interpretation of
Yeager’s enormous contributions to monetary theory, especially his
development of monetary-disequilibrium theory, while also building on
the contributions of Patinkin, Clower, Leijonhufvud, Barro and
Grossman, and Laidler .
A unique hybrid of treatise and graduate
text, Monetary Theory fills a tremendous void in the current
literature and will be of interest to scholars and students of
monetary theory and economic thought.
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