1st Edition

Liquidity Preference and Monetary Economies

By Fernando J. Cardim de Carvalho Copyright 2015
    168 Pages
    by Routledge

    168 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    The 2008 international crisis has revived the interest in Keynes’s theories and, in particular, on Minsky’s models of financial fragility. The core proposition of these theories is that money plays an essential role in modern economies, which is usually neglected in other approaches. This is Keynes’s liquidity preference theory, which is also the foundation for Minsky’s model, a theory that has been largely forgotten in recent years.



    This book looks at liquidity preference theory and its most important problems, showing how one should understand the role of money in modern monetary economies. It develops Keynes’s and Minsky’s financial view of money, relating it to the process of capital accumulation, the determination of effective demand and the theory of output, and employment as a whole.



    Building on the author’s significant body of work in the field, this book delves into a broad range of topics allowing the general reader to understand propositions that have been mistreated in the literature including Keynes and the concept of monetary production economy; uncertainty, expectations and money; short and long period; liquidity preference theory as a theory of asset pricing under uncertainty; asset prices and capital accumulation; Keynes’s version of the principle of effective demand; and the role of macroeconomic policy. It will be essential reading for all students and scholars of Post-Keynesian economics.

    Introduction Chapter 1: Monetary Economies Part 1 Money and Uncertainty Chapter 2: Uncertainty and Liquidity Preference Chapter 3: Liquidity Premium, Liquidity Risk and Liquidity Preference Part 2 Banks and Money Supply Chapter 4: Keynes and the Endogeneity of Money Chapter 5: Liquidity Preference of Banks and Crises Part 3: Financial Systems Chapter 6: Aggregate Savings, Finance and Investment Chapter 7: Financial Fragility and Systemic Crises Part 4: Macroeconomic Policy Chapter 8: Economic Policy for Monetary Economies Conclusion Chapter 9: Liquidity Preference Theory and the Great Recession

    Biography

    Fernando J. Cardim de Carvalho is Emeritus Professor at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.