Getting it wrong [electronic resource] : how faulty monetary statistics undermine the Fed, the financial system, and the economy / William A. Barnett.

Blame for the recent financial crisis and subsequent recession has commonly been assigned to everyone from Wall Street firms to individual homeowners. It has been widely argued that the crisis and recession were caused by "greed" and the failure of mainstream economics. In this book, leadi...

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full Text (via MIT Press)
Main Author: Barnett, William A.
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, ©2012.
Subjects:
Table of Contents:
  • Foreword: Macroeconomics as a Science; Preface; Acknowledgments; I. The Facts without the Math; 1. Introduction; 1.1 Whose Greed?; 1.2 The Great Moderation; 1.3 The Maestro; 1.4 Paradoxes; 1.5 Conclusion; 2. Monetary Aggregation Theory; 2.1 Adding Apples and Oranges; 2.2 Dual Price Aggregation; 2.3 Financial Aggregation; 2.4 The Commerce Department and the Department of Labor; 2.5 The Major Academic Players; 2.6 Banks throughout the World; 2.7 Mechanism Design: Why Is the Fed Getting It Wrong?; 2.8 Conclusion; 3. The History; 3.1 The 1960s and 1970s.
  • 3.2 The Monetarist Experiment: October 1979 to September 19823.3 The End of the Monetarist Experiment: 1983 to 1984; 3.4 The Rise of Risk-Adjustment Concerns: 1984 to 1993; 3.5 The Y2K Computer Bug: 1999 to 2000; 3.6 Conclusion; 4. Current Policy Problems; 4.1 European ECB Data; 4.2 The Most Recent Data: Would You Believe This?; 4.3 The Current Crisis; 4.4 Conclusion; 5. Summary and Conclusion; II. Mathematical Appendixes; A. Monetary Aggregation Theory under Perfect Certainty; A.1 Introduction; A.2 Consumer Demand for Monetary Assets; A.3 Supply of Monetary Assets by Financial Intermediaries.
  • A.4 Demand for Monetary Assets by Manufacturing FirmsA. 5 Aggregation Theory under Homogeneity; A.6 Index- Number Theory under Homogeneity; A.7 Aggregation Theory without Homotheticity; A.8 Index- Number Theory under Nonhomogeneity; A.9 Aggregation over Consumers and Firms; A.10 Technical Change; A.11 Value Added; A.12 Macroeconomic and General Equilibrium Theory; A.13 Aggregation Error from Simple- Sum Aggregation; A.14 Conclusion; B. Discounted Capital Stock of Money with Risk Neutrality; B.1 Introduction; B.2 Economic Stock of Money (ESM) under Perfect Foresight; B.3 Extension to Risk.
  • B.4 CE and Simple Sum as Special Cases of the ESMB. 5 Measurement of the Economic Stock of Money; C. Multilateral Aggregation within a Multicountry Economic Union; C.1 Introduction; C.2 Definition of Variables; C.3 Aggregation within Countries; C.4 Aggregation over Countries; C.5 Special Cases; C.6 Interest Rate Aggregation; C.7 Divisia Second Moments; C.8 Conclusion; D. Extension to Risk Aversion; D.1 Introduction; D.2 Consumer Demand for Monetary Assets; D.3 The Perfect- Certainty Case; D.4 The New Generalized Divisia Index; D.5 The CCAPM Special Case; D.6 The Magnitude of the Adjustment.
  • D.7 Intertemporal NonseparabilityD. 8 Consumer's Nonseparable Optimization Problem; D.9 Extended Risk- Adjusted User Cost of Monetary Assets; D.10 Conclusion; E. The Middle Ground: Understanding Divisia Aggregation; E.1 Introduction; E.2 The Divisia Index; E.3 The Weights; E.4 Is It a Quantity or Price Index?; E.5 Stocks versus Flows; E.6 Conclusion; References; Index.