Sign in
Sign in
Recover your password.
A password will be e-mailed to you.
Browsing Category
Monetary System
Goldilocks, the Crash, and the Perfect Fiscal Storm
Randall Wray revisits the Clintonian Goldilocks economy to find the seeds of the Global Financial Crisis, using the sectoral balance approach.
What are the differences between QE1, QE2 and QE3?
Last week, when discussing what QE3 could look like I indicated that were the Federal Reserve to start expanding its balance sheet, QE3 will see interest rate caps after a pause and period of reflection. Let me address the differences…
Can Obama cut the deficit and have job growth too?
Stephanie Kelton demonstrates that as long as unemployment remains high, the deficit will remain high. Here’s the formula: Spending creates income. Income creates sales. Sales create jobs. If you think you can cut the deficit without…
Hoenig: Restrict bank activities to core services
Below are extracts of a paper formulated by Thomas Hoenig, the President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, to better regulate the US Financial sector. His overarching aim is to isolate core banking activities that are protected by…
The Euro system contains a serious design flaw
The primary difference for Euroland to sovereign issuers is that the Euro can only be created by the ECB – it is the issuer of the currency. The governments of Ireland, Greece, Spain, Germany, etc. are the USERS of the currency. The…
Operation Twist
Marshall Auerback and Rob Paenteau explain a method the Fed might use to target interest rates further out on the yield curve.
How to become virtuous and save more
In this column, Michael Pettis uses Germany and Spain as examples of the interplay between savings rates, trade balances and economic policy. Looking at this interplay, it turns out that domestic policies by the German government can…
To repeat, the ECB is not conducting a stealth bailout
Karl Whelan finds that a recent analysis by Hans-Werner Sinn on an alleged ECB bailout is incorrect. Willem Buiter is now out with a commentary on the same issue corroborating Whelan’s view. Below are the bullet points he highlights in his…
The ECB is not conducting a stealth bailout
In a recent column at VoxEU , Hans Werner Sinn of the prestigious Institute for Economic Research claims that the German Bundesbank is effectively propping up banks across the Eurozone’s periphery. He adds that doing this risks a major…
Rajan: Easy money will not create sustainable growth
Raghuram Rajan, one of the few mainstream economists to warn of the US housing bubble, has recently written a piece which is highly critical of US monetary policy. His view, one that I share, is that US policy favours debtors over savers in…