Central banks and financial markets the declining power of US monetary policy

In this important and interesting book, Hasan Cömert demonstrates convincingly, through institutional analysis and econometrics, that central banks lost control of the price and quantity of credit starting two decades before this celebration. He shows that central banks themselves, through their sup...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cömert, Hasan
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cheltenham Edward Elgar Pub. Ltd 2013
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Collection: Edward Elgar eBook Archive - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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Summary:In this important and interesting book, Hasan Cömert demonstrates convincingly, through institutional analysis and econometrics, that central banks lost control of the price and quantity of credit starting two decades before this celebration. He shows that central banks themselves, through their support of financial market deregulation and globalization, helped bring about both monetary policy impotence and the global crisis. Its a must-read. James Crotty, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, USIn the wake of the financial crisis of 2008, there has been increasing debate over the appropriate role of central banks in mitigating economic disaster. This timely volume combines detailed historical and econometric analyses to explore the profound changes that occurred within the US financial system from the 1980s to the present, and shows how these changes have affected the US economy.
1. Introduction -- 2. The co-evolution of monetary policy and the US financial system : declining effectiveness of US monetary policy -- 3. Decreasing balance sheet constraints on financial firms -- 4. Weakening relationship between the federal funds rate and long-term interest rates : decreasing effectiveness of monetary policy in the US -- 5. Did the Fed create the US financial crisis of 2008? -- 6. Concluding remarks
Hasan Cömert demonstrates how dramatic shifts in the financial system undermined the ability of the US Fed ...
This argument, supported by institutional analysis and econometric tests, has two explosive implications: first, Federal Reserve policy did not cause the subprime crisis; second, central banks no longer have instruments for intervening in economies whose growth they are now expected to restore. Anyone concerned with the future of global capitalism should consider Cömerts work as a matter of urgency. Gary Dymski, Leeds University Business School, UK and University of California, Riverside, USPrior to the outbreak of the financial crisis in 2008, mainstream economists celebrated a "New Consensus" on monetary policy in which independent central banks were assumed able to bring about a "Great Moderation" of low inflation and high economic growth by manipulating short-term interest rates.
Hasan Cömert's timely book reaches us during the prolonged conditions of the global great recession. By providing a thorough and detailed econometric analysis of the institutional and historical developments of the hegemonic leader of capitalism, Cömert reveals that the simplistic monetary policy tools of the central banks of the so-called "modern great moderation" era are over, and we are now at the crossroads of a paradigmatic shift. Cömert's book suggests itself as one of the first leading examples of this shift. Erinç Yeldan, Yasar University, TurkeyThis provocative book shows that the Federal Reserve has, in the last four decades, gradually lost influence over credit and financial markets.
Physical Description:xii, 207 p ill
ISBN:9781781004050
9781781004043