Monetary Regimes of the Twentieth Century

Andrew Britton author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:4th Jun '01

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Monetary Regimes of the Twentieth Century cover

Summarises the monetary history of the world over the last 100 years.

This short historical account of monetary regimes since 1900 shows how the role of policy has changed, and how this has related to experience of inflation and the real economy, as well as to changes in political philosophies. The narrative concentrates on developments in America, Europe and Japan.Abstract economic theory may be timeless and potentially universal in its application, but macroeconomics has to be seen in its historical context. The nature of the policy regime, the behaviour of the economy and the beliefs of professional economists all interact, and influence each other. This short historical account of monetary regimes since 1900 shows how the role of policy has changed, and how this has related to experience of inflation and the real economy, as well as to changes in political philosophies. The narrative concentrates on developments in America, Europe and Japan from the era of the classical gold standard, via the era of policy intervention and reduced faith in the market to the present 'neo-liberal' regimes. The 'grand narrative' of the century is a journey 'to Utopia and back'. It is argued that no school of macroeconomics is right for all time; different theoretical models may be appropriate, for different periods and regimes.

'No one interested in twentieth-century economic performance in the major economies should miss this book.' History
'Andrew Britton has provided us with a concise account of changing economic policy regimes in the twentieth century.' English Historical Review

ISBN: 9780521801690

Dimensions: 236mm x 159mm x 24mm

Weight: 540g

260 pages