LEADER 05024nam 22006133u 450 001 9910462132603321 005 20210117154732.0 035 $a(CKB)2670000000169198 035 $a(EBL)876180 035 $a(OCoLC)244017283 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC876180 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC350902 035 $a(Au-PeEL)EBL350902 035 $a(EXLCZ)992670000000169198 100 $a20131014d2008|||| u|| | 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurcnu|||||||| 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 12$aA Course in Monetary Economics$b[electronic resource] $eSequential Trade, Money, and Uncertainty 205 $a1st ed. 210 $aHoboken $cWiley$d2008 215 $a1 online resource (424 p.) 300 $aDescription based upon print version of record. 311 $a0-631-21566-2 327 $aA COURSE IN MONETARY ECONOMICS; Contents; Preface; Part I: Introduction to Monetary Economics; 1 Overview; 1.1 Money, Inflation, and Output: Some Empirical Evidence; 1.2 The Policy Debate; 1.3 Modeling Issues; 1.4 Background Material; 1.4.1 The Fisherian diagram; 1.4.2 Efficiency and distortive taxes; 1.4.3 Asset pricing; 2 Money in the Utility Function; 2.1 Motivating the Money in the Utility Function Approach: The Single-period, Single-agent Problem; 2.2 The Multi-period, Single-agent Problem; 2.3 Equilibrium with Constant Money Supply 327 $a2.4 The Social and Private Cost for Accumulating Real Balances 2.5 Administrative Ways of Getting to the Optimum; 2.6 Once and for All Changes in M; 2.7 Change in the Rate of Money Supply Change: Technical Aspects; 2.8 Change in the Rate of Money Supply Change: Economics; 2.9 Steady-state Equilibrium (SSE); 2.10 Transition from One Steady State to Another; 2.11 Regime Changes; 2.12 Introducing Physical Capital and Bonds; 2.13 The Golden Rule and the Modified Golden Rule; Appendix 2A A dynamic programming example; 3 The Welfare Cost of Inflation in a Growing Economy 327 $a3.1 Steady-state Equilibrium in a Growing Economy 3.2 Generalizing the Model in Chapter 2 to the Case of Growth; 3.3 Money Substitutes; Appendix 3A A dynamic programming formulation; 4 Government; 4.1 The Revenues from Printing Money; 4.1.1 Steady-state revenues; 4.1.2 Out of the steady-state revenues; 4.1.3 The present value of revenues; Appendix 4A Non-steady-state equilibrium; 4.2 The Government's "Budget Constraint"; 4.2.1 Monetary and fiscal policy: Who moves first?; 4.2.2 The fiscal approach to the price level 327 $a4.3 Policy in the Absence of Perfect Commitment: A Positive Theory of Inflation5 More Explicit Models of Money; 5.1 A Cash-in-advance Model; 5.1.1 A two-goods model; 5.1.2 An analogous real economy; 5.1.3 Money super-neutrality in a one-good model; 5.2 An Overlapping Generations Model; 5.3 A Baumol-Tobin Type Model; Appendix 5A; 6 Optimal Fiscal and Monetary Policy; 6.1 The Second-best Allocation; 6.2 The Second Best and the Friedman Rule; 6.3 Smoothing Tax Distortions; 6.4 A Shopping Time Model; 7 Money and the Business Cycle: Does Money Matter? 327 $a7.1 VAR and Impulse Response Functions: An Example7.2 Using VAR Impulse Response Analysis to Assess the Money-Output Relationship; 7.3 Specification Search; 7.4 Variance Decomposition; 8 Sticky Prices in a Demand-satisfying Model; 9 Sticky Prices with Optimal Quantity Choices; 9.1 The Production to Order Case; 9.2 The Production to Market Case; 10 Flexible Prices; 10.1 Lucas' Confusion Hypothesis; 10.2 Limited Participation; Part II: An Introduction to the Economics of Uncertainty; 11 Preliminaries; 11.1 Trade in Contingent Commodities; 11.2 Effficient Risk Allocation 327 $a12 Does Insurance Require Risk Aversion? 330 $aMonetary Economics and Sequential Trade is an insightful introduction to the advanced topics in monetary economics. Accessible to students who have mastered the diagrammatic tools of economics, it discusses real issues with a variety of modeling alternatives, allowing for a direct comparison of the implications of the different models. The exposition is clear and logical, providing a solid foundation in monetary theory and the techniques of economic modeling. The text is rooted in the author's years of teaching and research, and will be highly suitable for monetary economics courses in both 606 $aMonetary policy 606 $aMoney - Mathematical models 606 $aMoney 606 $aUncertainty - Mathematical models 608 $aElectronic books. 615 4$aMonetary policy. 615 4$aMoney - Mathematical models. 615 4$aMoney. 615 4$aUncertainty - Mathematical models. 676 $a332.4 676 $a332.4/6 676 $a332.40151 676 $a332.46 700 $aEden$b Benjamin$0918225 801 0$bAU-PeEL 801 1$bAU-PeEL 801 2$bAU-PeEL 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910462132603321 996 $aA Course in Monetary Economics$92058857 997 $aUNINA LEADER 02722nam 2200397 n 450 001 996389986803316 005 20200824121211.0 035 $a(CKB)4940000000098953 035 $a(EEBO)2240913252 035 $a(UnM)99826540e 035 $a(UnM)99826540 035 $a(EXLCZ)994940000000098953 100 $a19941216d1698 uy | 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurbn||||a|bb| 200 04$aThe whole art of navigation$b[electronic resource]$ein five books. Containing I. The principles of navigation and geometry. II. The principles of astronomy. III. The practical part of navigation. IV. The description and use of such instruments, as are useful in taking observations at sea, and therein, the use of a large new sinical quadrant, performing with more exactness than any yet extant, all questions relating to navigation; rendered so easie as to be understood by the meanest capacity. V. Useful tables in navigation, wherein those of the suns and stars declination and right ascension, &c. are newly calculated. The whole delivered in a very easie and familiar stile, by way of dialogue between a tutor and his scholar. By Captaine Daniel New-house 210 $aLondon $cprinted for Richard Mount, at the Postern on Tower-Hill$dMDCXCVIII. [1698] 215 $a[22], 199, 100-124, 121-152, 253-311, [1]; 128, 113-131, [1] p., plates $cill 300 $aWith additional engraved title page. 300 $a"A table of amplitudes ortive and occasive" has half title; register and pagination are continuous. Book V has separate pagination and continuous register. "A table of the miles of east and west, answering to the degrees of longitude in the fourth rumb" and "A table for changing the degrees and minutes of east and west into miles", "A table for reducing miles of east and west into degrees of longitude", "Loxodromiques, or traverse-tables of miles, with the difference of longitudes and latitudes", and "A table of the latitudes and longitudes of the principal ports, harbours, capes, and islands, in most of the known parts of the world" have half title, continuous register and pagination. 300 $aThe maps are plates; engraved title page has letterpress material on recto. 300 $aReproduction of the original in the Trinity College (Cambridge, Eng.) Library. 330 $aeebo-0120 606 $aNavigation$vEarly works to 1800 606 $aAstronomy$vEarly works to 1800 615 0$aNavigation 615 0$aAstronomy 700 $aNewhouse$b Daniel$01006673 801 0$bCu-RivES 801 1$bCu-RivES 801 2$bCStRLIN 801 2$bWaOLN 906 $aBOOK 912 $a996389986803316 996 $aThe whole art of navigation$92416916 997 $aUNISA