
Financial Assets, Debt and Liquidity Crises
A Keynesian Approach
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
Financial Assets, Debt and Liquidity Crises
A Keynesian Approach
About this book
The macroeconomic development of most major industrial economies is characterised by boom-bust cycles. Normally such boom-bust cycles are driven by specific sectors of the economy. In the financial meltdown of the years 2007–9 it was the credit sector and the real-estate sector that were the main driving forces. This book takes on the challenge of interpreting and modelling this meltdown. In doing so it revives the traditional Keynesian approach to the financial-real economy interaction and the business cycle, extending it in several important ways. In particular, it adopts the Keynesian view of a hierarchy of markets and introduces a detailed financial sector into the traditional Keynesian framework. The approach of the book goes beyond the currently dominant paradigm based on the representative agent, market clearing and rational economic agents. Instead it proposes an economy populated with heterogeneous, rationally bounded agents attempting to cope with disequilibria in various markets.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Financial Assets, Debt and Liquidity Crises
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Notation
- Preface
- 1 Financial crises and the macroeconomy
- Part I The non-linear dynamics of credit and debt default
- Part II Theoretical foundations for structural macroeconometric model building
- Part III Debt crises: firms, banks and the housing markets
- References
- Index
- Untitled