
The Grumpy Economist: What’s wrong with macro?
06 Dec 2014 Leave a comment
in business cycles, fiscal policy, global financial crisis (GFC), great recession, macroeconomics, monetary economics, politics - USA Tags: Macroeconomics
Janet Yellen on the influence of Milton Friedman on contemporary monetary policy
25 Nov 2014 Leave a comment

Financial regulation and financial crisis | Sam Peltzman Oct 19, 2014
17 Nov 2014 Leave a comment
in economics of regulation, global financial crisis (GFC), macroeconomics, monetary economics, Sam Peltzman Tags: economics of regulation, financial crises, offsetting behaviour, Sam Peltzman
Friday graph: why Ireland is broke
31 Oct 2014 5 Comments
in fiscal policy, global financial crisis (GFC), macroeconomics, monetary economics Tags: GFC, Ireland
I am planning to blog on why the Irish economic crisis of recent years was caused exclusively by government, and in particular, government responses that made an ordinary recession into a depression
Roger Kerr, New Zealand Business Roundtable Executive Director
This is a graph courtesy of the Institute of Public Affairs in Melbourne, an impressive Australian thinktank.
It comes from the Irish government’s own 140 page ‘National Recovery Plan‘ published last week.
It is amazing reading.
- From 2000 to 2009 average public sector salaries increased 59%
- In 2004, 34% of income earners were exempt from tax. In 2010, 45% were exempt
- In 2007 property taxes generated 6.7 billion euros. In 2010 that figure will be 1.6 billion
- In 2009 interest on government debt was 8% of tax revenues. In 2014 it will be 20%.
Naysayers try to tell you that the Celtic Tiger was a myth and that free-market policies brought the Irish economy down.
The truth is exactly the opposite. Liberalisation caused the Irish economy to surge until a return to big government crushed it. Membership of the eurozone, poor banking regulation and the government guarantee of…
View original post 34 more words
Earl A. Thompson on fiscal and monetary policy in the Great Recession
09 Oct 2014 Leave a comment
in budget deficits, business cycles, economic growth, fiscal policy, great recession, macroeconomics, monetary economics Tags: crowding out, Earl A. Thomson, fiscal policy, great depression, great recession, permanent income hypothesis, Ricardian equivalence

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand is hinting at exchange rate intervention!!
27 Sep 2014 Leave a comment
in inflation targeting, macroeconomics, monetary economics, politics - New Zealand Tags: exchange rate interventions, rules versus discretion, sterilised interventions


Was this Milton Friedman’s monetary policy dashboard?
19 Aug 2014 1 Comment
in macroeconomics, Milton Friedman, monetarism, monetary economics Tags: Milton Friedman, monetarism, rules versus discretion

I am not so sure the above would be mimicking Milton Friedman’s monetary policy dashboard as claimed.
Milton Friedman advocated a fixed monetary policy growth where the monetary supply would grow at 4% year in, year out no matter what happened in the economy. Towards the end of his career, he advocated replacing the Fed with a computer.



















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