Macroeconomics : (Record no. 597527)
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000 -LEADER | |
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fixed length control field | 07192cam a22001818i 4500 |
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION | |
fixed length control field | 170804s2017 cau 001 0 eng |
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER | |
International Standard Book Number | 9789386602091 |
082 00 - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER | |
Classification number | 339 |
Cutter | BAN.M |
100 1# - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME | |
Personal name | Banerjee, Sreejata, |
245 10 - TITLE STATEMENT | |
Title | Macroeconomics : |
Remainder of title | theories and applications for emerging economies / |
Statement of responsibility, etc | Sreejata Banerjee and P. Nandakumar Warrier. |
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT) | |
Place of publication, distribution, etc | New Delhi |
Name of publisher, distributor, etc | Sage Publication |
Date of publication, distribution, etc | 2018 |
263 ## - PROJECTED PUBLICATION DATE | |
Projected publication date | 1710 |
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION | |
Extent | pages cm |
500 ## - GENERAL NOTE | |
General note | Includes index. |
520 ## - SUMMARY, ETC. | |
Summary, etc | Contents<br/>Machine generated contents note: 1.1.Introduction: What is Macroeconomics?<br/>1.2.What Exactly Constitutes the Field of Study of Macroeconomics?<br/>1.3.Myopic and Long-run Views: Supply Side Specifications and the Time Horizon for Macroeconomic Analysis<br/>1.4.Macroeconomic Models for Industrial Nations and for Developing Countries: Stabilization and Growth<br/>1.5.Why Study Macroeconomics?<br/>1.6.Macroeconomic Aggregates<br/>1.7.What is New in This Book?<br/>1.8.Conclusion<br/>Summary<br/>Keywords<br/>Concept Check<br/>Discussion Questions<br/>2.1.Introduction: The National Income Accounts<br/>2.2.Measuring GDP<br/>2.3.Real GDP, Nominal GDP and the Price Indices<br/>2.4.Looking at GDP from the Production and Demand Sides<br/>2.5.Problems and Issues in GDP Measurement<br/>2.6.The Circular Flow of Income and the Macroeconomic Model<br/>2.7.Conclusion<br/>3.1.Introduction: The Basic Keynesian Model<br/>Contents note continued: 3.2.Explaining the Multiplier: Cascading Effects on Consumer Spending<br/>3.3.A Diagrammatic Representation of Consumption and Aggregate Demand: The 45 Degree Representation of the Keynesian Model<br/>3.4.A New Diagrammatic Approach: The Hidden Cross in the Basic Keynesian Model<br/>3.5.The Government Budget<br/>3.6.Conclusion<br/>4.1.Introduction: Growth Theory<br/>4.2.What Drives Growth?<br/>4.3.Measuring Growth<br/>4.4.The Solow Growth Model in a Closed Economy<br/>4.5.The Cobb Douglas Production Function<br/>4.6.The Solow Residual<br/>4.7.The Divergence Between Countries across the World<br/>4.8.The Endogenous Growth Model<br/>4.9.Conclusion<br/>5.1.Introduction: The Financial Sector<br/>5.2.The Bond Market: Bond Prices and Interest Rates<br/>5.3.The Bond Market: Supply and Demand<br/>5.4.The Bond Market: The Interest-Quantity Diagram<br/>Contents note continued: 5.5.The Interest Rate and the Market for Money<br/>5.6.The Term Structure of Interest Rates and the Yield Curve<br/>5.7.Conclusion<br/>6.1.Introduction<br/>6.2.Money Supply<br/>6.3.The Money Multiplier Approach<br/>6.4.Credit Creation by Commercial Banks<br/>6.5.The Determinants of Money Supply<br/>6.6.Government Behaviour: Budget Deficit and the Money Supply<br/>6.7.Conclusion<br/>7.1.Introduction: The Demand for Money<br/>7.2.The Quantity Theory of Money<br/>7.3.The Demand for Money as Behaviour Towards Risk<br/>7.4.Conclusion<br/>8.1.Introduction to the IS-LM Model<br/>8.2.Elements of the IS-LM model<br/>8.3.Output and Interest Rate Determination in the IS-LM Model<br/>8.4.Construction of the Aggregate Demand Curve from the IS-LM Curves<br/>Contents note continued: 8.5.The LM Curve: The Balance of Payments and Adjustments over Time<br/>8.6.Conclusion<br/>9.1.Introduction: The IS-LM Model and Fiscal Policy<br/>9.2.Deriving the Basic Keynesian Model as a Special Case of the IS-LM Model<br/>9.3.Effects of Changes in Taxes on Autonomous Income and Spending<br/>9.4.Conclusion<br/>10.1.Introduction<br/>10.2.Monetary Expansion in the IS-LM Model<br/>10.3.What Decides the Effectiveness of Monetary Policy?<br/>10.4.Monetary Policy and the State of the Economy<br/>10.5.Policies, Policy Effects and Political Colour<br/>10.6.The Multiplier with Price Changes<br/>10.7.The Policy Mix in Action<br/>10.8.Constraints on Government Policy<br/>10.9.Conclusion<br/>11.1.Introduction to Consumption and Investment<br/>Contents note continued: 11.2.Consumption Based on the Present Value of Income<br/>11.3.The Modigliani Life Cycle Theory<br/>11.4.The Permanent Income Hypothesis<br/>11.5.Investment Demand<br/>11.6.The User Cost of Capital<br/>11.7.The Extended Investment Function and the IS-LM Model Results<br/>11.8.Tobin's 'q'<br/>11.9.Conclusion<br/>12.1.Introduction<br/>12.2.The Size and Reach of the Public Sector in Different Types of National Economies<br/>12.3.The Mixed Economy<br/>12.4.Market Failures and Corrective Government Action<br/>12.5.The Economies of Scale<br/>12.6.Market Power<br/>12.7.Automatic Stabilizers<br/>12.8.The Government Budget Balance<br/>12.9.The Fiscal Deficit<br/>12.10.Conclusion<br/>13.1.Introduction<br/>13.2.The Slope of the Supply Curve<br/>13.3.Policy Effects<br/>Contents note continued: 13.4.The Keynesian Income Multiplier with an Upward-sloping Supply Curve: The Crowding-out Effect of a Price Rise<br/>13.5.Inflation and Output<br/>13.6.The Aggregate Supply Curve in the Long-run<br/>13.7.The Complete IS-LM Model with the Supply Side Included<br/>13.8.The Complete Macroeconomic Model with Labour Market Clearing<br/>13.9.Conclusion<br/>14.1.Introduction<br/>14.2.Unemployment and the Government Budget<br/>14.3.Unemployment and Full Employment: Frictional, Structural and Cyclical Unemployment<br/>14.4.The Costs of Unemployment<br/>14.5.Government Budget Balance and Its Macroeconomic Impacts<br/>14.6.Stopping High Inflation<br/>14.7.The Costs of Inflation and Disinflation<br/>14.8.Government Budget Deficits and the Public Debt Burden<br/>14.9.Derivation of the Debt Burden Stability Condition<br/>14.10.Conclusion<br/>Contents note continued: 15.1.Introduction to the Open Economy<br/>15.2.The Balance of Payments<br/>15.3.Trade and Capital Flows in an Open Economy<br/>15.4.The Openness of an Economy<br/>15.5.Conclusion<br/>Appendix<br/>16.1.Introduction<br/>16.2.The Open Economy Model<br/>16.3.Internal and External Balance in an Open Economy<br/>16.4.Devaluation and the Trade Balance<br/>16.5.Monetary and Fiscal Policies in Open Economies<br/>16.6.Macroeconomic Policy with Imperfect Capital Mobility<br/>16.7.Conclusion<br/>17.1.Introduction to Exchange Rates<br/>17.2.The Gold Standard, Bretton Woods and After: A Brief History of the Exchange Rate Regimes<br/>17.3.Determinants of the Exchange Rate<br/>17.4.The Time Frame<br/>17.5.Exchange Rate Dynamics: The Short-run to the Long-run in Dornbusch's 'Overshooting Model'<br/>Contents note continued: 17.6.The Portfolio Balance Model: Short-run Exchange Rate Determination and Overshooting<br/>17.7.Fixed Exchange Rates and Managed Floats<br/>17.8.The Pros and Cons of Fixed and Floating Exchange Rates<br/>17.9.Conclusion<br/>18.1.Introduction<br/>18.2.The Simple Income Determination Model<br/>18.3.The Monetarist Theory of Business Cycles<br/>18.4.The Real Business Cycle Theory<br/>18.5.Dating Business Cycles<br/>18.6.Conclusion<br/>19.1.Introduction<br/>19.2.The Classical Model<br/>19.3.The Monetarist Model<br/>19.4.A Synthesis of the Keynesian, Classical and Monetarist Approaches<br/>19.5.The Future's Ours' To See: New Classical Economics and Rational Expectations by the Labour Market Participants<br/>19.6.New Keynesian Economics and Other Labour Market Theories<br/>19.7.Real Business Cycle Models with Exogenous Labour Productivity Shocks<br/>Contents note continued: 19.8.The Natural Rate of Unemployment and Labour Market Equilibrium<br/>19.9.Conclusion<br/>20.1.Introduction: Multi-sector Models<br/>20.2.Policy Results in the Aggregated Models<br/>20.3.Two Sector Models<br/>20.4.The Small Open Economy Model for Industrialized Nations<br/>20.5.The Bose Model: A Model for Developing Nations<br/>20.6.Conclusion<br/>Discussion Questions. |
650 #0 - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM | |
Topical term or geographic name as entry element | Macroeconomics. |
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA) | |
Source of classification or shelving scheme | Dewey Decimal Classification |
Item type | Books |
Withdrawn status | Lost status | Source of classification or shelving scheme | Damaged status | Not for loan | Home library | Current library | Shelving location | Date acquired | Source of acquisition | Cost, normal purchase price | Full call number | Barcode | Date last seen | Cost, replacement price | Koha item type |
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Dewey Decimal Classification | Symbiosis International University Central Library | Symbiosis International University Central Library | 22/08/2018 | 202 | 346.50 | 339/BAN 43528 | SIU-B-43528 | 17/03/2025 | 495.00 | Books | |||||
Dewey Decimal Classification | Symbiosis Law School, Noida | Symbiosis Law School, Noida | Reference | 30/01/2018 | 62 | 341.55 | 339 BAN.M | SLSN-B-11837 | 18/06/2021 | 495.00 | Books | ||||
Dewey Decimal Classification | Symbiosis Law School, Noida | Symbiosis Law School, Noida | 30/01/2018 | 62 | 341.55 | 339 BAN.M | SLSN-B-11838 | 01/02/2018 | 495.00 | Books | |||||
Dewey Decimal Classification | Symbiosis Law School, Noida | Symbiosis Law School, Noida | 30/01/2018 | 62 | 341.55 | 339 BAN.M | SLSN-B-11839 | 30/01/2018 | 495.00 | Books | |||||
Dewey Decimal Classification | Symbiosis School for Liberal Arts | Symbiosis School for Liberal Arts | 27/02/2019 | 191 | 346.50 | 339/BAN | SSLA-B-8974 | 10/10/2022 | 495.00 | Books |