TY - BOOK AU - Banerjee,Sreejata TI - Macroeconomics: theories and applications for emerging economies SN - 9789386602091 U1 - 339 PY - 2018/// CY - New Delhi PB - Sage Publication KW - Macroeconomics N1 - Includes index N2 - Contents Machine generated contents note: 1.1.Introduction: What is Macroeconomics? 1.2.What Exactly Constitutes the Field of Study of Macroeconomics? 1.3.Myopic and Long-run Views: Supply Side Specifications and the Time Horizon for Macroeconomic Analysis 1.4.Macroeconomic Models for Industrial Nations and for Developing Countries: Stabilization and Growth 1.5.Why Study Macroeconomics? 1.6.Macroeconomic Aggregates 1.7.What is New in This Book? 1.8.Conclusion Summary Keywords Concept Check Discussion Questions 2.1.Introduction: The National Income Accounts 2.2.Measuring GDP 2.3.Real GDP, Nominal GDP and the Price Indices 2.4.Looking at GDP from the Production and Demand Sides 2.5.Problems and Issues in GDP Measurement 2.6.The Circular Flow of Income and the Macroeconomic Model 2.7.Conclusion 3.1.Introduction: The Basic Keynesian Model Contents note continued: 3.2.Explaining the Multiplier: Cascading Effects on Consumer Spending 3.3.A Diagrammatic Representation of Consumption and Aggregate Demand: The 45 Degree Representation of the Keynesian Model 3.4.A New Diagrammatic Approach: The Hidden Cross in the Basic Keynesian Model 3.5.The Government Budget 3.6.Conclusion 4.1.Introduction: Growth Theory 4.2.What Drives Growth? 4.3.Measuring Growth 4.4.The Solow Growth Model in a Closed Economy 4.5.The Cobb Douglas Production Function 4.6.The Solow Residual 4.7.The Divergence Between Countries across the World 4.8.The Endogenous Growth Model 4.9.Conclusion 5.1.Introduction: The Financial Sector 5.2.The Bond Market: Bond Prices and Interest Rates 5.3.The Bond Market: Supply and Demand 5.4.The Bond Market: The Interest-Quantity Diagram Contents note continued: 5.5.The Interest Rate and the Market for Money 5.6.The Term Structure of Interest Rates and the Yield Curve 5.7.Conclusion 6.1.Introduction 6.2.Money Supply 6.3.The Money Multiplier Approach 6.4.Credit Creation by Commercial Banks 6.5.The Determinants of Money Supply 6.6.Government Behaviour: Budget Deficit and the Money Supply 6.7.Conclusion 7.1.Introduction: The Demand for Money 7.2.The Quantity Theory of Money 7.3.The Demand for Money as Behaviour Towards Risk 7.4.Conclusion 8.1.Introduction to the IS-LM Model 8.2.Elements of the IS-LM model 8.3.Output and Interest Rate Determination in the IS-LM Model 8.4.Construction of the Aggregate Demand Curve from the IS-LM Curves Contents note continued: 8.5.The LM Curve: The Balance of Payments and Adjustments over Time 8.6.Conclusion 9.1.Introduction: The IS-LM Model and Fiscal Policy 9.2.Deriving the Basic Keynesian Model as a Special Case of the IS-LM Model 9.3.Effects of Changes in Taxes on Autonomous Income and Spending 9.4.Conclusion 10.1.Introduction 10.2.Monetary Expansion in the IS-LM Model 10.3.What Decides the Effectiveness of Monetary Policy? 10.4.Monetary Policy and the State of the Economy 10.5.Policies, Policy Effects and Political Colour 10.6.The Multiplier with Price Changes 10.7.The Policy Mix in Action 10.8.Constraints on Government Policy 10.9.Conclusion 11.1.Introduction to Consumption and Investment Contents note continued: 11.2.Consumption Based on the Present Value of Income 11.3.The Modigliani Life Cycle Theory 11.4.The Permanent Income Hypothesis 11.5.Investment Demand 11.6.The User Cost of Capital 11.7.The Extended Investment Function and the IS-LM Model Results 11.8.Tobin's 'q' 11.9.Conclusion 12.1.Introduction 12.2.The Size and Reach of the Public Sector in Different Types of National Economies 12.3.The Mixed Economy 12.4.Market Failures and Corrective Government Action 12.5.The Economies of Scale 12.6.Market Power 12.7.Automatic Stabilizers 12.8.The Government Budget Balance 12.9.The Fiscal Deficit 12.10.Conclusion 13.1.Introduction 13.2.The Slope of the Supply Curve 13.3.Policy Effects Contents note continued: 13.4.The Keynesian Income Multiplier with an Upward-sloping Supply Curve: The Crowding-out Effect of a Price Rise 13.5.Inflation and Output 13.6.The Aggregate Supply Curve in the Long-run 13.7.The Complete IS-LM Model with the Supply Side Included 13.8.The Complete Macroeconomic Model with Labour Market Clearing 13.9.Conclusion 14.1.Introduction 14.2.Unemployment and the Government Budget 14.3.Unemployment and Full Employment: Frictional, Structural and Cyclical Unemployment 14.4.The Costs of Unemployment 14.5.Government Budget Balance and Its Macroeconomic Impacts 14.6.Stopping High Inflation 14.7.The Costs of Inflation and Disinflation 14.8.Government Budget Deficits and the Public Debt Burden 14.9.Derivation of the Debt Burden Stability Condition 14.10.Conclusion Contents note continued: 15.1.Introduction to the Open Economy 15.2.The Balance of Payments 15.3.Trade and Capital Flows in an Open Economy 15.4.The Openness of an Economy 15.5.Conclusion Appendix 16.1.Introduction 16.2.The Open Economy Model 16.3.Internal and External Balance in an Open Economy 16.4.Devaluation and the Trade Balance 16.5.Monetary and Fiscal Policies in Open Economies 16.6.Macroeconomic Policy with Imperfect Capital Mobility 16.7.Conclusion 17.1.Introduction to Exchange Rates 17.2.The Gold Standard, Bretton Woods and After: A Brief History of the Exchange Rate Regimes 17.3.Determinants of the Exchange Rate 17.4.The Time Frame 17.5.Exchange Rate Dynamics: The Short-run to the Long-run in Dornbusch's 'Overshooting Model' Contents note continued: 17.6.The Portfolio Balance Model: Short-run Exchange Rate Determination and Overshooting 17.7.Fixed Exchange Rates and Managed Floats 17.8.The Pros and Cons of Fixed and Floating Exchange Rates 17.9.Conclusion 18.1.Introduction 18.2.The Simple Income Determination Model 18.3.The Monetarist Theory of Business Cycles 18.4.The Real Business Cycle Theory 18.5.Dating Business Cycles 18.6.Conclusion 19.1.Introduction 19.2.The Classical Model 19.3.The Monetarist Model 19.4.A Synthesis of the Keynesian, Classical and Monetarist Approaches 19.5.The Future's Ours' To See: New Classical Economics and Rational Expectations by the Labour Market Participants 19.6.New Keynesian Economics and Other Labour Market Theories 19.7.Real Business Cycle Models with Exogenous Labour Productivity Shocks Contents note continued: 19.8.The Natural Rate of Unemployment and Labour Market Equilibrium 19.9.Conclusion 20.1.Introduction: Multi-sector Models 20.2.Policy Results in the Aggregated Models 20.3.Two Sector Models 20.4.The Small Open Economy Model for Industrialized Nations 20.5.The Bose Model: A Model for Developing Nations 20.6.Conclusion Discussion Questions ER -