Mainstream macroeconomics is under attack, professionally and in the popular press, as rarely before. Stanley Fischer has brought together this collection of essays in support of the view that mainstream macroeconomics can contribute much that it is both scientifically and socially useful to the analysis of policy issues and controversies. The book is divided into four parts, each with its own introduction. The preface presents Fischer's methodological defense of macroeconomics.The essays cover: The Costs and Effects of Inflation: Toward an Understanding of the Real Effects and Costs of Inflation (with Franko Modigliani). Toward an Understanding of the Costs of Inflation: II. Inflation, Unemployment, and Public Opinion Polls (with John Huizinga). Relative Shocks, Relative Price Variability, and Inflation. Wage Indexation and Inflation: Wage Indexation and Macroeconomic Stability. Indexing and Inflation. Contracts, Credibility, and Disinflation. Exchange Rate versus Money Targets in Disinflation. Indexation in the Capital Markets: The Demand for Index Bonds. On the Nonexistence of Privately issued index Bonds in the U.S. Capital Market. Call Option Pricing When the Exercise Price Is Uncertain, and the Valuation of Index Bonds. Welfare Aspects of Government Issue of Indexed Bonds. Policy Issues: Long-Term Contracts, Rational Expectations, and the Optional Money Supply Rule. Seigniorage and the Case for a National Money. On Activist Monetary Policy with Rational Expectations. Dynamic Inconsistency, Cooperation, and the Benevolent Dissembling Government. Israeli Inflation and Indexation.Stanley Fischer is Professor of Economics at MIT and coauthor with Rudiger Dornbusch of "Economics" and "Macroeconomics."
- ISBN10 0262060981
- ISBN13 9780262060981
- Publish Date 14 April 1986
- Publish Status Out of Print
- Out of Print 28 February 2001
- Publish Country US
- Publisher MIT Press Ltd
- Imprint MIT Press
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 502
- Language English