Description

Book Synopsis

While recent developments in monetary theory have been fast to spread to policy analysis and practice and the media, the same is not true of fiscal policy, and a void has emerged. Issues such as timing, cyclical adjustments, long-term sustainability, and social implications are often seen as detached from discussions in the public arena.

This book fills this gap. It delivers a keen assessment of the role and scope of current fiscal policy. New contributions and critical reviews of state of the art research analyze fiscal policy in terms of viability, potency, consequences and sustainability, and also shed light on its relation to economic and political ideas.

The general tone of this volume is cautiously favourable of fiscal activism, although the emphasis is placed more on medium-term adjustments than on short-term âfine-tuningâ. The authors believe that the legacy of the last fiscal revolution has been an excessively negative view of deficits and debt, and believe th

Table of Contents
List of figures List of tables List of contributors Acknowledgments Preface by James K. Galbraith 1 Introduction Per Gunnar Berglund and Matias Vernengo Part I. Fiscal policy strikes back 2 The case for fiscal policy Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer 3 A fiscal policy to counter recessions: triggered transfers to households Laurence S. Seidman and Kenneth A. Lewis 4 Integrating sound finance with functional finance David Colander and Peter Hans Matthews 5 Regime change for the US Federal budget Max B. Sawicky Part II. Fiscal policy in the periphery 6 Grappling with fiscal reform: the case of the Dominican Republic Esteban Pérez Caldentey 7 Endogenous Fiscal Crises: Theory and Brazilian Experience Matias Vernengo 8 Fiscal programming and alternatives in debt management: the Turkish experience Ebru Voyvoda Part III. Fiscal policy for our grandchildren 9 Paradox of Thrift and Budget in a Simple Keynesian Growth Model Per Gunnar Berglund 10 Budget deficits, unemployment and economic growth: a cross-section time-series analysis Robert Eisner 11 Debt sustainability in the European Monetary Union: theory and empirical evidence for selected countries Alfred Greiner, Uwe Koeller and Willi Semmler 12 Varieties of Fiscal Stimulus: A Conflicting Claims Analysis Alan G. Isaac Part IV. What are the questions? 13 The political economy of the deficit (roundtable session) Barbara R. Bergmann, Jeffrey A. Frankel, William A. Niskanen, Laurence S. Seidman (participants); Matias Vernengo (moderator); with an introduction by Per Gunnar Berglund and Matias Vernengo 14 The final word on fiscal policy (interview) Robert Eisner; with an introduction by Per Gunnar Berglund

The Means to Prosperity

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    A Hardback by Per Gunnar Berglund, Matias Vernengo

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      Publisher: Taylor & Francis
      Publication Date: 11/17/2005 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780415701563, 978-0415701563
      ISBN10: 0415701562
      Also in:
      Macroeconomics

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      While recent developments in monetary theory have been fast to spread to policy analysis and practice and the media, the same is not true of fiscal policy, and a void has emerged. Issues such as timing, cyclical adjustments, long-term sustainability, and social implications are often seen as detached from discussions in the public arena.

      This book fills this gap. It delivers a keen assessment of the role and scope of current fiscal policy. New contributions and critical reviews of state of the art research analyze fiscal policy in terms of viability, potency, consequences and sustainability, and also shed light on its relation to economic and political ideas.

      The general tone of this volume is cautiously favourable of fiscal activism, although the emphasis is placed more on medium-term adjustments than on short-term âfine-tuningâ. The authors believe that the legacy of the last fiscal revolution has been an excessively negative view of deficits and debt, and believe th

      Table of Contents
      List of figures List of tables List of contributors Acknowledgments Preface by James K. Galbraith 1 Introduction Per Gunnar Berglund and Matias Vernengo Part I. Fiscal policy strikes back 2 The case for fiscal policy Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer 3 A fiscal policy to counter recessions: triggered transfers to households Laurence S. Seidman and Kenneth A. Lewis 4 Integrating sound finance with functional finance David Colander and Peter Hans Matthews 5 Regime change for the US Federal budget Max B. Sawicky Part II. Fiscal policy in the periphery 6 Grappling with fiscal reform: the case of the Dominican Republic Esteban Pérez Caldentey 7 Endogenous Fiscal Crises: Theory and Brazilian Experience Matias Vernengo 8 Fiscal programming and alternatives in debt management: the Turkish experience Ebru Voyvoda Part III. Fiscal policy for our grandchildren 9 Paradox of Thrift and Budget in a Simple Keynesian Growth Model Per Gunnar Berglund 10 Budget deficits, unemployment and economic growth: a cross-section time-series analysis Robert Eisner 11 Debt sustainability in the European Monetary Union: theory and empirical evidence for selected countries Alfred Greiner, Uwe Koeller and Willi Semmler 12 Varieties of Fiscal Stimulus: A Conflicting Claims Analysis Alan G. Isaac Part IV. What are the questions? 13 The political economy of the deficit (roundtable session) Barbara R. Bergmann, Jeffrey A. Frankel, William A. Niskanen, Laurence S. Seidman (participants); Matias Vernengo (moderator); with an introduction by Per Gunnar Berglund and Matias Vernengo 14 The final word on fiscal policy (interview) Robert Eisner; with an introduction by Per Gunnar Berglund

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