01706 a2200205 45000010006000000050017000060080041000230030015000640400040000790800038001192450066001570200018002232640037002413000025002785051047003030410008013501000017013587000023013758560102013983444820260407155631.0260407a2004 arg spa dAR-UNSa-BCEJYS aAR-UNSa-BCEJYSbspacAR-UNSa-BCEJYS a336.71xBancos. Sistema bancario 10aCentral banking in the modern worldpalternative perspectives a1-84376-641-8 1aCheltenham :bEdward Elgarc2004 axiii, 296 p.c24 cm. a1. The new consensus on monetary policy seen from a Post-Keynesian Perspective - 2. Central banking, stability and macroeconomic outcomes: A comparison of new consensus and Post-Keynesian monetary macroeconomics - 3. Interest rate operating procedures and income distribution - 4. Monetary policy when money is endogenous: Going Beyond the "New consensus" - 5. Monetary dialogue and dogma in the bank of Canada: Inside evidence revisited - 6. Interest rate policy at the bank of Canada: Setting the agenda Marc-André Pigeon - 7. Modern central banks only have real effects - 8. Central banking in the monetary circuit - 9. Long-Term interest rates, liquidity preference and the limits of central banking - 10. The role of monetary policy in Post-Keynesian - 11. The effectiveness of monetary policy in open economy macroeconomics: Dornbusch versus Tobin - 12. Minsky and Tobin on the instability of a monetary economy - 13. Considerations on Allan H. Meltzer`s history of the federal reserve - 14. Central banking in early industrialization aspa1 aLavoie, Marc1 aSeccareccia, Mario41uhttps://biblioeco.unsa.edu.ar/pmb/images/libros/centralBanking.jpgyImagen de portadaqimage/jpeg