Money, banking, and the economy:
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , , |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York u.a.
Norton
1993
|
Ausgabe: | 5. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XV, 574 S. graph. Darst., Kt. |
ISBN: | 0393963004 |
Internformat
MARC
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | PREFACE xiii
PART ONE: THE FINANCIAL STRUCTURE 1
CHAPTER 1: MONEY 3
Importance of the Monetary System 3 Outline of the Book 4 What Is
Money? 4 Medium of Exchange Standard of Value and Deferred Payment
Reversion to Barter Store of Wealth Interaction of the Functions of Money Measuring
the Money Supply 10 Types of Money 11 Nature of Credit Money The
Cashless Society 13 Money, Near Money, and Liquidity 14 Summary 15
Key Terms 15 Questions and Exercises 16 Further Reading 16
CHAPTER 2: STOCKS, BONDS, AND FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS 17
The Financial System 17 Equity vs. Debt 19 Equity Debt Suppose Your
Uncle Gives You a Junk Bond: Should You Thank Him? Hybrid Securities
Identifying the Suppliers and Demanders 23 The Supply of Funds 23
Those Who Demand 24 Households Governments Businesses Financial
Markets and Financial Services 27 Types of Private Financial Institutions
Financial Intermediaries Types of Financial Intermediaries Government Credit
Agencies Government Regulation of Financial Markets 34 Summary 36
Key Terms 36 Questions and Exercises 37 Further Reading 37
CHAPTER 3: FINANCIAL THEORY 38
Portfolios 38 The Nature of Risk Types of Risk Portfolio Risk Portfolio
Management Contingent Claims Optimal Portfolios and Security Prices Equity vs.
Debt 43 The Modigliani Miller Theorem How Well Do Financial Markets
Function? 45 Efficient Markets Theory Dart Board Beats Experts Complete
Financial Markets Market Failures: Moral Hazard, Asymmetric Information,
and Signaling 50 Moral Hazard Asymmetric Information Signaling
Summary 53 Key Terms 54 Questions and Exercises 54 Further
Reading 54
CHAPTER 4: ASSET MARKETS 55
Real and Financial Assets 55 The Main Features of Asset Markets 56 The
Market in Bank Deposits 57 The Foreign Exchange Market 58 The U.S.
Government Securities Market 59 State and Local Government Bonds 61
The Corporate Bond Market 62 The Market in Corporate Shares 63 The
Markets in Mortgages and Consumer Debt 64 Summary 64 Key
Terms 65 Questions and Exercises 65 Further Reading 65
VI CONTENTS
CHAPTER 5: THE STRUCTURE OF INTEREST RATES 66
The Link between Present and Future Values 66 Why Interest Rates
Differ 71 Liquidity The Tax Attribute A Horse Race among Assets
Default Sensitivity Attribute The Political Attribute The Currency Attribute The
Maturity Attribute Inflation, and the Level and Structure of Interest Rates 80
Summary 82 Key Terms 82 Questions and Exercises 82 Further
Reading 83
CHAPTER 6: THE DEPOSITORY INSTITUTIONS INDUSTRY 84
Banking History: A Sketch 85 Chartering, Examination, and Fed
Membership 88 Bank Capital 90 Deposit Insurance 92 Check
Clearing 93 Correspondent Banking 94 Concentration in Banking 94
Social Regulations of Bank Loans 95 Savings and Loan Associations 96
Chartering, Supervision, and Insurance A Sketch of Savings and Loan History
Savings Banks 97 Credit Unions 98 Summary 98 Key Terms 99
Questions and Exercises 99 Further Reading 99
CHAPTER 7: INSIDE THE DEPOSITORY INSTITUTION 101
The Bank s Balance Sheet 102 The Bank s Liabilities 103 Transactions
Deposits Savings and Other Time Deposits Borrowings, Other Liabilities, and
Capital The Bank s Assets 105 Primary Reserves Distinguishing Capital from
Reserves Securities and Loans Other Assets Asset and Liability
Management 113 Matching the Maturities of Assets and Liabilities Risks in
Banking Banking in the Good Old Days The Changing Business of
Banking 115 The Thrifts Balance Sheet 117 Summary 118 Key
Terms 118 Questions and Exercises 118 Further Reading 119
CHAPTER 8: INTERNATIONAL BANKING 120
Offshore Banking and the Internationalization of Commercial Banking 121
The Structure of International Banking 122 International Banking and
the Domestic Banking System 124 The Erosion of Banks—and Bank
Regulation Interest Rates at Domestic and Offshore Banks 128
International Banking and the Domestic Money Supply 130
Summary 131 Key Terms 131 Questions and Exercises 131 Further
Reading 132
CHAPTER 9: THE FAILURE OF THE DEPOSIT INSURANCE
SYSTEM 133
Deposit Insurance and the Incentive to Take Too Much Risk 134 A Sketch of
Savings and Loan History Problems urith Regulation Q Phasing Out Regulation Q
Problems with Maturity Mismatch The Savings and Loan Crisis FIRREA Paying
the Piper Here We Go Again? Blaming the Crooks and Politicians Blaming
the System Blaming Congress Blaming the Regulators Blaming the
Administrations Blaming Economists Blaming the Public Who Benefited?
Commercial Banks 150 Continental Illinois LDC Loans Turn Sour Charting
the End of a Bank Oil Troubles and Real Estate Losses Congress Steps In: The
FDIC Improvement Act of 1991 157 Congress R, a Fatal Dose?
Summary 159 Key Terms 159 Questions and Exercises 160 Further
Reading 160
CONTENTS vii
CHAPTER 10: SOME REMAINING ISSUES OF FINANCIAL
POLICY 161
Fixing the Deposit Insurance System 162 Improved Administration Risk related
Insurance Premiums Higher Capital/Asset Ratios and Marking to Market Secondary
Capital Lowering the Insurance Ceiling Too Big to Fail The Narrow Bank
Privatizing Deposit Insurance An Assessment Restructuring the Banking
Industry 170 Expanding the Banks Bailiwick The Separation of Banking and
Commerce Branch Banking The Growth of Corporate Debt 174
Summary 175 Key Terms 176 Questions and Exercises 176 Further
Reading 176
CHAPTER 11: CENTRAL BANKING 177
The Central Bank: A Profile 177 Origin of Central Banks Purposes and
Functions of a Central Bank Other Aspects of Central Banking The Formal
Structure of the Federal Reserve System 180 The Federal Reserve Banks The
Board of Governors The Federal Open Market Committee The Informal Structure
of the Federal Reserve System 186 Distribution of Power within the Federal
Reserve The Federal Reserve s Constituency Finances of the Federal Reserve
System 188 Federal Reserve Independence 189 Delineating the Fed s
Autonomy Actual Independence The Subtlety of the Fed s Independence
Independence: Pros and Cons 192 The Case for Independence The Case against
Independence Possible Compromises Other Central Banks 195 Summary 196
Key Terms 197 Questions and Exercises 197 Further Reading 197
PART TWO: THE SUPPLY OF MONEY 199
CHAPTER 12: THE MEASUREMENT OF MONEY 201
The A Priori and Empirical Approaches 201 Leading Measures of
Money 203 An Alternative Definition 205 Two Simple but Inappropriate
Definitions 205 Money Substitutes 206 Measuring Money as a Weighted
Aggregate 206 Refining the Money Measurements 207 How Reliable Are
the Data? 207 So Who Has the Cash? Summary 209 Key Terms 209
Questions and Exercises 209 Further Reading 209
CHAPTER 13: THE CREATION OF MONEY 211
Currency Creation 211 Multiple Deposit Creation 212 The Suture of
Deposits Two Special Cases: 100 Percent Reserves and 100 Percent Currency Drain
The Equilibrium Level of Deposits The Deposit Multiplier Multiple Deposit
Contraction 216 Leakages from the Deposit Creation Process 218 Excess
Resemes Deposits into Currency From the Multiplier to the Stock of Deposits:
The Multiplicand 219 From the Deposit Supply to the Money Supply 220
Multipliers for the M l, M 2, and M 3 Money Supply Theory 221 Monetary
Policy, Bank Resenes, and Deposit Creation What Dominates, Supply or
Demand? 223 Money as Endogenous Summary 226 Key Terms 226
Questions and Exercises 226 Further Reading 227
CHAPTER 14: BANK RESERVES AND RELATED MEASURES 228
Federal Reserve Actions and Reserves 229 The Fed s Control over
Reserves 231 Measures of Reserves and the Base 231 The Importance of
Distinguishing between Various Reserve Measures 232 The Reserve Base,
Viii CONTENTS
the Money Multiplier, and the Money Stock 233 Summary 234 Key
Terms 234 Questions and Exercises 234 Further Reading 235
APPENDIX: Market Factors That Change Reserves 235
PART THREE: MONEY, NATIONAL INCOME, AND THE
PRICE LEVEL 239
CHAPTER 15: THE DETERMINANTS OF AGGREGATE
EXPENDITURES 241
A Look Ahead at Part Three 242 The Quantity Theory Equations 244 The
Cambridge Equation The Transactions Version The Quantity Theory: An
Overview 246 An Example of the Quantity Theory in Action: P* The
Income Expenditure Approach: Basic Ideas 248 Consumption Consumption
and the Rate of Interest The Consumption Function Permanent Income, the Life Cyck,
and Wealth Consumer Sentiment and the 1990 1991 Recession
Investment 253 The Marginal Productivity of Capital and the Pace of Investment
The User Cost of Capital Output and Investment The Stability of Investment Another
Way of Looking at Investment: The q Theory The Interaction of Investment and
Consumption: The Investment Multiplier 260 Government Expenditures,
Taxes, and Exports 261 The Stability of Income 262 The
Income Expenditure Theory and the Quantity Theory 262 Summary 263
Key Terms 264 Questions and Exercises 264 Further Reading 264
CHAPTER 16: AGGREGATE EXPENDITURES AND THE INTEREST
RATE 265
The Importance of the Interest Rate 266 The Interest Rate as a Price 266
Case I: A Simple Economy 267 Case II: The Fixed Price Economy with
Changes in the Supply of and Demand for Money 269 Case III: The
Flexible Price Economy 272 Nominal and Real Interest Rates The Fisher Effect
Adaptive Expectations Expectations, Interest Rates, and Stock Prices Rational
Expectations Rational Expectations and the Inflation Premium Summary of Case
III Case IV: The Sticky Prices Economy 279 Case V: An Economy with
Income Taxes and Inflation Effects 279 A Policy Implication: The Fed and
High Interest Rates 280 Summary 281 Key Terms 282 Questions and
Exercises 282 Further Reading 282 APPENDIX: The Liquidity Preference
Approach to Interest Rates 283
CHAPTER 17: AGGREGATE EXPENDITURES AND THE DEMAND FOR
MONEY 285
A Simpleminded Story 286 Transactions Demand 287 Precautionary
Demand 288 The Speculative Demand for Money and the Liquidity
Trap 290 The Savings Demand for Money 291 The Money Demand
Function 291 Statistical Money Demand Functions 293 The Behavior of
Velocity 295 Summary 296 Key Terms 296 Questions and
Exercises 296 Further Reading 297 APPENDIX A: A Model of
Transactions Demand 297 APPENDIX B: A Demand Function for M 2 298
CHAPTER 18: AGGREGATE EXPENDITURES: THE COMPLETE
MODEL 300
Combining the Elements 300 The Goods and Services Market The Money
Market Combining the IS and LM Curves Determinants of the Slopes of the IS and
rf~ . ..
CONTENTS ix
LM Curves Shifts of the IS and LM Curves Fiscal and Monetary Policies in the
IS LM Framework 309 Fiscal Policy Monetary Policy Criticisms of IS LM
Analysis 312 Let s Go Back to Clay Tablets Summary 315 Key
Terms 315 Questions and Exercises 315 Further Reading 316
CHAPTER 19: INFLATION AND UNEMPLOYMENT 317
Inflation: Definition and Types 317 Inflations in the United States
Unemployment 320 The Phillips Curve with Expectations of Constant
Prices 320 The Expectations Augmented Phillips Curve The Nonaccelerating
Inflation Rate of Unemployment 324 Beyond the Simple, Expectations
Augmented Phillips Curve 325 Supply Shocks Unemployment Hysteresis
Flexible Mark ups The Causes of Inflation 326 Aggregate Supply and Demand
Curves: An Application Price Increases and Inflation: Supply Side
Shocks 328 Relative Prices and the Price Level Price Increases and Inflation:
The Expenditures Side 329 Is Money the Cause? Policies to Fight
Inflation 331 Indexing: Good or Bad? 332 The Causes of
Unemployment 332 Summary 333 Key Terms 334 Questions and
Exercises 334 Further Reading 334
CHAPTER 20: THE QUANTITY THEORY AND MONETARISM 335
Development of the Quantity Theory 335 The Chicago Approach Explaining
Hyperinflations The Transmission Process Fiscal Policy Some Empirical Evidence
on the Importance of Money Some Monetarist Propositions 341 The Stability
Issue 342 Reconciling Monetarist and Keynesian Theories 344
Summary 346 Key Terms 346 Questions and Exercises 346 Further
Reading 347 APPENDIX A: The Real Balance Effect 347 APPENDIX B:
The Brunner Meltzer Model 351
CHAPTER 21: OTHER PERSPECTIVES: NEW CLASSICAL, REAL
BUSINESS, AND POST KEYNESIAN 354
New Classical Theory 354 Rational Expectations and Market Clearing The Sew
Classical Theory in Action Real Business Cycles 359 The Behavior of Real GDP
The Real Business Cycle Theory Post Keynesian Theory 363 Keynes on
Uncertainty Uncertainly and Its Implications Money or Bank Credit? lime and
Equilibrium Analysis The Aggregate Supply Curve and Stabilization Polity The Role
of Monetary Policy A Post Keynesian Cycle Theory Summary 368 Key
Terms 369 Questions and Exercises 369 Further Reading 369
PART FOUR: MONETARY POLICY 371
CHAPTER 22: THE GOALS OF MONETARY POLICY 373
The Goals 373 High Employment Price Stability An Appropriate
Foreign Exchange Rate Economic Growth The Constraints 377 I revention of
Financial Panics Interest Rate Stability Sharing the Burden of a Restmtive Policy
Maintaining the Confidence of Foreign Investors Relations among Goals 380
Political Parties and the Inflation/Unemployment Trade Off What Should the
Fed Do? 382 Single or Multiple Goals for the Fed? 383 The Case for a Single
Goal The Case against a Single Goal What Does the Fed Do? 385 Coordination
of Monetary and Fiscal Policies The Government Budget Constraint Summary 388
Key Terms 388 Questions and Exercises 388 Further Reading 389
X CONTENTS
CHAPTER 23: THE TOOLS OF MONETARY POLICY 390
Open Market Operations 390 The Nitty Gritty of Open Market Operations
Advantages of Open Market Operations The Discount Mechanism 393 The
Discount Rate 396 The Announcement Effect Reserve Requirement
Changes 398 Selective Controls 398 Stock Market Credit Moral
Suasion 399 Publicity and Advice 400 Summary 400 Key Terms 401
Questions and Exercises 401 Further Reading 401
CHAPTER 24: TARGETS AND INSTRUMENTS 402
Between Tools and Goals: Targets and Instruments 402 Target
Variables 403 Using Single or Multiple Target Variables 405 The Pros and
Cons of Multiple Targets Some Mechanics of Using Two or More Target Variables
Criteria for Target Variables Credit or Debt as Targets The Exchange Rate as a
Target An Alternative Approach: Downgrading Target Variables 417 GDP
Targeting 417 What Should FOMC Have Done? A Real GDP Target
Instruments 419 Evaluation of Instruments Accommodating versus
Nonaccommodating Policy Another Look at the Discount Rate Accommodation as Eed
Policy The Fed s Use of Targets and Instruments 425 The 1950s and 1960s
The 1970s October 1979 August 1982 September 1982 to the Present
Summary 429 Key Terms 429 Questions and Exercises 429 Further
Reading 430
CHAPTER 25: THE IMPACT OF MONETARY POLICY 431
The Transmission Process 431 Portfolio Equilibrium The Keynesian
Interpretation Monetary Policy and Stock Prices Consumption International Trade
Effects of Monetary Policy 434 Rational Expectations 435 An Econometric
Model 436 Was Monetary Policy Impotent in the 1990 1991 Recession?
Deregulation, New Financial Instruments, and Monetary Policy 438
Summary 439 Key Terms 439 Questions and Exercises 439 Further
Reading 440 APPENDK: A Potential Problem—A Flexible Interest Rate on
Money 440
CHAPTER 26: CAN COUNTER CYCLICAL MONETARY POLICY
SUCCEED? 441
The Problem of Lags 442 A Formal Model Problems Created by the Lag
Empirical Estimates of the Lag Policy Tools: A Further Consideration Rational
Expectations and Market Clearing 447 The Lucas Critique Political and
Administrative Problems 450 Political Subservience Curbing Political Business
Cycles The Fed s Goals: Public Interest or Self interest ? Inefficient Policy Making
Time Inconsistent Monetary Policies A Summing Up 456 Summary 456 Key
Terms 457 Questions and Exercises 457 Further Reading 457
CHAPTER 27: THE RECORD OF MONETARY POLICY 459
The Early Years 459 The Great Depression 461 Federal Reserve
Policy 463 Not All Holidays Are Carefree Effects of Federal Reserve Policy
Challenges to the Friedman Schwartz Interpretation War Finance and Interest Rate
Pegging 469 Pegged Rates The Great Inflation 470 Lowering the Inflation
Rate Recessions in the Early 1980s 474 Lessons from the Monetarist (?)
Experiment The End of the Monetarist (?) Experiment The Expansion during the
1980s and the 1990 Recession The Credit Crumble Summary 478 Key
Terms 479 Questions and Exercises 479 Further Reading 479
CONTENTS xi
CHAPTER 28: ALTERNATIVE MONETARY STANDARDS 481
A Stable Monetary Growth Rate Rule and Other Monetarist
Recommendations 481 If You Have a Standard, Stick to It The Case for a
Monetary Rule The Case against a Monetary Rule Some Possible Compromises
Other Monetarist Policy Positions 487 The Gold Standard Private Money A
Populist Standard Summary 490 Key Terms 491 Questions and
Exercises 491 Further Reading 491
PART FIVE: THE INTERNATIONAL MONETARY
SYSTEM 493
CHAPTER 29: THE EVOLUTION OF THE INTERNATIONAL
MONETARY SYSTEM 495
The Gold Standard 496 Gold and International Reserves Rules of the Game
Gold and the Consumer Price Level The Gold Exchange Standard 501 The
Bretton Woods System The International Monetary Fund and the Bretton Woods
System How Long Do Monetary Constitutions Last? The Breakdown of Bretton
Woods Summary 509 Key Terms 510 Questions and Exercises 510
Further Reading 510
CHAPTER 30: EXCHANGE RATES AND THE BALANCE OF
PAYMENTS 511
Foreign Exchange Trading 513 Organization of the Foreign Exchange
Market 514 The Relation between the Spot Exchange Rate and the Forward
Exchange Rate 516 Forward Exchange Rates as Forecasts of Future Spot
Exchange Rates 519 The Level of the Exchange Rate 520 Analyzing
Exchange Rate Disturbances 523 Why Has the Foreign Exchange Value of
the U.S. Dollar Been So Variable? Central Bank Intervention in the
Foreign Exchange Market 525 The Segmentation of National Money
Markets 527 The Balance of Payments Accounts 529 Summary 532 Key
Terms 533 Questions and Exercises 533 Further Reading 534
CHAPTER 31: FUTURE DIRECTIONS FOR THE INTERNATIONAL
MONETARY SYSTEM 535
International Monetary Developments in the 1970s and 1980s 536 Optimal
Currency Areas and Monetary Unions 537 The European Community and
Currency Unification Floating or Pegged Exchange Rates? 540 The Controversy
between Proponents of Pegged and Floating Exchange Rates I n cert dint s and
Independence under a Floating Rate System President Kemp and the Gold
Standard Problems of Managing an Exchange Rale System The Supply of
Reserve Assets 546 Gold as International Money The US. Dollar and Othn Hat
Assets The Role of Multinational Monetary Institutions 550 Toward a New
International Monetary System 551 Summary 553 Key Terms 554
Questions and Exercises 554 Further Reading 554
INDEX 555
|
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author | Mayer, Thomas 1927- Duesenberry, James S. Aliber, Robert Z. 1930- |
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discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
edition | 5. ed. |
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geographic | USA USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd |
geographic_facet | USA |
id | DE-604.BV008887959 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T17:26:42Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0393963004 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-005879834 |
oclc_num | 25630782 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-703 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM |
owner_facet | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-703 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM |
physical | XV, 574 S. graph. Darst., Kt. |
publishDate | 1993 |
publishDateSearch | 1993 |
publishDateSort | 1993 |
publisher | Norton |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Mayer, Thomas 1927- Verfasser (DE-588)119302284 aut Money, banking, and the economy Thomas Mayer ; James S. Duesenberry ; Robert Z. Aliber 5. ed. New York u.a. Norton 1993 XV, 574 S. graph. Darst., Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Bankwezen gtt Geldwezen gtt Monetaire politiek gtt Bank Banks and banking United States Monetary policy United States Money United States Geldpolitik (DE-588)4019902-2 gnd rswk-swf Bankpolitik (DE-588)4004470-1 gnd rswk-swf Geld (DE-588)4019889-3 gnd rswk-swf Kreditwesen (DE-588)4032950-1 gnd rswk-swf USA USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd rswk-swf Kreditwesen (DE-588)4032950-1 s USA (DE-588)4078704-7 g DE-604 Geld (DE-588)4019889-3 s Bankpolitik (DE-588)4004470-1 s 1\p DE-604 Geldpolitik (DE-588)4019902-2 s 2\p DE-604 Duesenberry, James S. Verfasser aut Aliber, Robert Z. 1930- Verfasser (DE-588)171948157 aut HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=005879834&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 2\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Mayer, Thomas 1927- Duesenberry, James S. Aliber, Robert Z. 1930- Money, banking, and the economy Bankwezen gtt Geldwezen gtt Monetaire politiek gtt Bank Banks and banking United States Monetary policy United States Money United States Geldpolitik (DE-588)4019902-2 gnd Bankpolitik (DE-588)4004470-1 gnd Geld (DE-588)4019889-3 gnd Kreditwesen (DE-588)4032950-1 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4019902-2 (DE-588)4004470-1 (DE-588)4019889-3 (DE-588)4032950-1 (DE-588)4078704-7 |
title | Money, banking, and the economy |
title_auth | Money, banking, and the economy |
title_exact_search | Money, banking, and the economy |
title_full | Money, banking, and the economy Thomas Mayer ; James S. Duesenberry ; Robert Z. Aliber |
title_fullStr | Money, banking, and the economy Thomas Mayer ; James S. Duesenberry ; Robert Z. Aliber |
title_full_unstemmed | Money, banking, and the economy Thomas Mayer ; James S. Duesenberry ; Robert Z. Aliber |
title_short | Money, banking, and the economy |
title_sort | money banking and the economy |
topic | Bankwezen gtt Geldwezen gtt Monetaire politiek gtt Bank Banks and banking United States Monetary policy United States Money United States Geldpolitik (DE-588)4019902-2 gnd Bankpolitik (DE-588)4004470-1 gnd Geld (DE-588)4019889-3 gnd Kreditwesen (DE-588)4032950-1 gnd |
topic_facet | Bankwezen Geldwezen Monetaire politiek Bank Banks and banking United States Monetary policy United States Money United States Geldpolitik Bankpolitik Geld Kreditwesen USA |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=005879834&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT mayerthomas moneybankingandtheeconomy AT duesenberryjamess moneybankingandtheeconomy AT aliberrobertz moneybankingandtheeconomy |