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  • {{r|Money supply}}
    808 bytes (110 words) - 08:42, 10 June 2010
  • [[Money supply]]
    873 bytes (106 words) - 16:06, 15 February 2024
  • “LM” refers to “Liquidity preference and money supply”. The LM curve represents all equilibriums where demand equals supply on *At ''point B'', supply of goods and services is also insufficient and so is money supply. This combination implies a rise of both output and interest rate.
    9 KB (1,417 words) - 01:36, 19 December 2009
  • ...inflation]] and [[stagnation]], in which he pursued a policy of curtailing money supply. ...U.S. [[dollar]] faced runaway inflation. He responded by restricting the [[money supply]], in contrast to the past approach of controlling [[interest rate]]s. Thou
    3 KB (482 words) - 16:53, 12 March 2024
  • * The L-M (liquidity-money supply) curve shows, those combinations of interest rate and income that make the .... It follows from those assumptions that, at a given level of the total [[money supply]], the process of reconciling the transactions demand with the speculative
    9 KB (1,528 words) - 19:43, 7 March 2024
  • ...the Great Depression". He argues that, in addition to its effects via the money supply, the financial crisis had raised, what he terms the "cost of credit interme
    1 KB (216 words) - 04:26, 4 February 2009
  • ...n order to stem the resulting outflow of gold, and that would contract the money supply, producing a downward pressure on domestic prices which would tend to reduc ...Sterilsation|sterilise]] gold inflows and so prevent any increase in their money supply. Such sterilisation was, in fact practised from time to time by the two maj
    9 KB (1,474 words) - 10:49, 23 February 2024
  • ==Money Supply==
    10 KB (1,073 words) - 04:33, 8 June 2009
  • ...]]. War expenditure had been almost completely financed by loans and the [[money supply]] had been quadrupled in the period from 1914 to 1918. [[Inflation|Inflatio ...ll above British and American rates and there was a sharp reduction in the money supply<ref> There is a detailed account of monetary developments at the time on pa
    6 KB (845 words) - 04:51, 28 November 2011
  • ...war. War expenditure had been almost completely financed by loans and the money supply had been quadrupled in the period from 1914 to 1918. Inflationary pressures ...ll above British and American rates and there was a sharp reduction in the money supply<ref> There is a detailed account of monetary developments at the time on pa
    6 KB (845 words) - 16:23, 3 March 2013
  • ...switching from coins and paper to bank checks, which greatly expanded the money supply. In 1890 the ratio at the mines was 20 to 1 (20 oz of silver cost the same As Friedman and Schwarz (1963) have shown, the money supply was steadily expanding in the 1890s because bank checks were becoming commo
    10 KB (1,549 words) - 16:40, 22 March 2023
  • ...esians]], ought to be replaced with iron "rules" of policy - notably his "money supply growth" rule, and that central banks should be abolished<ref>[http://www.re
    5 KB (738 words) - 14:27, 31 March 2024
  • ...ng regulatory structure, and is theoretically one means of controlling the money supply, though it is not often used as such. ...required reserves are held in gold, and there is an extrinsic limit on the money supply which cannot be exceeded without relaxing the reserve requirement or [[mone
    8 KB (1,290 words) - 11:05, 6 November 2008
  • - [[money supply]]
    13 KB (1,670 words) - 19:47, 7 March 2024
  • {{r|Money supply}}
    6 KB (786 words) - 19:51, 7 March 2024
  • ...ult from the reduction of interest rates which follows an increase in the money supply, and upon the consequent price increases and expectations of price increase ...80s to control inflation by [[incomes policies]] and by controlling the [[money supply]] in Britain <ref> Nick Gardner: ''Decade of Discontent'', Blackwell 1987</
    6 KB (932 words) - 19:16, 10 September 2008
  • * The link between intermediate monetary targets (such as the [[money supply]]) and policy objectives is too unstable for their policy use, although th
    3 KB (414 words) - 16:46, 2 March 2013
  • ..., [[labour]], [[land]], [[market (economics)|market]], [[microfinance]], [[money supply]], [[moral hazard]], [[multiplier effect]], [[Nash equilibrium]], [[nationa
    5 KB (555 words) - 19:47, 7 March 2024
  • ...ice-Hall 1964</ref>, indicated that price increases had, in fact, followed money supply increases, but with time-lags that were long and variable. Critics argued ...re attempted to test it against the Keynesian theory that increases in the money supply would not affect the prices of goods because they would be spent on financi
    25 KB (3,861 words) - 19:47, 7 March 2024
  • ...nment security|government securities]], and is therefore controlling the [[money supply]] of the United States. ...other commercial companies could issue bank notes and thus regulate the [[money supply]]. Here is a dollar bill issued by the Delaware Bridge Co. of [[Lambertvill
    11 KB (1,696 words) - 09:21, 6 August 2023
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