GECO 6210 - Topics in Economic Analsysis Inflation Syllabus.pdf

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  • 7/27/2019 GECO 6210 - Topics in Economic Analsysis Inflation Syllabus.pdf

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    TOPICS IN ECONOMIC ANALYSIS: INFLATION

    Economics 210S Prof. Anwar Shaikh

    Fall 2007

    Reading List

    1

    This seminar focuses on the problem of inflation. We will examine price patterns going back several centuries, as well as past

    episodes of inflation on a world scale. The course will also examine competing theoretical explanations of inflation. Students are

    expected to conduct empirical research on two different countries, one in the developed world and one in the developing world, and

    are expected to present their results in class. Grades for the course will be based on these presentations.

    Persistent Inflation as a Theoretical Problem

    I. Twentieth Century Inflations

    Major inflations:

    Capie, F. H. (1991).Major Inflations in History. Aldershot, Edward Elgar: Ch 1, 12, 15.

    Liederman, L. (1993).Inflation and Disinflation: The Israeli Experiment. Chicago, University of Chicago Press: Ch 1-2, 7-8.

    Brown, A.J. (1985). World Inflation Since 1950: An International Comparative Study. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press:

    Ch 1-3, [10], 13.

    International Comparisons:

    Harberger, A. C. (1988). World Inflation Revisited, Ch. 12 in E. Helpman, A. Razzin, and E. Sadka, Economic Effects of the

    Government Budget. Cambridge, MA, MIT Press: pp. 217-237.

    Fender, J. (1990).Inflation: A Contemporary Perspective. Harverster Wheatsheaf, New York: Ch 1.

    2. Competing Explanations of Persistent Inflation

    Surveys:

    Frisch, H. (1983). Theories of Inflation. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press: Ch 1-4, 7

    McCallum, B.T.(1990). Inflation: Theory and Evidence, Ch 18 in B.M. Friedman and F.H. Hahn,Handbook of Monetary

    Economics, Vol II. Amsterdam, North-Holland: pp. 963-1012.

    Classical theories of money and the price level:

    Laidler, D. (1991). The Golden Age of the Quantity Theory. Princeton, Princeton University Press: Ch 1-2, 5.

    Humphrey, T.M. (2004). Classical Deflation Theory,Economic Quarterly, Vol. 90/1, Winter, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond:

    pp. 11-32.

    Green, R. (1992). Classical Theories of Money, Output and Inflation: A Study in Historical Economics. London, St. Martins

    Press: Ch 1, 2, 8.

    Monetarist theory of inflation:

    Snowdon, B. and Vane, H.R. (2005). Modern Macroeconomics: Its Origins, Development and Current State. Cheltenham, UK,

    Edward Elgar: Ch 4.

    Brumm, H.J. (2005). Money Growth, Output Growth, and Inflation: A Reexamination of the Modern Quantity Theorys LinchpinPrediction. Southern Economic Journal 71(3): pp 661-667.

    Moroney, J.R. (2002). Money Growth, Output Growth, and Inflation: Estimation of a Modern Quantity Theory. Southern

    Economic Journal 69(2): pp 398-413.

    Smith, B. (1988). The Relationship Between Money and Prices: Some Historical Evidence Reconsidered. Federal Reserve Bank

    of Minneapolis Quarterly Review, Summer: pp 18-32.

    Oligopoly and monopoly explanations of inflation:

    Lekachman, R. (1973).Inflation: The Permanent Problem of Boom and Bust. New York, Vintage Books: Ch II

    Stadnichenko, A. (1975).Monetary Crisis of Capitalism. Moscow, Progress Publishers: pp 7-79.

  • 7/27/2019 GECO 6210 - Topics in Economic Analsysis Inflation Syllabus.pdf

    2/2

    TOPICS IN ECONOMIC ANALYSIS: INFLATION

    Economics 210S Prof. Anwar Shaikh

    Fall 2007

    Reading List

    2

    Sherman, H. (1976). Stagflation: A Radical Theory of Unemployment and Inflation. New York, Harpers and Row Publishers: Ch 6.

    Sawyer, M. (2001). Kalecki on Imperfect Competition, Inflation and Money. Cambridge Journal of Economics, 25: pp. 245-261.

    Money, credit, inflation:

    Earley, J.S., Parsons, R.J. and Thompson, F.A. (1976). Money, Credit, and Expenditure: A Sources and Uses of Funds Approach.

    The Bulletin, 1976-3, New York University.

    Gowland, D. (1991).Money, Inflation and Unemployment. New York, St. Martin's Press: Ch 1-3, 11.

    Filho, A. (no date). Credit Money and Inflation: A Theoretical Appraisal, unpublished paper.

    Budget deficit and inflation:

    Congdon, T. G. (1987). The Link between Budget Deficits and Inflation: Some Contrasts between Developed and Developing

    Countries, Ch 3, in M. J. Boskin, J. S. Flemming and S. Gorini, Private Savings and Public Debt. Oxford, Basil Blackwell: pp.

    234-254.

    Gowland, D. (1991). op.cit: Ch 9.

    Structuralist explanations (real wages and inflation):

    Taylor, L. (1991).Income Distribution, Inflation, and Growth. Cambridge Massachusetts, The MIT Press: Ch 1, 4.

    NAIRU: New Keynesian theory of inflation and unemployment:

    Galbraith, J. (2004). Fed Ache: A Review of A Term at the Fed: An Insiders View The People and Policies of the Worlds Most

    Powerful Institution, The Washington Monthly, July-August: pp. 1-3.

    Espinosa-Vega, M.A. and Russell, S. (1997)History and Theory of the NAIRU: A Critical Review,Economic Review, Federal

    Reserve Bank of Atlanta, Second Quarter: pp. 4-25.

    Snowdon, B. and Vane, H. (2005)Modern Macroeconomics: Its Origins, Development and Current State. Cheltenham, UK,

    Edward Elgar Publishing: Ch 7.

    Capacity Utilization

    Garner, C.A. (1994). Capacity Utilization and U.S. Inflation, Economic Review, Fourth Quarter, Federal Reserve Bank of KansasCity: pp. 5-21.

    Conflict ModelsSarantis, N. (1991) Conflict and inflation in industrial countries,International Review of Applied Economics, 5: pp. 155-169.

    Scitovsky, T. (1983). The demand-side economics of inflation, in Keynes and the Modern World, David Worswick and James

    Trevithick, (eds.). Cambridge, Cambridge University Press: pp. 223-254.

    Screpanti, E. (1997). Wages, Inflation and Employment: A Dynamic Model. Quarderni Del Dipartimento Di Economia Politica,

    217 (October), Siena, Italy, University of Siena: pp. 1-16.

    Stirati, A. (undated). Inflation, Unemployment and Hysteresis: an Alternative View, unpublished paper, Siena, Italy, University

    of Siena.

    ClassicalMarxian Approach to Growth and Inflation

    Shaikh, A. Explaining Inflation and Unemployment: An Alternative to Neoliberal Economic Theory, Ch 4 in A. Vlachou (ed.),

    Contemporary Economic Theory: Radical Critiques of Neoliberalism. London, MacMillan: pp. 89-105.

    Gillman, M., and M. Harris and L. Matyas (2004). Inflation and Growth: Explaining a Negative Effect,Empirical Economics 29,

    Berlin, Springer-Verlag: pp. 149-167.

    Ramamurthy, B. (2003) Inflation, Money Supply and Budget Deficit: Theory and an Empirical Exercise, unpublished research

    paper.

    Early, James S. What Caused Worlwide Inflation: Excess Liquidity, Excessive Credit or Both?Worldwide Inflation Archive, Bd.

    CXVII, 1981 17(21).