Milton Friedman's Monetary Framework
A Debate with His Critics
199 pages
|
© 1975
In response to widespread interest in a formal complete statement analyzing aspects of the money-income relationship and clarification of his quantity theory, Milton Friedman in 1970 published "A Theoretical Framework for Monetary Analysis," and a year later "A Monetary Theory of Nominal Income," both in the Journal of Political Economy. A combined version of these essays, first published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, begins this volume.
Because his statement was important and controversial both as a commentary on the history of economic thought and as a theoretical contribution in its own right, the Journal of Political Economy in 1972 presented critical reviews from noted monetary theorists, including Karl Brunner and Allan H. Meltzer, James Tobin, Paul Davidson, and Don Patinkin. Their studies, which are printed in the present volume, focus on substantive issues, covering a variety of topics. All of their major points are discussed in Friedman's reply, which clarifies and expands upon his original themes and introduces interesting new material. Thus the synthesis of his two articles, the critical comments, and his response, together with an introduction by Robert J. Gordon, are combined in one volume for the convenience of scholars and students.
Because his statement was important and controversial both as a commentary on the history of economic thought and as a theoretical contribution in its own right, the Journal of Political Economy in 1972 presented critical reviews from noted monetary theorists, including Karl Brunner and Allan H. Meltzer, James Tobin, Paul Davidson, and Don Patinkin. Their studies, which are printed in the present volume, focus on substantive issues, covering a variety of topics. All of their major points are discussed in Friedman's reply, which clarifies and expands upon his original themes and introduces interesting new material. Thus the synthesis of his two articles, the critical comments, and his response, together with an introduction by Robert J. Gordon, are combined in one volume for the convenience of scholars and students.
Contents
Dedication
Introduction
A Theoretical Framework for Monetary Analysis
Milton Friedman
Friedman's Monetary Theory
Karl Brunner and Allan H. Meltzer
Friedman's Theoretical Framework
James Tobin
A Keynesian View of Friedman's Theoretical Framework for Monetary Analysis
Paul Davidson
Friedman on the Quantity Theory and Keynesian Economics
Don Patinkin
Comments on the Critics
Milton Friedman
References
Contributors
Index
Introduction
A Theoretical Framework for Monetary Analysis
Milton Friedman
Friedman's Monetary Theory
Karl Brunner and Allan H. Meltzer
Friedman's Theoretical Framework
James Tobin
A Keynesian View of Friedman's Theoretical Framework for Monetary Analysis
Paul Davidson
Friedman on the Quantity Theory and Keynesian Economics
Don Patinkin
Comments on the Critics
Milton Friedman
References
Contributors
Index
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