Forms of Money: The Gold Standard continue…

The endogenous determination of the interest rate

In a boom, banks will lend more and will seek to create new deposits or issue additional notes. To support these activities, they will have to attract additional reserves. This will lead them to bid up interest rates, as they seek to attract idle reserves from one another and from hoards. In a slump, they will issue less and lend less, and will seek to shed reserves, lowering interest rates. In other words, while long-term average rates are determined by costs and competition, current interest rates reflect the balance of supply and demand in the market. They move pro-cyclically.

This is illustrated by a simple model. On the one hand, the rate of interest (in relation to the rate of profit), is likely to affect investment inversely, and investment, in turn, will have an impact on prices and employment. Changes in prices and employment will call for changes in reserves. Read the rest of this entry »

THE JOB GUARANTEE AND THE BUDGET DEFICIT

The International Labour Office (1999) argues:

[A]ny strategy for full employment must be based on a sound macroeconomic framework. To achieve this, unsustainable current account imbalances, or foreign debt accumulation, must be reduced and low rates of inflation achieved. This requires the continuous adjustment of policies, a realistic exchange rate, fiscal discipline and wage moderation (wage increases in line with labor productivity). But in times of global deflation this is not necessarily sufficient as a guide to policy, and a boost to demand may be needed, perhaps going so far as to generate expectations of inflation, in addition to the accepted policy of balancing budgets over the business cycle as a whole (International Labour Office, 1999). Read the rest of this entry »

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