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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
141

A study of the Euro-dollar market : its origin and interaction with U.S. monetary policy /

Resler, David H. January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
142

A two stage decision rule for the conduct of monetary policy /

Chiu, Cheng Hsiung January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
143

An Empirical Test of the Real Interest Rate in Germany, 1970-2000

Stubblebine, Michael A. 10 September 2002 (has links)
This thesis is a empirical test of the constancy of the real rate of interest in Germany over the period of 1970 to 2000. The methodology, based on Mishkin (1981), employs Ordinary Least Squares regressions to search for correlation in movements of real rates with lagged inflation, time trends, and ten other variables that commonly appear in the literature. Overall results reject the hypothesis of the constancy of the real rate. The Fisher Effect (Fisher, 1930), that movements in nominal interest rates reflect changes in expected inflation, is found to be only moderate for Germany. The monetary policy implication is that nominal interest rates contain little information about real interest rates and therefore on the tightness of monetary policy. Overall lack of significance in the test results may (as Mishkin found) be because there is so little variation in real rate movements. / Master of Arts
144

Sustainable monetary policy : lessons and evidence from the bank suspension period, 1797-1821

Newby, Elisa Maria Susanna January 2008 (has links)
This thesis re-examines the suspension of the gold standard rule in Britain between 1797 and 1821 within the framework of the theory of credible and time consistent monetary policy. By combining both historical and theoretical analysis the thesis challenges the prevailing theory in which the gold standard is considered as a contingent rule and the suspension as an exogenously credible regime. Firstly, the thesis analyses what made the suspension credible in the absence of the gold standard rule. It is proposed that the suspension was a credible regime, because the resumption of the gold standard at the old par value in the future was a sustainable plan. It is shown that monetary policy during the bad state -- such as war -- can still be time consistent in the absence of the formal commitment rule, if the policy maker's plan is to resume the original commitment rule when the economy returns to the good state. The equilibrium is based on trigger strategies where private agents retaliate if a policy maker deviates from its policy plan to resume the gold standard rule. Secondly, the thesis aims to establish why the gold standard rule was suspended for twenty-four years. Both historical analysis and a dynamic general equilibrium model demonstrate that the gold standard was a shock amplifier when the shocks became persistent in the 1790s, and suspension was used to restore monetary stability during the French Wars. As the suspension of cash payments was a credible regime, it maintained the value and circulation of paper currency that in turn stabilised production and consumption. Suspension increased the degree of flexibility in the economic policy as the monetary authority had an opportunity to stimulate the economy by issuing fiat money during the war, on the understanding that the fiat money so issued would be withdrawn from circulation before the gold standard resumed. Finally, it is explained why the gold standard was resumed after the relatively successful Suspension Period. The gold standard was seen as a solution to the problem that arose from the Bank of England's ambiguous role as a public and private institution. Rules were considered to be better than discretion, and the gold convertibility was a transparent principle, which maximised the long-run welfare of the society. The thesis demonstrates how already in the eighteenth century commitment to the gold standard rule had increased the efficiency of capital markets and enabled Britain to finance its eighteenth-century wars by using deficit finance. Maintaining these abilities through the gold standard was desirable.
145

'n Teoretiese en ekonometriese evaluering van monetêre beleid in Suid-Afrika

11 February 2015 (has links)
M.Com. (Econometrics) / The main objective of this study was to formulate and evaluate a set of equations that adequately represents the South African monetary system. The analytical framework of the study is based on a theoretical examination of the process of formulating monetary policy. The main objectives of monetary policy was identified as price stability, a high rate of economic growth, exchange rate stability and an acceptable balance of payments situation. The achievement of these goals is dependent on the central bank's choice of target variables and policy instruments. The monetary system of South Africa was analysed by examining the various goals, target variables and policy instruments that constitute the South African Reserve Bank's monetary policy. The nature and impact of the new banking legislation which was introduced in South Africa on 1 February 1991 when the Deposit-taking Institutions Act of 1990 came into effect, was also discussed in the study. As a result of the high level of abstraction of the monetary phenomenon and the dynamic and interdependent nature of monetary policy, econometric and statistical techniques and criteria were used to evaluate certain aspects of the South African monetary system.
146

Politics and Monetary Policy: A Cross-National and Time Series Analysis

Williams, John Taylor 12 1900 (has links)
This research proposes that monetary policy is more than a technical economic policy. Since it is politically controlled, political variables should affect it. In this analysis, the monetary policies of France, Italy, the United Kingdom, and West Germany are described in detail. Political variables potentially affecting this policy are reviewed. Political variables, such as political party in power, electoral competition, electoral cycles, and political instability, are employed in a time series regression analysis of monetary aggregates. Various economic variables are also included to aid model specification. While cross-national variations occur in monetary policy determination, this research shows that political parties follow ideologies in monetary policy-making. Other political variables are not strongly related to monetary aggregates.
147

Financial liberalization and transmission of monetary policy in developing countries the cases of Ghana and Kenya /

Sebuharara, Ruzima C. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--State University of New York at Binghamton, Department of Economics, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 280-289).
148

Inflation, inflation uncertainty, and the variance of money growth: Are they related?

Ashley, Malcolm Orrin 01 December 2003 (has links)
No description available.
149

Government financing, monetary shock and economic growth-small open monetary economy.

Yueh, Chun-Hao 21 August 2003 (has links)
none
150

The Hong Kong Government's interest rate policy : a political and economic perspective /

Tse, Ching-biu, Alan. January 1986 (has links)
Thesis (M. Soc. Sc.)--University of Hong Kong, 1986.

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