ABSTRACT

Monetary policy is still one of the most contested areas of modern economics, and since the original publication of Policy Makers on Policy much has changed. This new edition collects contributions from leading policy makers and practitioners to reflect on the aims and objectives of monetary policy and on what it can achieve, combining the old chapters from Gordon Brown, Tony Blair, Kenneth Clarke, Geoffrey Howe, Nigel Lawson, and others, with new perspectives from Mervyn King, Jean-Claude Trichet, Ernst Welteke, Otmar Issing, and Alastair Darling.



A new far-reaching introduction from the editors Forrest Capie and Geoffrey Wood puts these important contributions to the discussion of economic policy in the new context. They look at what lessons can be learnt from the earlier discussions, what anticipations of present difficulties can be found in them and what, in other words, the comparatively recent past teaches us about how to deal with the turbulent present.



The second edition of Policy Makers on Policy brings together otherwise inaccessible commentaries and reflections on policy by those involved in making it, along with a commentary on and context for their remarks. Thus the book will be of great interest and use to students of economics and politics, and indeed anyone with an interest in current economic developments and their roots in the past.

chapter 1|15 pages

Introduction

Three decades of monetary policy

part |54 pages

Part I

chapter 3|12 pages

Objectives of monetary policy

Past and present

chapter 4|16 pages

The fight against inflation

part |64 pages

Part II

chapter 6|17 pages

Monetary policy

Practice ahead of theory

chapter 8|13 pages

Financial and monetary integration

Benefits, opportunities and pitfalls

chapter 10|14 pages

The ECB and the euro

The first five years

part |72 pages

Part III

part |27 pages

Part IV

chapter 16|12 pages

A new economic model

chapter 17|13 pages

Benefits and costs

Securing the future of social security

part |41 pages

Part V