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The Ayes Have It, While Greenspan and Many Others Comment.
This week the House Financial Service Committee voted to approve legislation requiring the Fed to report a policy rule or strategy for setting the instruments of monetary policy. The legislation now goes to the full House, with a vote likely … Continue reading
Posted in Monetary Policy
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Discussion of Policy Rule Legislation Continues
Discussion and debate about new policy rule legislation continued during the past week. I replied to Alan Blinder’s article, “An Unnecessary Fix for the Fed,” published in the Wall Street Journal last Friday (July 18). I show that Alan’s article was … Continue reading
Posted in Monetary Policy
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What a Rollout!
Last week (July 7) I wrote on this blog about a newly-introduced bill that would require policy rules for the Fed. Since then a Congressional hearing was held on the bill on July 10, Fed Chair Janet Yellen was cross-examined … Continue reading
Posted in Monetary Policy
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New Legislation Requires Fed to Adopt Policy Rule
A lot of research and experience shows that more predictable rules-based monetary policy leads to better economic performance—both in terms of price stability and steadier-stronger employment and output growth. But in practice there have been big swings in Fed policy … Continue reading
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Stanford’s Economics 1 Now Coming Online
I have been teaching economics at Stanford for many years. Economics 1 is one of my favorite courses, and it’s been one of the most popular courses at Stanford. I usually teach it in a large lecture hall with hundreds … Continue reading
Posted in Teaching Economics
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Policy Rules When Money Still Matters
In an interesting recent paper and blog post “Money Still Matters,” Michael Belongia and Peter Ireland report new empirical results with relevance to monetary policy. They show that the Divisia index of the money supply (not M1 or M2) has effects on … Continue reading
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Ten Amusingly Irreverent Tweets at Conference on Fed
So many members of the financial press were having a good time tweeting at the Fed Centennial conference last week at Stanford that, according the “TweetReach Report,” about 1 million Twitter accounts were reached and 10 million tweets were delivered … Continue reading
Posted in Teaching Economics
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An Essay on Gary Becker for the Hoover Digest
I wrote this short essay on Gary Becker for the Hoover Digest where it will appear in a forthcoming issue: Gary Becker was “the greatest social scientist who has lived and worked in the last half century.” So declared Milton Friedman … Continue reading
Posted in Teaching Economics
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New Conference on Fed and Rules-Based Policy: A Preview
Today starts a two day conference at Stanford’s Hoover Institution on monetary policy. It’s part of the Fed Centennial. Here is the full agenda which includes talks and commentary by Esther George, Tom Sargent, Charles Plosser, John Williams, Jeff Lacker, Ed … Continue reading
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Market Failure and Government Failure in Leading Economics Texts
A new review of 23 leading Principles of Economics texts reveals huge differences in the coverage of government failure versus market failure. Jim Gwartney, who is the author of a leading text with a strong emphasis on public choice, along … Continue reading
Posted in Teaching Economics
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