Chapter 1: Prosperity for All
Chapter 2: Keynes Betrayed
Chapter 3: The Demise of the Natural Rate Hypothesis
Chapter 4: Let's Stop Pretending that Unemployment is Voluntary
Chapter 5: Five Problems with New Keynesian Economics
Chapter 6: Why Unemployment Persists
Chapter 7: Wall Street and Main Street
Chapter 8: The New Keynesian Model Explained
Chapter 9: The Farmer Monetary Model Explained
Chapter 10: Keynesian Economics without the Consumption
Function
Chapter 11: How to Prevent Financial Crises
Roger E. A. Farmer is a Distinguished Professor of Economics at
UCLA. In 2013, he was the Senior Houblon-Norman Fellow at the Bank
of England. He has published numerous scholarly articles in leading
academic journals, as well as books that have been translated into
Chinese, Italian, Vietnamese and Hungarian. He has previously held
positions at the University of Pennsylvania, The European
University Institute and the University of Toronto. He is a
Fellow of the Econometric Society, Research Associate of the
National Bureau of Economic Research, Research Fellow of the Centre
for Economic Policy Research, Fellow Commoner of Cambridge
University, and Co-Editor of
the International Journal of Economic Theory.
"The book is well written and will be of interest to economists who
are looking for new
ways to think about macroeconomics." - Journal of Economic
Literature
"Though Farmer's argument is never cuddly, it accounts for the
human emotion that mathematically driven models overlook: when
businesspeople feel nervous, they don't invest, resulting in low
values and volatile prices-and nervousness is the key emotion of
our time. Technical but rarely arid and of interest to economists,
investors, and policymakers." - Kirkus Reviews
"This is an ambitious, thought-provoking and well-written book that
addresses the big macroeconomic questions of the day from an
authoritative voice outside the mainstream. You may or may not
agree with the conclusions, but it makes for a great, rewarding and
stimulating read." - Claudio Borio, Head of the Monetary and
Economic Department, Bank for International Settlements
"Unafraid of challenging conventional macroeconomics, Farmer is
second to none for presenting his views in a pedagogical way
without sacrificing their sharpness." - Michel De Vroey, Professor
Emeritus, University of Louvain
"In this book, Professor Farmer challenges contemporary
macroeconomic analysis. This book will no doubt generate debate,
from which our profession will surely gain an improved
understanding of economic processes." - Arnold Harberger,
Distinguished Professor Emeritus, University of California Los
Angeles and University of Chicago
"Roger Farmer is an exceptional macroeconomist, whose contributions
span the range from deep theory to high policy relevance. He argues
that beliefs should be as fundamental as preferences, technology,
and endowments. Roger's delightful examples and metaphors deepen
understanding and add 'fun' to reading the book. His questions and
arguments make the book as fascinating to read as a detective
story." - William A. Barnett, Oswald Distinguished Professor of
Macroeconomics, University of Kansas and Center for Financial
Stability
"Farmer sees a future free from stock market crashes and deep
recessions, problems that he traces to financial panics fed by
lender mischief and by abrupt swings in investor psychology.
Inventing policies to manage market psychology will be no cakewalk
but the task is important, and a serious public conversation about
it seems long overdue. Policymakers, academics and informed
citizens who want to join this conversation will find lots of help
in Farmer's book."
- Costas Azariadis, Edward Mallinckrodt Distinguished Professor in
Arts & Sciences, Washington University, and Federal Reserve Bank of
St. Louis
"If you are looking for a lively sketch of mainstream
macroeconomics spiced with a provocative alternative model and
proposal for achieving full employment by stabilizing asset prices,
this is the book you need. Here is the rare treat of an economist
who both knows his field and has contributed to it standing back
and writing about it in an accessible, non-technical way." -
Michael Parkin, Professor Emeritus of Economics, University of
Western Ontario
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