edited by Steven Horwitz, St. Lawrence University, Canton, NY, USA.
First edition.
Bingley, UK :
Emerald Group Publishing Limited,
2016.
1 online resource
Advances in Austrian economics,
vol. 20
1529-2134 ;
Includes bibliographical references.
Introduction: money, cycles, and crises in the US and Canada / Steven Horwitz -- Financial foundations of Austrian business cycle theory / Nicolas Cachanosky, Peter Lewin -- The optimal Austrian business cycle theory / Alexander Salter, William Luther -- Hayek on the neutrality of money / Steven Horwitz -- On the empirical relevance of the Mises-Hayek theory of the trade cycle / William Luther, Mark Cohen -- Expansionary monetary policy at the federal reserve in the 1920s / Patrick Newman -- The political regime factor in Austrian business cycle theory: historically accounting for the US and Canadian experiences of the 2007-2009 financial crisis / George Bragues -- An empirical comparison of Canadian-American business cycle fluctuations with special reference to the Phillips curve / Robert Mulligan -- Canadian versus US mortgage markets: a comparative study from an Austrian perspective / Andrew Young -- Banking regulation and knowledge problems / Thomas Hogan, G. Manish -- The comparative political economy of a crisis / Peter Boettke, Liya Palagashvili -- Policy design and execution in a complex world: can we learn from the financial crisis? / Peter Lewin.
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The US housing bubble and the ensuing financial crisis and recession, as well as the ongoing slow recovery, have prompted a renewal of interest in the business cycle theory associated with the Austrian school of economics. Over the last thirty years, Austrian economists have extended and refined that theory while also deploying Austrian insights in other areas of monetary theory and macroeconomics. In this volume, a number of macroeconomists influenced by the Austrian school demonstrate its explanatory power by applying those ideas to a variety of historical and contemporary issues. Several of the papers focus on the differences between the US and Canadian experiences during the early 21st century, while other contributors offer critical extensions of Austrian monetary and business cycle theory. The volume also includes empirical applications to the housing boom and bust, and several papers consider the place of Austrian macroeconomics within the schools approach to political economy and public policy more generally. Studies in Austrian Macroeconomics shows the breadth and depth of modern macroeconomics in the Austrian tradition.