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Macro and Other Market Musings
Thursday, April 1, 2010
Recommended Readings
Breaking Up Banks--Bill Woolsey
Why
Texas
Avoided Much of the Real Estate Meltdown--Alyssa Katz
Do Bond Vigilantes Fear a Growing Economy?--Andrew Leonard
Treasuy Yield Curve Spread and the Zero Bound--Paul Krugman
The Dollar Still Dominates--Linda Goldberg
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About Me
David Beckworth
I am an assistant professor of economics at Texas State University in San Marcos, Texas. I am using this blog as an outlet to express my ideas, concerns, and questions on macroeconomics and markets.
View my complete profile
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Flexible Inflation Targeting Is Just Fine
A Dereliction of Duty
It Is Never Too Late: Global Economic Collapse Edi...
Fed Nominees, the Natural Interest Rate, and Safe ...
Monetary Policy Change James Hamilton Can Believe ...
The Best Fed News of the Week
David Andolfatto Can Feel More Confident About NGD...
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Bernanke: "Read My Lips, Not My Japan Papers!"
The Bernanke Conundrum and Level Targeting
Obama Needs His FDR Moment
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Is There Really An Aggregate Demand Problem?
John Taylor Reveals His Inner Market Monetarism
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Inconvenient Studies
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Don't Worry, Be Happy: Treasury Yield Edition
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NGDP Targeting News Roundup
Where Angels Fear To Tread
Christina Romer: We Need A Regime Change at the Fe...
The New York Fed Acknowledges the Fed's Superpower...
Ramesh Ponnuru, Ron Paul, and the Gold Standard
Some Thoughts for St. Louis Fed's James Bullard
Can Raising Interest Rates Spark a Robust Recovery...
The Cyclical Dimension of the Safe Asset Problem
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Yes, the Fed Still Has a Communication Problem
The FOMC Confuses Me
The Shining Star of Europe?
The Fed's Long-Term Interest Rate Forecast May Bac...
How to Fix the ECB's Communication Problem
Hey Newt, We Need Sound Money Not Hard Money
James Pethokoukis on NGDP Targeting
Did Fed Policy Matter to Housing Prices?
Pushback on the FOMC Transcript Hysteria
A Graph for Mario Draghi and the ECB to Ponder
Is There Really A German Bias at the ECB?
Weekend Macro Musings
FOMC Decides to Focus on the Rudder, Not the Desti...
Market Monetarism in The Telegraph
Scott Sumner and Russ Roberts Discuss Monetary Pol...
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Some NGDP Targeting Pieces
(1)
A Nominal GDP Target Would Narrow the Fed's Mandate.
(2)
How Nominal GDP Targeting Would Work.
(3)
The Case for Nominal GDP Targeting
.
(4)
Thoughts on the Tyler Cowen-Scott Sumner Debate.
(5)
Why a Nominal GDP Level Target Trumps a Price Level Target.
(6)
Target the Cause Not the Symptom.
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