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Money, Finance and the Real Economy: What went wrong?

Author

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  • Brender, Anton
  • Pisani, Florence
  • Gagna, Emile

Abstract

The functions of the financial system of a developed economy are often badly understood. This can largely be attributed to free-market ideology, which has spread the belief that leaving finance to its own devices would provide the best possible mechanism for allocating savings. The latest financial crisis has sparked the beginnings of a new awareness on this point, but it is far from having led to an improved understanding of the role of the financial institutions. For many people, finance remains more an enemy to be resisted than an instrument to be intelligently exploited. Its institutions, which issue and circulate money, play an important role in the working of the real economy that it would be imprudent to neglect. The allocation of savings, but also the level of activity and the growth rate depend on it. In this book, the authors carefully analyse the close links between money, finance and the real economy. In the process, they show why today the existence of a substantial potential of saving, instead of being an opportunity for the world economy, could threaten it with �secular stagnation�.

Suggested Citation

  • Brender, Anton & Pisani, Florence & Gagna, Emile, 2015. "Money, Finance and the Real Economy: What went wrong?," CEPS Papers 10290, Centre for European Policy Studies.
  • Handle: RePEc:eps:cepswp:10290
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Mr. Manmohan Singh, 2012. "The (Other) Deleveraging," IMF Working Papers 2012/179, International Monetary Fund.
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    3. Jean-Paul Pollin, 2005. "Théorie de la politique monétaire. Esquisses d'une refondation," Revue économique, Presses de Sciences-Po, vol. 56(3), pages 507-539.
    4. Taylor, John B., 1993. "Discretion versus policy rules in practice," Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy, Elsevier, vol. 39(1), pages 195-214, December.
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    Cited by:

    1. Pascale Combes Motel, 2022. "Introductory Macroeconomics," Post-Print hal-03865968, HAL.

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