Results 181 to 190 of about 9,313 (218)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
The Monetarization of Medical Care
New England Journal of Medicine, 1984CLOSE observers of the health-care system, among them Arnold Relman1 2 3 and David Rogers,4 are alarmed at how fast American medicine appears to be turning from a profession into a business. The evidence of history and economics suggests that a related and more pervasive trend, the monetarization of medical care, has been proceeding apace for the past ...
openaire +2 more sources
Monetarism, Bondism, and Inflation
Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 1982INFLATION HAS BEEN IDENTIFIED as Public Enemy No. 1." Many who hold this view attribute inflation to the Federal Reserve's willingness to finance government deficits with newly printed money. It is argued that inflation would end if only the Federal Reserve would instead commit itself to increasing the money supply at a constant rate, equal to the long-
openaire +1 more source
Robertson, Money, and Monetarism
1992Of the great economists of the twentieth century, there is, perhaps, none whose work is now more neglected than Dennis Robertson. This neglect might be understandable — though not, from a scholarly standpoint, justifiable — if Robertson had been concerned only with topics that are no longer of interest to economists; but this, of course, was not the ...
openaire +2 more sources
The monetarism, as I have tried to outline in this work is based on the ideas of the American professor Milton Friedman, who tried to revitalize and reconfigure the old quantity theory of money. These ideas were transposed and discussed by authors like Ion Pohoață, Tiberiu Brăilean or Al.
openaire
From Monetarism to Keynesianism and back to Monetarism again
1982‘Put all economists end to end and they still would not reach a conclusion.’ This disparaging view of economists is commonplace in the media, in the speeches of politicians and in everyday conversation. That every economist has a different theory is a widely held view.
openaire +1 more source
In recent years much has been written about the Chilean economy and its controversial flirtation with Chicago School economics. Economists have eagerly watched Chile's implementation of free market policies. The result of these economic reforms was hailed in the late 1970s, somewhat prematurely, by the Chicago School economists as a resounding success ...
openaire +1 more source
1990
Despite the prolonged existence of idle plant and heavy unemployment among a literate, trained labour force, the United States seems unable to mobilize these resources to rebuild our decaying cities, to revitalize mass transit, to regenerate clear air and waterways, and so on. Why are we so impotent?
openaire +1 more source
Despite the prolonged existence of idle plant and heavy unemployment among a literate, trained labour force, the United States seems unable to mobilize these resources to rebuild our decaying cities, to revitalize mass transit, to regenerate clear air and waterways, and so on. Why are we so impotent?
openaire +1 more source

