NOTE: You are purchasing a standalone product; MyEconLab does not come packaged with this content. If you would like to purchase both the physical text and MyEconLab search for ISBN-10: 0134047346/ISBN-13: 9780134047348 . That package includes ISBN-10: 0133836797 /ISBN-13: 9780133836790 and ISBN-10: 0133862518 /ISBN-13:  9780133862515.

 

For courses in Money and Banking or General Economics.

 

An Analytical Framework for Understanding Financial Markets

The Economics of Money, Banking and Financial Markets brings a fresh perspective to today’s major questions surrounding financial policy. Influenced by his term as Governor of the Federal Reserve, Frederic Mishkin offers students a unique viewpoint and informed insight into the monetary policy process, the regulation and supervision of the financial system, and the internationalization of financial markets.

 

Continuing to set the standard for money and banking courses, the Eleventh Edition provides a unifying, analytic framework for learning  that fits a wide variety of syllabi.  Core economic principles organize students' thinking, while current real-world examples keep them engaged and motivated.

 

Closely integrated with the text, MyEconLab offers students the ability to study and practice what they’ve learned. Students can watch over 120 mini-lecture videos presented by the author, work problems based on the latest data in the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis’s FRED database, and more.

 

Also available with MyEconLab®

MyEconLab is an online homework, tutorial, and assessment program designed to work with this text to engage students and improve results. Within its structured environment, students practice what they learn, test their understanding, and pursue a personalized study plan that helps them better absorb course material and understand difficult concepts.

 


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PART 1. INTRODUCTION
1. Why Study Money, Banking, and Financial Markets?
2. An Overview of the Financial System
3. What Is Money?

PART 2. FINANCIAL MARKETS
4. Understanding Interest Rates
5. The Behavior of Interest Rates
6. The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates
7. The Stock Market, the Theory of Rational Expectations, and the Efficient Market Hypothesis

PART 3. FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
8. An Economic Analysis of Financial Structure
9. Banking and the Management of Financial Institutions
10. Economic Analysis of Financial Regulation
11. Banking Industry: Structure and Competition
12. Financial Crises

PART 4. CENTRAL BANKING AND THE CONDUCT OF MONETARY POLICY
13. Central Banks and the Federal Reserve System
14. The Money Supply Process
15. The Tools of Monetary Policy
16. The Conduct of Monetary Policy: Strategy and Tactics

PART 5. INTERNATIONAL FINANCE AND MONETARY POLICY
17. The Foreign Exchange Market
18. The International Financial System

PART 6. MONETARY THEORY
19. Quantity Theory, Inflation, and the Demand for Money
20. The IS Curve
21. The Monetary Policy and Aggregate Demand Curves
22. Aggregate Demand and Supply Analysis
23. Monetary Policy Theory
24. The Role of Expectations in Monetary Policy
25. Transmission Mechanisms of Monetary Policy

CHAPTERS ON THE WEB
26. Financial Crjses in Emerging Market Economies
27. The ISLM Model
28. Nonbank Finance
29. Financial Derivatives
30. Conflicts of Interest in the Financial Services Industry
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Details
  • A print text
  • Free shipping
  • Real-time data analysis.  Problems marked with the RTDA logo require that students download data from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis FRED website, and then use the data to answer questions about current issues in macroeconomics.
    • Will Bitcoin will become the money of the future (Chapter 3)
    • The effects of the Obama tax increase on bond interest rates (Chapter 6)
    • The movement along the MP curve when the Fed raised the federal funds target from 2004 to 2006 (Chapter 21)
    • FYI box on what the word “autonomous”  means (Chapter 22)
    • Nominal GDP targeting (Chapter 23)
    • Reorganized Part 3, Financial Institutions. Updates include an FYI box on the tyranny of collateral (Chapter 8), more detail on securitization and the shadow banking system (Chapter 11), and the response of financial regulation to the global financial crisis (Chapter 12).
    • The Euro Crisis. Includes information on the European sovereign debt crisis (Chapter 12), monetary unions (Chapter 18), and whether the Euro will survive (Chapter 18).
    • Non-Conventional Monetary Policy and the Zero Lower Bound. Includes a new section on quantitative easing and the money supply, 2007-2014 (Chapter 14) and forward guidance and the commitment to future policy actions (Chapter 15). Chapter 23 has also been significantly revised to include monetary policy at the zero lower bound, unconventional monetary policy,  and the effects of Abenomics on Japanese monetary policy in 2013.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780133836790
Publisert
2015-08-14
Utgave
11. utgave
Utgiver
Pearson Education (US); Pearson
Vekt
1360 gr
Høyde
10 mm
Bredde
10 mm
Dybde
10 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
704

Om bidragsyterne

Frederic S. Mishkin

Frederic S. Mishkin is the Alfred Lerner Professor of Banking and Financial Institutions at the Graduate School of Business, Columbia University. He is also a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research, co-director of the U.S. Monetary Policy Forum, a member of the Squam Lake Working Group on Financial Reform, and past president of the Eastern Economics Association. Since receiving his Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1976, he has taught at the University of Chicago, Northwestern University, Princeton University, and Columbia. He has also received an honorary professorship from the People’s (Renmin) University of China. From 1994 to 1997, he was Executive Vice President and Director of Research at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and an associate economist of the Federal Open Market Committee of the Federal Reserve System. From September 2006 to August 2008, he was a member (governor) of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.

 

Professor Mishkin’s research focuses on monetary policy and its impact on financial markets and the aggregate economy. He is the author of more than twenty books including Macroeconomics: Policy and Practice, Second Edition  (Pearson, 2015); Financial Markets and Institutions, Eighth Edition (Pearson, 2015); Monetary Policy Strategy, (MIT Press, 2007); The Next Great Globalization: How Disadvantaged Nations Can Harness Their Financial Systems to Get Rich (Princeton University Press, 2006); Inflation Targeting: Lessons from the International Experience (Princeton University Press, 1999); Money, Interest Rates, and Inflation (Edward Elgar, 1993); and A Rational Expectations Approach to Macroeconometrics: Testing Policy Ineffectiveness and Efficient Markets Models (University of Chicago Press, 1983). In addition, he has published more than 200 articles in such journals as American Economic Review, Journal of Political Economy, Econometrica, Quarterly Journal of Economics, Journal of Finance, and Journal of Monetary Economics.

 

Professor Mishkin has served on the editorial board of American Economic Review and has been an associate editor at Journal of Business and Economic Statistics, the Journal of Applied Econometrics, Journal of Economic Perspectives, Journal of International Money and Finance, and Journal of Money, Credit and Banking; he also served as the editor of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Economic Policy Review. He is currently an associate editor (member of the editorial board) at five academic journals, including International Finance; Finance India; Review of Development Finance, Borsa Economic Review and Emerging Markets, Finance and Trade. He has been a consultant to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the World Bank, and the International Monetary Fund, as well as to many central banks throughout the world. He was also a member of the International Advisory Board to the Financial Supervisory Service of South Korea and an advisor to the Institute for Monetary and Economic Research at the Bank of Korea. Professor Mishkin was a Senior Fellow at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s Center for Banking Research and was an academic consultant to and serves on the Economic Advisory Panel of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.