National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
The Post Keynesian theory of money: Effect on economic (in)stability and the possibility of its solution
Vítek, Roman ; Chytil, Zdeněk (advisor) ; Janíčko, Martin (referee)
The diploma thesis analyses the influence of money on the economic instability by the view of Post Keynesian economic theory. The paper answers the question, what creates the economic instability and if it's possible to eliminate or least reduce the instability. The money is here always seen as credit, which is made by institutions on the financial market. We need trust to create money. However the confidence is based on long-term expectations, which are not rational. The result of the analysis is that the trust growth in economy leads to growth of creation of money, whereby more money based on irrational, by psychology influenced expectations, is made. The economy becomes less stable, because there is more money in it, than people will have in the future to pay for its extinction. As the irrational expectation is an exogenous variable, which basically cannot be influenced, the economic instability is ineliminable and therefore allied to economy. We can only reduce instability by focusing on limiting factors in the creation of money, or on areas, where the irrational action can vent itself. Into consideration comes regulation of the financial institutions size, or regulation of international capital flow.
The role of the central bank within the framework of endogenous money
Horváthová, Kateřina ; Chytil, Zdeněk (advisor) ; Mirvald, Michal (referee)
Abstract This bachelor thesis discusses the role of the central bank within the framework of the theory of endogenous money. The first part of the thesis gives an overview of the historical development concerning the theory of money: From the quantity theory of money to the new quantity theory of Milton Friedman, concluding with the Keynesain theory of money. The second part focuses on the endogenous theory of money. The third part discusses the role of the central bank in terms of this theory.

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