Monetarism/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 17:38, 11 January 2010
- See also changes related to Monetarism, or pages that link to Monetarism or to this page or whose text contains "Monetarism".
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- Banking [r]: the system of financial intermediation that provides the principle source of credit to individuals and companies. [e]
- Chicago School of Economics [r]: A highly influential school of thought and methodology favoring free-market economics practiced at and disseminated from the University of Chicago after 1950 [e]
- Economics [r]: The analysis of the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services. [e]
- Great Depression [r]: the severe downturn in economic activity that started in 1929 in Germany and the United States and affected many other countries. [e]
- History of economic thought [r]: the historical development of economic thinking. [e]
- Inflation [r]: An increase in the general level of the prices of goods and services. [e]
- Macroeconomics [r]: The study of the behaviour of the principal economic aggregates, treating the national economy as an open system. [e]
- Milton Friedman [r]: Capitalist, libertarian economist and political theorist and winner of the 1976 Nobel Prize in Economics. [e]