Christopher Adolph is Associate Professor of Political Science and Adjunct Associate Professor of Statistics at the University of Washington, Seattle, where he is also a core faculty member of the Center for Statistics and the Social Sciences. He is a former Robert Wood Johnson Scholar in Health Policy Research and won the American Political Science Association's Mancur Olson Award for the best dissertation in political economy. He is the author of "Bankers, Bureaucrats, and Central Bank Politics: The Myth of Neutrality," and his research on comparative political economy and quantitative methods has appeared in American Political Science Review, Political Analysis, Social Science & Medicine, and other academic journals.
Most studies of the political economy of money focus on the laws protecting central banks from government interference; this book turns to the overlooked people who actually make monetary policy decisions. Using formal theory and statistical evidence from dozens of central banks across the developed and developing worlds, this book shows that monetary policy agents are not all the same. Molded by specific professional and sectoral backgrounds and driven by career concerns, central bankers with different career trajectories choose predictably different monetary policies. These differences undermine the widespread belief that central bank independence is a neutral solution for macroeconomic management. Instead, through careful selection and retention of central bankers, partisan governments can and do influence monetary policy - preserving a political trade-off between inflation and real economic performance even in an age of legally independent central banks.
發表於2024-12-25
Bankers, Bureaucrats, and Central Bank Politics 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
圖書標籤: 比較政治 比較政治經濟學 政治學 政治經濟學 待獲取 Politics
Bankers, Bureaucrats, and Central Bank Politics 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載