The Monetarism Concept

written by: Elizabeth Turner; article published: year 2006, month 10;



In: Categories » Legal and finance » Historical facts » The Monetarism Concept

Monetarism is a school of macroeconomic theory emphasizing the causal role of the money stock in aggregate economic fluctuations, and holding that the key to aggregate economic stability lies with a steady, noncyclical growth path in the money supply. The aggregate economic system experiences upswings and downswings manifested in such statistics as the unemployment rate. These cyclical swings are a response to imbalances between the total demand for all goods and services relative to the total supply, as opposed to imbalances between supply and demand in individual markets, such as the market for automobiles.

According to monetarism, the aggregate economic system has strong intrinsic tendencies to gravitate toward a full-employment equilibrium, and these tendencies will assert themselves in the absence of shocks to the money stock growth rate. If the money stock growth rate is stable, the aggregate economic system will mirror that stability. Economists who adhere to the tenets of monetarism are called monetarists.

In policy terms monetarism means that central bank monetary policy should set target rates of growth of money stock measures, and rather single-mindedly pursue those targets. Keynesian monetary policy, the orthodox policy in the 1950s and 1960s, emphasized interest rates as a target of monetary policy, raising interest rates to slow down the economy and reducing interest rates to speed things up. Monetarists contended that the Keynesian policies took the focus off the money stock and replaced it with subjective ideas about what interest rates should be. According to monetarism financial markets should determine interest rate levels.

Monetarism rose to prominence in the 1970s as inflation began to eclipse unemployment as the most dreaded economic problem. Monetarists contended that the relationship between inflation and money stock growth was virtually a one-to-one relationship, and that money stock growth was feeding the inflation. Monetarists clung to the money stock theory as the sole explanation of inflation, excluding the possible role of government budget deficits, powerful unions, monopolistic corporations, harvest failures, and shortages of key raw materials.

Although restricted money stock growth seemed a plausible antidote against inflation, the first effects of restricted money stock growth were seen in rising unemployment rates rather than falling inflation rates, making the tactic a touchy matter in democratic societies subject to the moods of voters. A president no less conservative than Richard Nixon preferred to give wage and price controls a try rather than put the economy on a prolonged diet of restricted money stock growth.

The decade of the 1980s saw what might be called a monetarist experiment. The governments of Margaret Thatcher in the United Kingdom and President Reagan in the United States imposed strict monetarist policies of restricted money stock growth in an effort to break the back of double-digit inflation. In the United States the prime interest rate soared to 20 percent, and unemployment reached double-digit levels. Thatcher’s policies put the United Kingdom through similar rigors. The tight money policies put these economies through recessions deeper than any economic contraction since the 1930s.

Monetarist policies succeeded in bringing down inflation rates, and unemployment rates began to fall back, suggesting that monetarist policies were succeeding. Nevertheless, in October 1987 stock markets crashed in New York and London, and central banks began increasing money stock growth to reinflate world financial markets. Contrary to monetarists’ expectations the added money stock growth did not trigger another round of inflation. During the 1990s inflation has been less than expected based upon money stock growth, casting a bit of doubt on monetarism.

At the very least it can be said that monetarism brought a stoical quality to economic policy making that was needed to endure the pain of disinflating the economies of the world. Notwithstanding the departure in the 1990s from monetarist policies based upon strict, steady growth rates in money stocks, inflation rates have steadily subsided, perhaps reflecting the policy effects of new knowledge gained from the monetarists’ theoretical explorations.

legal disclaimer

1) Our website is not responsible for the information contained by this article as well for any and all copyright infringements by authors and writers. E-articles is a free information resource. If you suspect this article for any copyright infringements, please read the Terms of service and contact us to investigate the problem.
2) The E-articles directory team is not responsible for inaccuracies, falsehoods, or any other types of misinformation this tutorial may contain and will not be liable for any loss or damage suffered by a user through the user's reliance on the information gained here. Please read the Terms of service

Useful tools and features

Translate this article to...    Send this article to you or to a friend

Link to this article from your page   
If you like this article (tutorial), please link to it from your web page using the information above. Linking to this page, this is the only way to help us improve our service, the same time providing your visitors with a way to improve their online experience.

related articles

1. The Carolingian Reform
Around a.d. 755 the Carolingian Reform established the European monetary system, which can be expressed as: 1 pound = 20 shillings = 240 pennies Originally the pound was a weight of silver rather than a coin, and from a pound of pure silver 240 pennies were struck. The Carolingian Reform restored the silver content of a penny that was already in circulation and was the direct descendant of the Roman denarius. The shilling was a reference to the solidi, the money of a...

2. Historical perspectives of accounting
With the establishment of the first English colonies in America, accounting or bookkeeping, as the discipline was referred to then, quickly assumed an important role in the development of American commerce. Two hundred years, however, would pass before accounting would separate from bookkeeping, and nearly three hundred years would pass before the profession of accounting, as it is now practiced, would emerge. For individuals and businesses, accounting records in Colonial America often were very eleme...

3. Discussion about The Federal Reserve System
The Federal Reserve System is the central banking system for the United States, established by the Federal Reserve Act of 1913. Most countries have only one central bank, such as the Bank of England, or Germany’s Bundesbank. The Federal Reserve System makes up a system of 12 regional central banks. Central banks are bankers’ banks, holding deposits of commercial banks, making loans to commercial banks, and serving as lenders of last resort to commercial banks in an economic downturn. The Federal Reserve System also ac...

4. Suffolk System
The Suffolk System was the first effort to regulate private banking in the United States. Although banking regulation later became a government activity, the Suffolk System was born of a private initiative that saw a need to regulate country banks. The Suffolk Bank of Boston first established the Suffolk System in 1819 and in 1824 six other Boston banks joined the system. The Suffolk System required country banks around Boston to deposit reserve balances totaling $5,000 in one or more of the seven Boston banks participati...

5. What represent the Treasury Notes
Treasury notes were interest-bearing treasury bonds that circulated as money in the pre–Civil War era in the United States. The notes were not legal tender but were accepted for payments owed the federal government, including tax obligations. For the first two decades of its existence the new government of the United States steered clear of the issuance of government notes that circulated as money. The hyperinflation of the American Revolution remained a thought-provoking memory of the dangers of paper money, and Al...

6. Augustan Monetary System
Augustus, Roman emperor from 30 b.c. to a.d. 14—the first emperor after the fall of the Roman Republic, established a monetary system that provided a degree of monetary order to the Romans for two centuries. The system gradually gave ground to currency debasement and inflation, which grew to unbearable proportions during the third century a.d., when the emperors Aurelian, Diocletian, and Constantine instituted major reforms of the Roman currency. The early Roman Republic adopted a bronze monetary standard, but wars ...

7. Gold Standard
Under a gold standard, the value of a unit of currency, such as a dollar, is defined in terms of a fixed weight of gold and bank notes or other paper money are convertible into gold accordingly. Although the monetary systems of individual countries have been based on the gold standard at times, all the economically advanced countries of the world were on the gold standard for a relatively brief time—roughly from 1870 to 1914, sometimes called the period of the classic gold standard. The coinage of gold dates back to 7...

8. Postage Stamps
Postage stamps have served as money in areas as diverse as America, Europe, and the Far East. During the American Civil War merchants, struggling with a shortage of small coins, began the practice of making small change with postage stamps. Daily purchases of stamps increased fivefold in New York City alone, and individual stamps circulated until they became too dirty and tattered for recognition. John Gault, a Boston sewing-machine salesman, proposed the encasement of stamps in circular metal discs with transparent mica on one...

9. What were The Lombard Banks
Lombard banks were banks that accepted deposits of goods and issued credits on account. These credits could pass from one person’s account to another’s as a medium of exchange. The term Lombard probably came from the importance of Italian bankers in the early history of the London financial market, sometimes referred to as Lombard Street, just as Wall Street signifies the financial center of New York. In early English history, Lombard was another name for “Italian.” According to Webster&rsquo...

10. Second Bank of the United States
The Second Bank of the United States met the need for a central bank in the United States between 1816 and 1836. During the War of 1812 state banks suspended the conversion of bank notes into specie. At that time each bank issued its own paper money and held specie (gold and silver coins) to redeem its paper money. Today banks issue checking accounts and hold paper money to redeem the checking accounts. When the banks suspended specie payments in 1814, six months before the war ended, the federal government had no way to pressu...