Description:
"Magisterial. . . . The direct and indirect influence of the Monetary History would be difficult to overstate."--Ben S. Bernanke, Nobel Prize-winning economist and former chair of the U.S. Federal Reserve
From Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman and his celebrated colleague Anna Jacobson Schwartz, one of the most important economics books of the twentieth century--the landmark work that rewrote the story of the Great Depression and the understanding of monetary policy Milton Friedman and Anna Jacobson Schwartz's A Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960 is one of the most influential economics books of the twentieth century. A landmark achievement, it marshaled massive historical data and sharp analytics to argue that monetary policy--steady control of the money supply--matters profoundly in the management of the nation's economy, especially in navigating serious economic fluctuations. One of the book's most important chapters, "The Great Contraction, 1929-33" addressed the central economic event of the twentieth century, the Great Depression. Friedman and Schwartz argued that the Federal Reserve could have stemmed the severity of the Depression, but failed to exercise its role of managing the monetary system and countering banking panics. The book served as a clarion call to the monetarist school of thought by emphasizing the importance of the money supply in the functioning of the economy--an idea that has come to shape the actions of central banks worldwide.Review Quotes: "The long-awaited monetary history of the United States by Friedman and Schwartz is in every sense of the term a monumental scholarly accomplishment--monumental in its sheer bulk, monumental in the definitiveness of its treatment of innumerable issues, large and small, in U.S. monetary history, monumental in the consistency and coherence of its analysis of nearly a century of drastic institutional change, monumental, above all, in the theoretical and statistical effort and ingenuity that have been brought to bear on the solution of complex and subtle economic issues. The volume sets, if not a new style, a new standard for the writing of economic history, one that requires the explanation of historical developments in terms of monetary theory and the application to them of the techniques of quantitative economic analysis. It is, moreover, written in an eminently readable style."---Harry G. Johnson, Economic Journal