David Laidler
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 86 |
Date of birth | August 12,1938 |
Zodiac sign | Leo |
Job | Economist |
Education | The University of Chicago |
Syracuse University | |
London School of Economics and Political Science | |
Born | England |
United Kingdom | |
Affiliations | University Of Western Ontario |
Edited works | Inflation and labour markets |
Publications | scholar.google.com |
H index | 50 |
Citations | 10,860 |
Awards | Donner Prize |
Interests | Monetary Economics |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 649303 |
The demand for money
The golden age of the quantity theory
Fabricating the Keynesian Revolution: Studies of the Inter-war Literature on Money, the Cycle, and Unemployment
Taking Money Seriously
Introduction to Microeconomics
Monetarist perspectives
Money and macroeconomics
Essays on money and inflation
Macroeconomics in retrospect
Two Percent Target: The Context, Theory, and Practice of Canadian Monetary Policy
The buffer Stock Notion in Monetary Economics
Woodford and Wicksell on Interest and Prices: The Place of the Pure Credit Economy in Theory of Monetary Policy
Hawtrey, Harvard, and the Origins of the Chicago Tradition
Lucas, Keynes, and the Crisis
Skidelsky's Keynes: A Review Essay
Phillips in Retrospect
Monetarism : an Interpretation and an Assessment
The Great Canadian Disinflation: The Economics and Politics of Monetary Policy in Canada, 1988-93
What was Lost with IS-LM
Adam Smith as a Monetary Economist
The Price Level, Relative Prices and Economic Stability: Aspects of the Interwar Debate
Two Views of the Lender of Last Resort: Thornton and Bagehot
Monetary Policy Without Money: Hamlet Without the Ghost
Highlights of the Bullionist Controversy
Taking Money Seriously and Other Essays
Two Nations, One Money? Canada's Monetary System Following a Quebec Secession
An Early Harvard Memorandum on Anti-Depression Policies: Introductory Note
The Role of the History of Economic Thought in Modern Macroeconomics
Financial Stability, Monetarism and the Wicksell Connection
The Quantity Theory is Always and Everywhere Controversial - Why?
Are Perceptions of Inflation Rational?
Keynes and the Birth of Modern Macroeconomics
Georg Simmel's Philosophy of Money: A Review Article for Economists
Notes on the Microfoundations of Monetary Economics
Dow and Saville's Critique of Monetary Policy: A Review Essay
Axel Leijonhufvud and the Quest for Micro-Foundations: Some Reflections
Responses to Economic Change
Free Banking and the Bank of Canada
Central Banks As Lenders of Last Resort: Trendy Or Passe?
Chicago Monetary Traditions
Meltzer's History of the Federal Reserve
Successes and Failures of Monetary Policy Since the 1950s
Milton Friedman: A Brief Obituary
Monetary Cooperation in the North American Economy
Inflation Targets Versus International Monetary Integration: A Canadian Perspective
Remedies for Financial Crises in the Classical and Neoclassical Literature
The Case for Price Stability, Then and Now: A Retrospective Note on John W. Crow's 1988 Eric J. Hanson Memorial Lecture
Friedman and Schwartz on Monetary Trends : a Review Article
The Quantity of Money and Monetary Policy
The Exchange Rate Regime and Canada's Monetary Order
The Demand for Money in the United States Yet Again
The golden age of the quantity theory
Fabricating the Keynesian Revolution: Studies of the Inter-war Literature on Money, the Cycle, and Unemployment
Taking Money Seriously
Introduction to Microeconomics
Monetarist perspectives
Money and macroeconomics
Essays on money and inflation
Macroeconomics in retrospect
Two Percent Target: The Context, Theory, and Practice of Canadian Monetary Policy
The buffer Stock Notion in Monetary Economics
Woodford and Wicksell on Interest and Prices: The Place of the Pure Credit Economy in Theory of Monetary Policy
Hawtrey, Harvard, and the Origins of the Chicago Tradition
Lucas, Keynes, and the Crisis
Skidelsky's Keynes: A Review Essay
Phillips in Retrospect
Monetarism : an Interpretation and an Assessment
The Great Canadian Disinflation: The Economics and Politics of Monetary Policy in Canada, 1988-93
What was Lost with IS-LM
Adam Smith as a Monetary Economist
The Price Level, Relative Prices and Economic Stability: Aspects of the Interwar Debate
Two Views of the Lender of Last Resort: Thornton and Bagehot
Monetary Policy Without Money: Hamlet Without the Ghost
Highlights of the Bullionist Controversy
Taking Money Seriously and Other Essays
Two Nations, One Money? Canada's Monetary System Following a Quebec Secession
An Early Harvard Memorandum on Anti-Depression Policies: Introductory Note
The Role of the History of Economic Thought in Modern Macroeconomics
Financial Stability, Monetarism and the Wicksell Connection
The Quantity Theory is Always and Everywhere Controversial - Why?
Are Perceptions of Inflation Rational?
Keynes and the Birth of Modern Macroeconomics
Georg Simmel's Philosophy of Money: A Review Article for Economists
Notes on the Microfoundations of Monetary Economics
Dow and Saville's Critique of Monetary Policy: A Review Essay
Axel Leijonhufvud and the Quest for Micro-Foundations: Some Reflections
Responses to Economic Change
Free Banking and the Bank of Canada
Central Banks As Lenders of Last Resort: Trendy Or Passe?
Chicago Monetary Traditions
Meltzer's History of the Federal Reserve
Successes and Failures of Monetary Policy Since the 1950s
Milton Friedman: A Brief Obituary
Monetary Cooperation in the North American Economy
Inflation Targets Versus International Monetary Integration: A Canadian Perspective
Remedies for Financial Crises in the Classical and Neoclassical Literature
The Case for Price Stability, Then and Now: A Retrospective Note on John W. Crow's 1988 Eric J. Hanson Memorial Lecture
Friedman and Schwartz on Monetary Trends : a Review Article
The Quantity of Money and Monetary Policy
The Exchange Rate Regime and Canada's Monetary Order
The Demand for Money in the United States Yet Again
David Laidler Life story
David Ernest William Laidler is an English/Canadian economist who has been one of the foremost scholars of monetarism. He published major economics journal articles on the topic in the late 1960s and early 1970s.