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The peculiarity of money

Stephen Rousseas

Chapter Chapter 2 in Post Keynesian Monetary Economics, 1986, pp 15-28 from Palgrave Macmillan

Abstract: Abstract One of the basic assumptions of Post Keynesian monetary theory is that we live in a world of uncertainty. A second assumption, implied by the first, is that all events take place in historical time. Historical time, furthermore, is seen as being irreversible. We do not have the luxury of doing something and, not liking the way it turns out, ask that we be allowed to start all over again, wiping out all the vestiges and consequences of our first try. Decisions to act, once implemented, tend to unfold along lines we do not expect. Commitments, in other words, are not easily undone and they are invariably undertaken in a penumbra of indeterminateness. They have a way of starting a chain of events that have an element of surprise in them. We are, consequently, forever trapped in the present, in a historically contingent world in which the future is largely unknown and unforeseeable. The only thing we can say with any assurance is that the future unfolding of events cannot be predicted, that what we expect to happen will most likely not happen. Being so, we must always be in the process of adapting our strategies to changing circumstances, again without any guarantee that our new-laid plans will work out any better than before; and so on ad infinitum as a new train of events unfolds conditioned by our newly developed responses to the unpredictable events occurring in an ever-shifting present.

Keywords: Interest Rate; Monetary Policy; Cash Flow; Central Bank; Money Supply (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1986
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DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-18229-9_2

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