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Is It Possible to Create Goods from Thin Air Using Money and an Expenditure Multiplier?

Gennady Bilych ()

Business and Economic Research, 2013, vol. 3, issue 2, 156-172

Abstract: Most sensible people will not think to dispute the fact that any active government monetary policy that has no solid theoretical or empirical grounding should be thought of as an irresponsible experiment with completely unpredictable consequences for the economy. However, as surprising as it may be, this is exactly the policy in use today in many countries all over the world in the hope of overcoming the crisis and reviving national economies. The results of empirical studies on the effects of a certain amount of money on economic growth are rather contradictory and do not allow us to definitively evaluate the effectiveness of government intervention. The Keynes Theory, which for a long time served as scientific proof of the entry of the government to a market, has been the object of fierce criticism for the last 40 years. Little is left of the proud status it once enjoyed. Many economists are still only willing to support Keynes when he states that under certain circumstances, an unexpected increase in the money supply may have a positive effect on the function of the economy. Author argues that such attempts to refute the neutrality of money are theoretically unfounded and contradict empirical data and additional money in a crisis is more likely to be a poison rather than a cure.

Keywords: Money; Monetary Policy; Multiplier; Keynes Theory; Economic Growth (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2013
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