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Understanding Government Finance (English Edition) Kindle版
The government budget is not like a household budget. This report introduces the financial operations used by a central government with a free-floating currency, and explains how they differ from that of a household or corporation. The focus is on what constraints such a government faces, and explains why such governments only face a limited risk of involuntary default.
It introduces a simplified framework for the monetary system, along with the operating procedures that are associated with it. Complications seen in the real world are then added to this framework.
This report also acts as an introduction to some of the concepts used by Modern Monetary Theory, a school of thought within post-Keynesian economics.
It introduces a simplified framework for the monetary system, along with the operating procedures that are associated with it. Complications seen in the real world are then added to this framework.
This report also acts as an introduction to some of the concepts used by Modern Monetary Theory, a school of thought within post-Keynesian economics.
著者について
Brian Romanchuk founded the website BondEconomics.com in 2013. It is a website dedicated to providing analytical tools for the understanding of the bond markets and monetary economics. He previously was a senior fixed income analyst at la Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec. He held a few positions, including being the head of quantitative analysis for fixed income. He worked there from 2006-2013. Previously, he worked as a quantitative analyst at BCA Research, a Montréal-based economic-financial research consultancy, from 1998-2005. During that period, he developed a number of proprietary models for fixed income analysis, as well as covering the economies of a few developed countries. Brian received a Ph.D. in Control Systems Engineering from the University of Cambridge, and held post-doctoral positions there and at McGill University. His undergraduate degree was in electrical engineering, from McGill. He is a CFA charter holder. Brian currently lives in the greater Montréal area. --このテキストは、paperback版に関連付けられています。
登録情報
- ASIN : B00YTHX9D0
- 出版社 : BondEconomics (2015/6/3)
- 発売日 : 2015/6/3
- 言語 : 英語
- ファイルサイズ : 4318 KB
- 同時に利用できる端末数 : 無制限
- Text-to-Speech(テキスト読み上げ機能) : 有効
- X-Ray : 有効にされていません
- Word Wise : 有効
- 付箋メモ : Kindle Scribeで
- 本の長さ : 123ページ
- カスタマーレビュー:
著者について
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他の国からのトップレビュー
SP
5つ星のうち5.0
Great primer on Canadian & US Gov't Finance... Much of it was over my head though
2021年3月9日にカナダでレビュー済みAmazonで購入
This is not necessarily for beginners like me. I really struggled with 2 of the chapters. BUT it goes int great detail about how government finance actually works such as the role of the central bank and the finance department, and their relationships with other banks, what bonds are, and how money is created. In the end, I'd rather have too much detail than not enough.
レポート
レビュー を日本語に翻訳する
Martin F.
5つ星のうち5.0
If you want to understand government finance this is a must read
2018年5月1日に英国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
If you want to understand government finance this is a must read
Edward J. Delzio
5つ星のうち5.0
I highly recommend 'Understanding Government Finance' by Brian Romanchuk
2015年10月16日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Whether you are a devout follower of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT), or have never heard of it, I highly recommend 'Understanding Government Finance' by Brian Romanchuk, who is a Quebec-based fixed income quant analyst and publishes the website Bond Economics. Mr. Romanchuk’s expertise on the subject matter of government finance is evident, he has a B.Eng. in electrical engineering from McGill University, a Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge in control systems engineering, and is a CFA Charterholder. In May 2015, Brian Romanchuk was named by the Fixed Income Database newsletter as one of the ‘Top 10 Fixed Income Experts Worth Following’.
As per Mr. Romanchuk, the study of economic models, just like the study of mathematical models, includes understanding the rules, called constraints, that govern the behavior of variables in any highly complex system. These constraints affect the interrelationships of variables with all other entities within an economy, and understanding of these constraints (or the lack of constraints like a currency peg / gold fix) helps determine economic outcomes.
Mr. Romanchuk correctly takes aim at the pre-financial-crisis US money market system, saying that its "negligible capital requirements exacerbated the crisis", and generally "dragged US banks into the mess". This is true. In 'Stress Test', written by former Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, US money markets were part of the tri-party repo market which seized when Lehman went bankrupt on September 15, 2008, magnifying the crisis. As a result of this consequential interconnection and heavy reliance on the repo market for intra-day credit, the US Federal Reserve Bank’s macro-prudential policy today is to reduce the role of US money markets, broker-dealers, and clearing banks in the tri-party repo market.
In another clever observation, Mr. Romanchuk writes that US Treasury debt management officials have “painted themselves into an elaborate corner” by continuing to stick to the narrative that Treasury debt issuance is still needed to finance federal deficit spending, and that pure market forces alone determine the interest rates set at Treasury bond auctions ('monetizing debts' of gold-backed dollars was replaced by 'monetizing deficits' in fiat dollars, and the federal gov't manipulates interest rates to levels that it sees fit).
In 'Understanding Government Finance', Mr. Romanchuk wastes no time pointing out many of the common misconceptions by citizens regarding central government financing and the nonsensical tools used worldwide by monetary policymakers such as “counter-productive” US reserve requirements, “crazy” European negative interest rates, “meaningless” central government budget constraints, and “silly” Japanese quantitative easing. QE was first deployed in Japan in the 1990s and now practiced globally because central bankers "yearn to remain relevant after lowering policy rates to zero”, Mr. Romanchuk quips in yet another hits-it-on-the-head passage.
As per Mr. Romanchuk, the study of economic models, just like the study of mathematical models, includes understanding the rules, called constraints, that govern the behavior of variables in any highly complex system. These constraints affect the interrelationships of variables with all other entities within an economy, and understanding of these constraints (or the lack of constraints like a currency peg / gold fix) helps determine economic outcomes.
Mr. Romanchuk correctly takes aim at the pre-financial-crisis US money market system, saying that its "negligible capital requirements exacerbated the crisis", and generally "dragged US banks into the mess". This is true. In 'Stress Test', written by former Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, US money markets were part of the tri-party repo market which seized when Lehman went bankrupt on September 15, 2008, magnifying the crisis. As a result of this consequential interconnection and heavy reliance on the repo market for intra-day credit, the US Federal Reserve Bank’s macro-prudential policy today is to reduce the role of US money markets, broker-dealers, and clearing banks in the tri-party repo market.
In another clever observation, Mr. Romanchuk writes that US Treasury debt management officials have “painted themselves into an elaborate corner” by continuing to stick to the narrative that Treasury debt issuance is still needed to finance federal deficit spending, and that pure market forces alone determine the interest rates set at Treasury bond auctions ('monetizing debts' of gold-backed dollars was replaced by 'monetizing deficits' in fiat dollars, and the federal gov't manipulates interest rates to levels that it sees fit).
In 'Understanding Government Finance', Mr. Romanchuk wastes no time pointing out many of the common misconceptions by citizens regarding central government financing and the nonsensical tools used worldwide by monetary policymakers such as “counter-productive” US reserve requirements, “crazy” European negative interest rates, “meaningless” central government budget constraints, and “silly” Japanese quantitative easing. QE was first deployed in Japan in the 1990s and now practiced globally because central bankers "yearn to remain relevant after lowering policy rates to zero”, Mr. Romanchuk quips in yet another hits-it-on-the-head passage.
Mo
5つ星のうち4.0
Short and to the point
2019年11月23日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Good analytical content
diyman
5つ星のうち3.0
Not for newbies
2020年8月9日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Easy to read, but this book is best for people with general academic knowledge of economics. The author is also a proponent of MMT, so this book has that bias.