Money and Inflation at the Time of Covid

By (author) Tim Congdon

ISBN13: 9781035328963

Imprint: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd

Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd

Format: Hardback

Published: 28/10/2025

Availability: Not yet available

Description
How is the inflation flare-up of the early 2020s to be explained? In this book Tim Congdon, one of the world’s leading monetary analysts, argues that a money growth explosion in spring and summer 2020 was the main cause. The book is scholarly, but also lively and readable. Congdon restates the quantity theory of money, advocating the usefulness of a broadly-defined measure of money which includes all, or nearly all, bank deposits. He applies this theory to the macroeconomic events of the early 2020s, and debunks the widespread view that inflation was caused by unforeseeable supply-side shocks. In spring 2020 Congdon was almost unique in forecasting the inflation flare-up. His position contrasted sharply with the overwhelming majority of economists who instead believed that Covid-19 would lead to several years of disinflation. Congdon was right and nearly all of his profession was wrong. Congdon is very critical of leading central banks, particularly the USA’s Federal Reserve. Money and Inflation at the Time of Covid is a brilliant challenge to conventional macroeconomic thinking. It provides vital insights into recent events for students and academics in economics and finance, as well as economists, policymakers and other practitioners working in financial institutions, companies and consultancies.
Contents Preface Introduction to Money and Inflation at the Time of Covid PART I SOME BACKGROUND THEORY 1 The quantity theory of money: a new restatement 2 How this restatement differs from Friedman’s 3 Can central banks run out of ammunition? The money– equities interaction channel in monetary policy 4 Why were economists’ forecasts in the Covid pandemic so badly wrong? PART II APPLICATIONS OF THE THEORY IN THE EARLY 2020s 5 The money explosion of spring 2020, as it happened 6 Was it right in 2020 to forecast that the then money explosion would increase inflation? An analysis of the US situation 7 Applying the theory to the USA in the early 2020s 8 Applying the theory to the UK in the early 2020s 9 Does cost accountancy provide a good framework for analysing inflation? 10 Money in the Covid-related business cycle: an analytical narrative and key evidence
  • Macroeconomics
  • Monetary economics
  • Professional & Vocational
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List Price: £110.00