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Estimated U.S. M1 demand functions appear unstable, regularly "breaking down," over 1960-88 (e.g., missing money, great velocity decline, M1-explosion). The authors propose a money demand function whose arguments include inflation, real income, long-term bond yield and risk, T-bill interest...
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Walrasian general competitive equilibrium is considered in a simple example of an exchange economy with commodity-pairwise trading posts and transaction costs. Budget balance is enforced at each trading post separately. Commodity-denominated bid and ask prices at each post allow the post to...
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General equilibrium is investigated with N commodities traded at N(N − 1)/2 commodity-pairwise trading posts. Bid and ask prices are quoted as commodity rates of exchange. Trade is a resource-using activity undertaken by firms recovering transaction costs through the spread between bid...
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The classic Arrow-Debreu (1954) general equilibrium model cannot sustain or account for the existence of money. This lacuna arises because each household and firm faces a single budget constraint summarizing revenue and expense in all commodities. Money, a carrier of value between transactions,...
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