Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Relationship Between Energy Prices, Monetary Policy and Inflation; A Case Study of South Asian Economies Cover

Relationship Between Energy Prices, Monetary Policy and Inflation; A Case Study of South Asian Economies

By: Atiq-ur-Rehman  
Open Access
|Mar 2014

References

  1. 1. Gibson, A.H., 1923, The Future Course of High Class Investment Values, Banker’s Magazine (London) 115, 15-34.
  2. 2. Tooke (1838), A history of prices and of the state of circulation from 1793 to 1837, reprint London PS King and son (1928)
  3. 3. Barth III, M. J., & Ramey, V. A. (2001). The Cost Channel of Monetary Transmission. (B. S. Bernanke, & K. Rogoff, Eds.) NBER Macroeconomics Annual 2001 , 16, 199-239.10.1086/654443
  4. 4. Mishkin, F. S. (1995). Symposium on the Monetary Transmission Mechanism. The Journal of Economic Perspectives , 9 (4), 3-10.10.1257/jep.9.4.3
  5. 5. Ghaffari A (2013), Interest Rate, Inflation and Output; Relationship Revisited, Unpublished MS Economics thesis, International Islamic University, Islamabad
  6. 6. Keynes J. M. (1936), The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, Macmillan Cambridge University Press, for Royal Economic Society, London
  7. 7. Sims, Christopher A. (1992), “Interpreting the Macroeconomic Time Series Facts: The Effects of Monetary Policy,” European Economic Review 36 (June): 975-100010.1016/0014-2921(92)90041-T
  8. 8. Blinder, A. (1987). Credit rationing and effective supply failures. The Economic Journal 97(386):327-35210.2307/2232882
  9. 9. Farmer, R. (1984). A new theory of aggregate supply. American Economic Review 74(5):920-30
Language: English
Page range: 43 - 58
Published on: Mar 11, 2014
Published by: Central Bank of Montenegro
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 3 issues per year

© 2014 Atiq-ur-Rehman, published by Central Bank of Montenegro
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons License.