Brown Bag Series in collaboration with Job Talk: The Twin Endogeneities Hypothesis: A Theory of Central Bank Evolution

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Abstract: 

The paper outlines a theory according to which central banking evolves as the result of an interaction between endogenous money and endogenous institutions. This theory is called the Twin Endogeneities Hypothesis and forms the basis for two models which are developed and used to explain two stylized facts of central bank evolution. These models are examples of the operationalization of the hypothesis. The first model, combining endogenous money and hysteresis, explains the first stylized fact, namely that there are two different origin tendencies in the history of central banking. The second model is a heuristic model which combines the swings of the Polanyi pendulum (or the Polanyian double movement) with swings in long-run central bank independence to explain the latter. These examples serve to demonstrate how the Twin Endogeneities Hypothesis, a theory in the tradition of institutionalist Post Keynesianism, can be used to develop models which help us unpack and address the evolution of central banking from a theoretical point of view. This is achieved without falling into the trappings of neoclassical or New Classical economics.

 Speaker: Daniyal Khan - The New School for Social Research Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Economics

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Add to Calendar 2022-10-14 11:30:00 2022-10-14 01:00:00 Brown Bag Series in collaboration with Job Talk: The Twin Endogeneities Hypothesis: A Theory of Central Bank Evolution Abstract:  The paper outlines a theory according to which central banking evolves as the result of an interaction between endogenous money and endogenous institutions. This theory is called the Twin Endogeneities Hypothesis and forms the basis for two models which are developed and used to explain two stylized facts of central bank evolution. These models are examples of the operationalization of the hypothesis. The first model, combining endogenous money and hysteresis, explains the first stylized fact, namely that there are two different origin tendencies in the history of central banking. The second model is a heuristic model which combines the swings of the Polanyi pendulum (or the Polanyian double movement) with swings in long-run central bank independence to explain the latter. These examples serve to demonstrate how the Twin Endogeneities Hypothesis, a theory in the tradition of institutionalist Post Keynesianism, can be used to develop models which help us unpack and address the evolution of central banking from a theoretical point of view. This is achieved without falling into the trappings of neoclassical or New Classical economics.  Speaker: Daniyal Khan - The New School for Social Research Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Economics   Online LUMS Drupal 8 adil.sarwar@lums.edu.pk Asia/Karachi public

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