The Functional Form of the U.K. Demand for Money: A Critique of a Paper by Mills

Author(s):  
T. A. Boylan ◽  
I. G. O'Muircheartaigh
2018 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 353-371 ◽  
Author(s):  
William A. Barnett ◽  
Neepa B. Gaekwad

1983 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Prem S. Laumas ◽  
Martin Williams

The paper tries to overcome some of the empirical problems that are associated with the estimation of demand-for-money function in an underdeveloped economy. It deals explicitly with the choice of functional form and inclusion of interest rate as an explanatory variable to serve as opportunity cost of holding money in the money demand function using both narrow and broad definitions of money. The paper concludes that short- or long-period interest rates serve as an opportunity cost of holding money in India only when a narrow definition of money is used. Time deposits were found to be sensitive to the maturity structure of financial instruments. As regards the choice of functional form, the paper holds that it makes no difference whether the function is estimated by linear form or by log-linear form. The paper also confirms for India the results of Friedman's seminal study for the United States.


2005 ◽  
pp. 4-20
Author(s):  
E. Yasin

Currency inflow in Russia from raw materials exports allows taking into account high business activity to assimilate growing money supply transforming it into economic growth. Fall in business activity as a result of pressure on business led to saturation of demand for money. This considerably increases the danger of inflation growth and requires sterilization of excess money supply including the usage of the Stabilization Fund. According to the author's estimates, corresponding losses in GDP growth will equal 1-2 percentage points per year.


1970 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 272-280
Author(s):  
Richard C. Porter

A common problem of finite-horizon planning models is that there is no logical determinant of investment in the final year (s). Where post-horizon production is not valued by a model, later-year investment, whose sole function is creation of capacity for post-horizon output, looks as incongruous as last rites for an atheist. A number of artificial devices have been developed to handle this difficulty1, but one predominates: to assume that terminal-year investment is a function of terminal-year output. The purpose of this note is to show: 1) how varied and arbitrary are the assumed functions (Section I); 2) that the terminal-year variables and the apparent feasibility of the resulting Plan are highly sensitive to the choice of function (Section II); and 3) that the arbitrariness of functional form is inevitable in the sense that generally acceptable criteria do not much restrict the choice (Section III). Throughout this note, we shall neglect four complexities that are not essential to the problem at hand. One, the marginal capital-output ratio (


1975 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 370-375
Author(s):  
M. A. Akhtar

I am grateful to Abe, Fry, Min, Vongvipanond, and Yu (hereafter re¬ferred to as AFMVY) [1] for obliging me to reconsider my article [2] on the demand for money in Pakistan. Upon careful examination, I find that the AFMVY results are, in parts, misleading and that, on the whole, they add very little to those provided in my study. Nevertheless, the present exercise as well as the one by AFMVY is useful in that it furnishes us with an opportunity to view some of the fundamental problems involved in an empi¬rical analysis of the demand for money function in Pakistan. Based on their elaborate critique, AFMVY reformulate the two hypo¬theses—the substitution hypothesis and the complementarity hypothesis— underlying my study and provide us with some alternative estimates of the demand for money in Pakistan. Briefly their results, like those in my study, indicate that income and interest rates are important in deter¬mining the demand for money. However, unlike my results, they also suggest that the price variable is a highly significant determinant of the money demand function. Furthermore, while I found only a weak support for the complementarity between money demand and physical capital, the results obtained by AFMVY appear to yield a strong support for that rela¬tionship.1 The difference in results is only a natural consequence of alter¬native specifications of the theory and, therefore, I propose to devote most of this reply to the criticisms raised by AFMVY and the resulting reformulation of the two mypotheses.


2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Michael Finegold
Keyword(s):  

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