Publisher description
There is a growing academic consensus that governments can achieve lower
inflation at a reduced social cost by making their central banks independent.
Nowhere is this debate more relevant than in the transition economies of
Eastern Europe, where the newly established central banks' attempts to
stabilise prices have come into conflict with the social objectives of national
governments. This book, written by a multinational team of experts, explores
the changing face of central banking in Eastern Europe in the light of modern
macroeconomic thinking, providing important and novel insights into the design
of monetary policy institutions. With its authoritative content, this book will
interest students and academics involved with money and banking, macroeconomics
and Eastern European studies. Professionals working for financial institutions
will also find plenty that will appeal within these pages. This book explores the changing face of central banking in eastern Europe
in the light of the modern macroeconomic thinking, providing important and
novel insights into the design of monetary policy institutions.
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Central Banking in Eastern Europe
Book reviews » Central Banking in Eastern Europe (Routledge International Studies in Money and Banking)
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