The Study of Money
- 1 April 2000
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Project MUSE in World Politics
- Vol. 52 (3) , 407-436
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0043887100016592
Abstract
Monetary phenomena define the contours of the contemporary global economy. This is a recent development, and it will transform the study of international political economy (IPE). Two excellent new books,The Geography of Money, by Benjamin Cohen, andMad Money, by Susan Strange, will frame, support, and provide the point of departure for scholars addressing this vital question. Ultimately, however, and perhaps necessarily, these books raise more questions than they answer. But they do suggest in which direction the most promising avenues of investigation point—toward the study of the unique interconnections between the ideas, material interests, and institutions associated with the management of money. Those relationships are profoundly consequential for politics and demand the renewed attention of contemporary scholars of international relations and political economy.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Keynes, capital mobility and the crisis of embedded liberalismReview of International Political Economy, 1999
- National Currencies and National IdentitiesAmerican Behavioral Scientist, 1998
- Disinflation, Structural Change, and DistributionReview of Radical Political Economics, 1998
- Creating "Credible" Economic Policy in Developing and Transitional EconomiesReview of Radical Political Economics, 1997
- Monetary Populism in Nineteenth-Century America: An Open Economy InterpretationThe Journal of Economic History, 1997
- THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF EUROPEAN MONETARY UNIFICATION: AN ANALYTICAL INTRODUCTIONEconomics & Politics, 1993
- The Welfare Cost of Permanent Inflation and Optimal Short-Run Economic PolicyJournal of Political Economy, 1979
- The Effects of Inflation on the Distribution of Economic WelfareJournal of Money, Credit and Banking, 1973
- The Redistributional Effects of InflationThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1957
- Richard CantillonThe Economic Journal, 1891