Available Formats
The New Lombard Street: How the Fed Became the Dealer of Last Resort
By (Author) Perry Mehrling
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
7th February 2011
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Economic history
332.110973
Hardback
192
Width 140mm, Height 216mm
340g
Presents the innovative principles needed to address the instability of the markets and to rebuild our financial system. This book traces the evolution of ideas and institutions in the American banking system since the establishment of the Federal Reserve in 1913. It explains how the Fed took classic central banking wisdom from Britain and Europe.
"A well-written, scholarly dissection that should be required reading for all graduate courses (and perhaps some advanced undergraduate) in macroeconomics or monetary economics."--Choice "With lucid precision, Mehrling traces the history of how Fed policy makers became biased toward 'excessive elasticity'... Mehrling saves the best for the end, where he describes the Fed's battle to save the system with an alphabet soup of lending programs."--James Pressley, Bloomberg News "I continue to ponder Mehrling's main claims, but in any case this is an important book about the new Fed."--Tyler Cowen, Marginal Revolution "In The New Lombard Street, Perry Mehrling ... provides a lucid account of how the system worked when it was working--and of the growing role assumed by the Fed in an era of global economic volatility and 'credit-fueled bubbles.'"--Glenn C. Altschuler, Tulsa World "[A] fantastic book."--Rortybomb, Mike Konczal blog "[I]mportant... Mehrling's new book tries to do just what Bagehot did: to give an account both of how and why the Fed acted when it reinvented the rules in the middle of a financial crisis, and of what the implications for future monetary policy will be."--Harold James, Central Banking Journal "This is an excellent and accessible analysis for anyone wishing to understand the origins of the financial crisis and how the Fed came to respond as it did."--Larry Hatheway, Business Economist
Perry Mehrling is professor of economics at Barnard College, Columbia University. He is the author of "Fischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance" and "The Money Interest and the Public Interest: American Monetary Thought, 1920-1970".