The financial crisis of 2007-11 has now been analysed and explained from almost every conceivable standpoint. Far less attention has been paid to the long business cycle expansion that started in 1992 and provided an exceptional period of macroeconomic stability in the UK. To many it seemed that the main problem of the UK economy had been solved: that of sustained non-inflationary economic growth. This book brings together senior macroeconomists from universities and the Bank of England to look at what policy-making lessons can be learned from looking at the period of expansion that preceded the financial crisis. It does so with the twin aims of encouraging more policy-focused research on the UK and encouraging policy debate in the aftermath of the financial crisis and the prolonged economic recession. Students, researchers and practitioners with an interest in the UK economy will need to absorb the lessons of this book.
An analysis of the policy-making lessons that can be learned from the period of economic expansion that preceded the financial crisis.About the AuthorJagjit Chadha is Professor of Economics at the University of Kent, Canterbury. Alec Crystal is Professor Emeritus of Money and Banking at the Cass Business School, London. Joseph Pearlman is Professor of Economics at City University London. Peter Smith is Professor of Economics and Finance at the University of York. Stephen Wright is Professor of Economics at Birkbeck, University of London.
Book InformationISBN 9781316602058
Author Jagjit S. ChadhaFormat Paperback
Page Count 464
Imprint Cambridge University PressPublisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 600g
Dimensions(mm) 230mm * 152mm * 24mm