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monetarist

[ US /ˈmɑnətɝɪst/ ]
[ UK /mˈʌnɪtˌɑːɹɪst/ ]
NOUN
  1. an advocate of the theory that economic fluctuations are caused by increases or decreases in the supply of money

How To Use monetarist In A Sentence

  • Over many recent decades, both Keynesians and monetarists have generally at one time or another favored both fixed and flexible exchange rate regimes.
  • One can understand how a monetarist central banker with a libertarian bent might object.
  • The Bank's failure has cast into doubt the monetarist framework that has underpinned the government's economic policy.
  • Social welfare systems were criticized by monetarists and conservatives as a hindrance to self-advancement.
  • The organization also remains committed to a contractionary and anti-inflationary, monetarist role for monetary policy rather than an expansionary and reflationary, Keynesian one.
  • Similarly, fiscal policy, according to monetarists, has no role to play in demand-management.
  • Among more radical monetarists and free marketeers there remains disappointment that the government had not done more to shift the middle ground.
  • She began by supporting monetarist economics, but later underwent quite a conversion when she saw how it increased unemployment.
  • Monetarists believe that money supply should be kept within an acceptable bandwidth so that levels of inflation can be controlled.
  • Among more radical monetarists and free marketeers there remains disappointment that the government had not done more to shift the middle ground.
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