Bültmann & Gerriets
Money, Trade, and Competition
Essays in Memory of Egon Sohmen
von Herbert Giersch
Verlag: Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Reihe: Publications of the Egon-Sohmen-Foundation
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ISBN: 978-3-642-77267-2
Auflage: 1992
Erschienen am 06.12.2012
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 304 Seiten

Preis: 96,29 €

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Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

I: Money and Exchange Rates.- Free Minting.- Profitable Currency Speculation: Service to Users or Destabilizing?.- Flexible Exchange Rates and Insulation: A Reexamination.- An Institutional-Economic Analysis of the Louvre Accord.- The German Monetary Union.- Financial Liberalization in Developing Countries.- II: International Trade.- Fiscal Policy and the Theory of International Trade.- Wage Agreements and Optimal International Factor Flows.- Protection and Exchange Rates.- Aggressive Unilateralism.- Theory and Practice of Commercial Policy: 1945-1990.- III: Competition.- Welfare Economics, Economic Order, and Competition.- Competition and Economic Growth: The Lessons of East Asia.- List of Contributors.



On June 1, 1990, Egon Sohmen would have reached the age of 60 had he not suffered from a fatal illness. It demanded his death at the early age of 46. If he were still with us, he would playa prominent role in the current debate on monetary arrangements and on allocation theory, perhaps in­ cluding environmental issues and urban economics. His contributions are well remembered by his colleagues and friends, by his former students, and by many in the economics profession on both sides of the Atlantic. In extrapolating his great achievements as a scholar and teacher beyond the time of his death, one is inclined to suppose that Egon Sohmen's name would figure high on many a list of candidates for honors and awards in the field of international economics. For the reconstruction of economics in the German language area Egon Sohmen was invaluable. Born in Linz (Austria), he studied in Vienna at the Business School (Hochschule fUr Welthandel, now Wirtscha!tsuniversitiit), then went to the US as a Fulbright scholar (1953), returned to Europe to take his doctorate in Tiibingen, Germany, (1954) and crossed the Atlantic again to teach at MIT (1955-58) where he obtained a Ph. D. (1958) under Charlie Kindleberger. He might have stayed permanently in the US, con­ tinuing a career that he started as Assistant Professor at Yale University (1958-61), if the US visa provisions had been applied in a more liberal fashion.


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