No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
Theoretical and Institutional Limitations in the Management of Italian Monetary Policy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 August 2016
Extract
During the post-war period, and particularly after 1970, one of the main characteristics of the Italian economy has been a strong growth in financial intermediation. The financial assets in the whole have been increasing with an elasticity to money income much higher than one — and in particular the money base and the money supply have been growing with an elasticity of 1.5. In 1951 the ratio of the flow of financial assets to national income was 9 % and reached nearly 30 % in 1973.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Recherches Économiques de Louvain/ Louvain Economic Review , Volume 40 , Issue 3 , 1974 , pp. 223 - 236
- Copyright
- Copyright © Université catholique de Louvain, Institut de recherches économiques et sociales 1974
References
(1) During the fifties another policy had been chosen following the rules of the game. In that period the domestic component of the money supply grew in accordance with the foreign component. In particular in 1959. the strongest boom took place during the so-called “miracle” was favoured by the fact that the high liquidity of both domestic and foreign origin accumulated during the previous recession phase was not sterilizated: thus a sudden change in previously ruling interest rates and weakenning of bank credit standards were permitted, that contributed to feeding the investment boom in the following four years. Since that time there have been only two short, even though significant periods, during which the financing of the balance of payments and the sterilization of its effects on the domestic money supply were abbandoned in favour of trying instead to produce an adjustment of the basic balance.