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In this original book, Professor Shiller has created a unique and authoritative set of proposals for establishing new markets for the management of the biggest economic risks facing society. Our existing financial markets, he argues, are inadequate to deal with such risks and major new markets should be set up. He proposes a class of new international markets, macro markets, markets for claims on aggregate income and service flows.
Our stock markets are markets for claims on corporate dividends, and yet the latter are only a few per cent of national incomes: only 3 per cent in the United States. He argues that markets should be set up for claims on the other 97 per cent. He proposes new international markets for perpetual claims on national incomes, and on components and aggregates of national incomes. Other proposals are for new international markets for property and other currently difficult-to-trade assets.
Such new markets could dwarf our stock markets in their activity and significance.
Establishing such unprecedented new markets presents some important technical problems, which Shiller attempts to solve. He has proposals for implementing index futures markets in perpetual claims on incomes and services. There is also a substantial section on the construction of index numbers for use in settlement in the macro markets. Such new markets could fundamentally alter and diminish macroeconomic fluctuations, and reduce the inequality of incomes around the world.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
| Edition | Availability |
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1
Macro Markets: Creating Institutions for Managing Society's Largest Economic Risks (Clarendon Lectures in Economics)
May 29, 1998, Oxford University Press, USA
in English
0198294182 9780198294184
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2
Macro markets: creating institutions for managing society's largest economic risks
1993, Clarendon Press, Oxford University Press
in English
0198287828 9780198287827
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First Sentence
"Living standards are not fully insurable because of moral-hazard problems: if people or organizations knew that their incomes were guaranteed regardless of the amount of effort that they put in, then there would be a markedly reduced incentive to make efforts to maintain income."
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