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Abstract

BASIL MOORE studied economics at the University of Toronto and Johns Hopkins University. The author of Horizontalists and Verticalists: The Macroeconomics of Credit Money (Cambridge University Press, 1988), he is best known for his critique of orthodox theories of exogenous money. Basil Moore is Professor of Economics at Wesleyan University, where he has taught since 1958.

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  1. B.J. Moore, An Introduction to Modern Economic Theory (Glencoe, Ill.: The Free Press/Macmillan, 1973).

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  2. B.J. Moore, ‘Monetary Factors’, in A.S. Eichner (ed.), A Guide to Post Keynesian Economics (London: Macmillan, 1979), pp. 120–38.

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  3. L. R. Wray, Money and Credit in Capitalist Economies: The Endogenous Money Approach (Aldershot: Elgar, 1990).

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  4. H. P. Minsky, ‘Monetary Systems and Accelerator Models’, American Economic Review 47(5), December 1957, pp. 859–83.

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  5. ‘The mark-up …’: B. J. Moore, Horizontalists and Verticalists: the Macroeconomics of Credit Money (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988), pp. 282–5.

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  6. R.J. Gordon, ‘What is New-Keynesian Economics?’, Journal of Economic Literature 28(3), September 1990, pp. 1115–71.

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  7. P. Davidson, ‘Why Deficits Hardly Matter’, New Leader, 20 August 1984, pp. 3–5;

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  8. cf. Moore, Horizontalists and Verticalists, pp. 294–309.

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  9. A. Klamer and D. Colander, The Making of an Economist (Boulder, Col.: Westview Press, 1990).

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© 1995 J. E. King

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King, J.E. (1995). Basil Moore. In: Conversations with Post Keynesians. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230378827_5

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