monetarism
[ mon-i-tuh-riz-uh m, muhn- ]
/ ˈmɒn ɪ təˌrɪz əm, ˈmʌn- /
noun Economics.
a doctrine holding that changes in the money supply determine the direction of a nation's economy.
Origin of monetarism
An Americanism dating back to 1965–70;
monetar(y) +
-ism
OTHER WORDS FROM monetarism
mon·e·ta·rist, noun, adjectiveWords nearby monetarism
monesthetic,
monestrous,
monet,
monet, claude,
moneta,
monetarism,
monetary,
monetary aggregate,
monetary policy,
monetary unit,
monetize
Example sentences from the Web for monetarism
July 31 marks the centenary of the birth of the high priest of monetarism, Milton Friedman.
Nicholas Wapshott: A Lovefest Between Milton Friedman and J.M. Keynes |Nicholas Wapshott |July 30, 2012 |DAILY BEASTWapshott gives us no less than Milton Friedman, the father of monetarism, claiming himself something of an heir to Keynes.
British Dictionary definitions for monetarism
monetarism
/ (ˈmʌnɪtəˌrɪzəm) /
noun
the theory that inflation is caused by an excess quantity of money in an economy
an economic policy based on this theory and on a belief in the efficiency of free market forces, that gives priority to achieving price stability by monetary control, balanced budgets, etc, and maintains that unemployment results from excessive real wage rates and cannot be controlled by Keynesian demand management
Derived forms of monetarism
monetarist, noun, adjectiveCultural definitions for monetarism
monetarism
[ (mon-uh-tuh-riz-uhm) ]
The economic doctrine that the supply of money has a major impact on a nation's economic growth. For example, monetarists prefer to control inflation by restricting the growth of a nation's money supply rather than by raising taxes. The doctrine is associated with Milton Friedman.