With Pearson eText, Global Edition
For courses in money and banking, or general economics.
This package includes MyLab Economics.
A unified framework for understanding financial markets
The Economics of Money, Banking and Financial Markets brings a fresh perspective to today’s major questions surrounding financial policy. Influenced by his term as Governor of the Federal Reserve, Frederic Mishkin offers students a unique viewpoint and informed insight into the monetary policy process, the regulation and supervision of the financial system, and the internationalization of financial markets. The 12th Edition, Global Edition, provides a unifying, analytic framework for learning that fits a wide variety of syllabi. Core economic principles and real-world examples organize students' thinking and keeps them motivated.
Reach every student by pairing this text with MyLab Economics
MyLab™ is the teaching and learning platform that empowers you to reach every student. By combining trusted author content with digital tools and a flexible platform, MyLab personalizes the learning experience and improves results for each student.
MyLab Economics should only be purchased when required by an instructor. Please be sure you have the correct ISBN and Course ID. Instructors, contact your Pearson representative for more information.
Features
This title is a Pearson Global Edition. The Editorial team at Pearson has worked closely with educators around the world to include content which is especially relevant to students outside the United States.
Enliven students’ study of money, banking, and financial markets
New - Chapter 1 teaches students about career opportunities available beyond Wall Street or in a bank.
New - Chapter 4 illustrates negative interest rates in countries like Japan, the United States, and Europe.
New - Chapter 5 shows how the supply and demand model explains current interest rate movements.
New - Chapter 12 discusses and analyzes how the financial crises that originated in the United States also impacts other advanced global economies.
New - Chapter 13 discusses the crisis-stricken Mexico, Thailand, and South Korea’s external debt and highlights the same using appropriate diagrams.
New - Chapter 14 highlights major banking systems around the world—the European Central Bank, the Federal Reserve, the Bank of Japan—their origins, structure, and functions.
New - Chapter 18 highlights an application on Burgernomics, Big Macs, and Purchasing Power Parity, as a fun way of showing students how purchasing power parity works in practice.
Updated - Global Box in Chapter 18 helps students interpret claims made about the large US current account deficit in both the media and in Congress.
A unifying, analytic framework uses a few basic economic principles to organize students’ thinking about the structure of financial markets, foreign exchange markets, financial institution management, and the role of monetary policy in the economy.
A no-fuss solution for instructors who want to make the most recent data a central part of their macroeconomics course. Real-time data analysis exercises not only help students better understand macroeconomics, but enable them to see the real-world relevance of their study of the topic.
Flexible and modular design
Core chapters provide the basic analysis used throughout the book, and other chapters or sections of chapters can be used or omitted according to instructor preferences.
The internationalization of the text through marked international sections within chapters, as well as through complete separate chapters on the foreign exchange market and the international monetary system, is comprehensive yet flexible. The international sections within chapters are self-contained and can be omitted with little to no loss of continuity.
To illustrate how this book can be used for courses with varying emphases, several course outlines are suggested for a semester teaching schedule. More detailed information about how the text can be used flexibly in instructors’ courses is available in the Instructor’s Manual.
The Business School Edition: Engage students using a finance-oriented approach
New - A close-up of nonbank finance, financial derivatives, and conflicts of interest in the financial industry.
New - Text is ideal for professors whose courses put less emphasis on monetary theory.
New - Discussions on the financial crises in emerging market economies and the ISLM model.
New - More than 20 appendices covering additional topics and technical material for students.
New - Custom-designed PowerPoint lectures with feature animations of all key text figures.
Updated/revised - Chapter 20 provides a clear presentation on the theory of purchasing power parity and why it does not fully explain exchange rates in the short run.
This package includes MyLab™ MyLab Economics
MyLab™ is the teaching and learning platform that empowers you to reach every student. By combining trusted author content with digital tools and a flexible platform, MyLab personalizes the learning experience and improves results for each student.
Reach every student with MyLab
Deliver trusted content: You deserve teaching materials that meet your own high standards for your course. That’s why we partner with highly respected authors to develop interactive content and course-specific resources that you can trust -- and that keep your students engaged.
Empower each learner: Each student learns at a different pace. Personalized learning pinpoints the precise areas where each student needs practice, giving all students the support they need -- when and where they need it -- to be successful.
Teach your course your way: Your course is unique. So whether you’d like to build your own assignments, teach multiple sections, or set prerequisites, MyLab gives you the flexibility to easily create your course to fit your needs.
Improve student results: When you teach with MyLab, student performance often improves. That’s why instructors have chosen MyLab for over 15 years, touching the lives of over 50 million students.
New to this Edition
Enliven students’ study of money, banking, and financial markets
Chapter 1 teaches students about career opportunities available beyond Wall Street or in a bank.
Chapter 4 illustrates negative interest rates in countries like Japan, the United States, and Europe.
Chapter 5 shows how the supply and demand model explains current interest rate movements.
Chapter 12 discusses and analyzes how the financial crises that originated in the United States also impacts other advanced global economies.
Chapter 13 discusses the crisis-stricken Mexico, Thailand, and South Korea’s external debt and highlights the same using appropriate diagrams.
Chapter 13 highlights an application on China and the “non-crisis” in 1997-98.
Chapter 14 highlights major banking systems around the world—the European Central Bank, the Federal Reserve, the Bank of Japan—their origins, structure, and functions.
Chapter 14 highlights an application on Brexit and the Bank of England.
Chapter 18 highlights an application on Burgernomics, Big Macs, and Purchasing Power Parity, as a fun way of showing students how purchasing power parity works in practice.
Global Box in Chapter 19 helps students interpret claims made about the large US current account deficit in both the media and in Congress.
The Business School Edition: Engage students using a finance-oriented approach
A close-up of nonbank finance, financial derivatives, and conflicts of interest in the financial industry.
Text is ideal for professors whosecourses put less emphasis on monetary theory.
Discussions on the financial crises in emerging market economies and the ISLM model.
More than 20 appendices covering additional topics and technical material for students.
Custom-designed PowerPoint lectures with feature animations of all key text figures.
Chapter 21 provides a clear presentation on the theory of purchasing power parity and why it does not fully explain exchange rates in the short run.
This package includes MyLab™ MyLab Economics
MyLab™ is the teaching and learning platform that empowers you to reach every student. By combining trusted author content with digital tools and a flexible platform, MyLab personalizes the learning experience and improves results for each student.
Table of Contents
PART I: INTRODUCTION 1
1. Why Study Money, Banking, and Financial Markets?
2. An Overview of the Financial System
3. What Is Money?
PART II: FINANCIAL MARKETS
4. The Meaning of Interest Rates
5. The Behavior of Interest Rates
6. The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates
7. The Stock Market, the Theory of Rational Expectations, and the Efficient Market Hypothesis
PART III: FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
8. An Economic Analysis of Financial Structure
9. Banking and the Management of Financial Institutions
10. Economic Analysis of Financial Regulation
11. Banking Industry: Structure and Competition
12. Financial Crises in Advanced Economies
13. Financial Crises in Emerging Market Economies
PART IV: CENTRAL BANKING AND THE CONDUCT OF MONETARY POLICY
14. Central Banks
15. The Money Supply Process
16. Tools of Monetary Policy
17. The Conduct of Monetary Policy: Strategy and Tactics
PART V: INTERNATIONAL FINANCE AND MONETARY POLICY
18. The Foreign Exchange Market
19. The International Financial System
PART VI: MONETARY THEORY
20. Quantity Theory, Inflation, and the Demand for Money
21. The IS Curve
22. The Monetary Policy and Aggregate Demand Curves
23. Aggregate Demand and Supply Analysis
24. Monetary Policy Theory
25. The Role of Expectations in Monetary Policy
26. Transmission Mechanisms of Monetary Policy
CHAPTERS ON THE WEB
1. The ISLM Model
2. Nonbank Finance
3. Financial Derivatives
4. Conflicts of Interest in the Financial Services Industry