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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Useful
I'm an undergraduate student in Finance and Economics. I picked up this book for a term paper for my Public Economics class.

If there's one thing to say about De Grauwe's book is that it seemed very useful, down to earth, in contrast to other economics books I've read. The concepts covered in the book were explained very clearly, and for someone interested in the...

Published on April 10, 2002

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1.0 out of 5 stars Poorly written, incoherent
This textbook is poorly written: "one of the main driving forces for the popularity of a monetary union is to be found in the fact that it allows high-inflation countries to import price stability." (pg 99). Instead of "x is because of y," we always get "x has to do with the fact that y might possibly in some but not all important circumstances tend to exist." (pg. 55 and...
Published 27 days ago by qwapzy


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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Useful, April 10, 2002
By A Customer
I'm an undergraduate student in Finance and Economics. I picked up this book for a term paper for my Public Economics class.

If there's one thing to say about De Grauwe's book is that it seemed very useful, down to earth, in contrast to other economics books I've read. The concepts covered in the book were explained very clearly, and for someone interested in the area, the theories seemed ready for use for application in understanding the important issues of monetary integration.

Whether there are flaws in the theory are--honestly--beyond my grasp; I'd have to read more. The book seems written and revised fairly enough and hasn't received negative comments from the faculty at my university. If someone else has a contrary opinion, I'm sure it'd help for people to hear.

Check the sample pages if you want to see if this book would be good for you.

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1.0 out of 5 stars Poorly written, incoherent, January 4, 2012
This textbook is poorly written: "one of the main driving forces for the popularity of a monetary union is to be found in the fact that it allows high-inflation countries to import price stability." (pg 99). Instead of "x is because of y," we always get "x has to do with the fact that y might possibly in some but not all important circumstances tend to exist." (pg. 55 and 64.) There's no content, and the same meaningless diagrams keep popping up.
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The Economics of Monetary Integration
The Economics of Monetary Integration by Paul de Grauwe (Paperback - October 30, 1997)
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