116 research outputs found

    A Credit Market Γ  la David Hume

    Get PDF
    In Book III of his Treatise of Human Nature, David Hume considers the following simple interaction: "I suppose a person to have lent me a sum of money, on condition that it be restor'd in a few days, and also suppose, that after the expiration of the term agreed on, he demands the sum" and Hume asks: "What reason or motive have I to restore the money?" [1740, p. 479] The answer, he concludes, must be "that the sense of justice and injustice [which is the motive for repaying the loan] is not deriv'd from nature, but arises artificially, tho' necessarily, from education and human conventions." [p. 483] It is my purpose in this essay to offer formal (and modern) underpinnings for Hume's argument. I shall do so in the context of Hume's own example, cited above, where the interaction being considered is one between lender and borrower.lending, borrowing, credit market

    On the Consumer\u27s Lifetime Allocation Process

    Get PDF

    Consumption-Saving Decisions When the Horizon is Random

    Get PDF

    On the Existence of an Optimal Plan in a Continuous-Time Allocation Process

    Get PDF

    Convexity in the Theory of Choice Under Risk

    Get PDF

    A Re-Examination of the Pure Consumption Loans Model

    Get PDF

    Individual Saving, Aggregate Capital Accumulation, and Efficient Growth

    Get PDF

    A Note on the Role of Money in Providing Sufficient Intermediation

    Get PDF
    • …
    corecore