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Readers of The Mystery of Banking will find that money and banking are, contrary to what the book’s title might suggest, no longer a mystery to them. Textbooks on money and banking are often prolix, dull, and confusing, but Murray Rothbard explains the essential issues in a step-by-step fashion.
How does Rothbard proceed? The key to the book is that, following his mentor Ludwig von Mises, he integrates monetary theory with the basic principles of value theory that apply to all goods and services. He begins with a discussion of supply and demand. Once you understand how prices are determined in a free market, you are in a position to understand how the same principles apply to the demand and supply of money.
With his characteristic clarity and incisiveness, Rothbard explains the origins of money. Mises’s regression theorem shows that money had to originate as a commodity. Rothbard next shows how banking got started. He shows the difference between loan banking and deposit banking. Fractional reserve banking allowed credit expansion, but so long as there was no central bank, inflation of the money supply was limited.
Rothbard was not only an outstanding contributor to Austrian monetary theory but a great economic historian as well. He offers a detailed account of how central banking developed in England and Scotland. Central banking made massive inflation possible.
In even greater detail, he discusses the banking history of the United States in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Readers who absorb his account will learn how the Federal Reserve System promotes monetary instability and the business cycle. Rothbard concludes by showing how we can return to a sound monetary system, based on the gold standard.
If you follow Rothbard’s step-by-step explanation of money and banking, you will learn the key principles that will enable you to understand the financial economy today.
- Preface
- Foreword
- I. Money: Its Importance and Origins
- II. What Determines Prices: Supply and Demand
- III. Money and Overall Prices
- IV. The Supply of Money
- V. The Demand for Money
- VI. Loan Banking
- VII. Deposit Banking
- VIII. Free Banking and the Limits on Bank Credit Inflation
- IX. Central Banking: Removing the Limits
- X. Central Banking: Determining Total Reserves
- XI. Central Banking: The Process of Bank Credit Expansion
- XII. The Origins of Central Banking
- XIII. Central Banking in the United States I: The Origins
- XIV. Central Banking in the United States II: The 1820s to the Civil War
- XV. Central Banking in the United States III: The National Banking System
- XVI. Central Banking in the United States IV: The Federal Reserve System
- XVII. Conclusion: The Present Banking Situation and What to Do About It
- Appendix: The Myth of Free Banking in Scotland