Dr. Mark Thornton: Central Bankers Don’t Understand Booms and Busts
![Mark Thornton on Mises Weekends](https://cdn.mises.org/styles/responsive_4_3_650w/s3/static-page/img/MisesWeekends_Logo_Thornton_20150306.jpg.webp?itok=d7VLfFgT 650w,https://cdn.mises.org/styles/responsive_4_3_870w/s3/static-page/img/MisesWeekends_Logo_Thornton_20150306.jpg.webp?itok=WhTz6PG4 870w,/s3/files/styles/responsive_4_3_1090w/s3/static-page/img/MisesWeekends_Logo_Thornton_20150306.jpg.webp?itok=IjFPJHY4 1090w,/s3/files/styles/responsive_4_3_1310w/s3/static-page/img/MisesWeekends_Logo_Thornton_20150306.jpg.webp?itok=ezhzOkfl 1310w,/s3/files/styles/responsive_4_3_1530w/s3/static-page/img/MisesWeekends_Logo_Thornton_20150306.jpg.webp?itok=T-JBWnQ_ 1530w)
Our guest this weekend is Dr. Mark Thornton, a senior fellow here at the Mises Institute, and our topic is booms and busts. Falling stock prices are in the news lately, so Mark and Jeff talk about how and why central bankers don’t understand deflation, whether they are really Keynesians or some variant thereof, what a “crack-up boom” might look like, and what the Skyscraper Index and other symptoms of irrational spending might tell us about the future of the global economy.