The Idea of Alternative Currencies Is Going Mainstream
The movement for alternative money is the result of the history of government monetary mismanagement.
The movement for alternative money is the result of the history of government monetary mismanagement.
Not only does fractional-reserve banking gives rise to monetary inflation it is also responsible for monetary deflation. Money created out of "thin air" can disappear as rapidly as it was created.
To cause a truly disastrous boom and bust with far-fetching real consequences, you need to control the money supply.
James Grant's new book Bagehot: The Life and Times of the Greatest Victorian, reveals there we can still learn a lot from the world that existed before our modern era of central banking.
Central banks’ economic models predict deeper negative rates are necessary in the event that a significant recession materializes. This would be a disaster.
Neither loose monetary policy, nor big-spending fiscal policy can grow an economy. All that these policies can do is to redistribute a given pool of real savings from wealth generators toward non-wealth generating activities.
The eurozone economy is slowing down. The solution isn't more fiscal and monetary stimuli.
The US dollar continues to enjoy the confidence of markets, governments, and central banks. But faith in the US dollar is weakening, and many are trying to help the process along.
The Fed would have us believe that it has am impressive record of success in preventing recessions and improving the economy. The actual historical record suggests otherwise.
Since real savings enable the production of capital goods, obviously real savings are at the heart of the economic growth that raises people's living standards.