Ending Fiat Money Won’t Destroy the State
When we ask ourselves the question, “Can states survive without fiat currency?” the answer is clearly yes.
When we ask ourselves the question, “Can states survive without fiat currency?” the answer is clearly yes.
The adoption of gold as the preferred commodity money was never inevitable or based on some sort of natural law of money. Many coincidences and political schemes were key factors.
Turkey's President Erdoğan faces a series of crises as the lira collapses and the state's central bank steps in to clean up the mess.
This is freedom: "That he is independent of the arbitrary power of his fellows … [freedom] arose in the process of social development and its final completion is the work of mature Capitalism.”
Contractionary monetary policy may be necessary to slow the rise of inflation, but the recessionary results of this remind us why the Fed's inflationary policy is so dangerous.
Overall, at least 50 percent of the consumer price index in Japan appears to be government controlled, which is reflected in the significant growth of government spending on subsidies.
With the Eurozone’s global systemically important banks geared up to 30x, rising bond yields of little more than a few percent could collapse the entire euro system.
From its inception, the Fed's job has been to pay off the debt and cover excess expenditures with newly printed paper money.
Economics is haunted by more fallacies than any other study known to man. This is no accident.