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- Search found 13 items for:
- Monetary Theory
- David Gordon
Media Asset
Author:
David Gordon
Online Publish Date:
From “Choice in Currency: A Path to Sound Money”; the Mises Circle in Vancouver. Recorded 13 September 2008.
Media Asset
Author:
David Gordon
Online Publish Date:
Recorded at the Mises Institute Supporters Summit, 1 November 2008; Auburn, Alabama.
Mises Daily
Author:
David Gordon
Online Publish Date:
[ How Much Money Does an Economy Need? Solving the Central Economic Puzzle of Money, Prices, and Jobs. By Hunter Lewis. Axios Press. Vi + 185 pages.] In Are the Rich Necessary? Hunter Lewis showed himself to be a master of dialectics; and he here applies the same method to monetary theory. Not content to expound his own views, Lewis carefully
Mises Daily
Author:
David Gordon
Online Publish Date:
[ Hamilton’s Curse: How Jefferson’s Archenemy Betrayed the American Revolution — and What It Means for America Today . By Thomas J. DiLorenzo. Crown Forum. 2008. 245 pages.] After you read the dedication of Hamilton’s Curse , you know that the book is going to be good: “Dedicated to the memory of Professor Murray N. Rothbard, a brilliant scholar
Mises Daily
Author:
David Gordon
Online Publish Date:
Max Keiser, in pursuit of his efforts to show that Mises lapsed into error in monetary theory owing to his deviations from Menger, has recently posted “Menger and Mises: The Essential Difference.” The post is credited to “adamsmith1684”; whether this is Keiser himself I do not know. To complicate matters, the post begins with a quotation from
Mises Daily
Author:
David Gordon
Online Publish Date:
Money: How the Destruction of the Dollar Threatens the Global Economy — and What We Can Do About It , by Steve Forbes and Elizabeth Ames, McGrawHill, 2014 Money is an odd book. Its odd character can be brought out through an analogy. Imagine that someone wrote an eloquent book about price and wage controls. The book showed how attempts to control
Mises Wire
Author:
David Gordon
Online Publish Date:
Dr. Marc Miles, a noted monetary economist, has now joined Mr. John Tamny in criticism of my review of Steve Forbes and Elizabeth Ames’s book Money . These authors write from a shared viewpoint, and I shall endeavor here to respond to both. In trying to understand my critics, I was puzzled. Forbes and Ames asserted, and I denied, that money
Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics
Author:
David Gordon
Online Publish Date:
Volume 17, No. 4 (Winter 2014) Steve Forbes and Elizabeth Ames New York: McGraw Hill, 2014, xvii + 249 pages Money is an odd book. Its odd character can be brought out through an analogy. Imagine that someone wrote an eloquent book about price and wage controls. The book showed how attempts to control prices led to economic disaster. Faced with
Mises Wire
Author:
David Gordon
Online Publish Date:
[Reprinted from The Austrian (September – October 2016).] Concrete Economics: The Hamilton Approach to Economic Growth and Policy Stephen S. Cohen and J. Bradford DeLong Harvard Business Press Review, 2016 xi + 223 pages Cohen and DeLong are well-known economists, but they indict their fellow economists for an overemphasis on theory. Away with