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Can the 'invisible hand' handle money? George Selgin challenges the
view that government regulation creates monetary order and
stability, and instead shows it to be the main source of monetary
crisis. The volume is divided into three sections: * Part I refutes
conventional wisdom holding that any monetary system lacking
government regulation is 'inherently unstable', and looks at the
workings of market forces in an otherwise unregulated banking
system. * Part II draws on both theory and historical experience to
show how various kinds of government interference undermine the
inherent efficiency, safety, and stability of a free monetary
system. * Part III completes the argument by addressing the popular
misconception that a monetary system is unsound unless it delivers
a stable output price-level.
Can the 'invisible hand' handle money? George Selgin challenges the
view that government regulation creates monetary order and
stability, and instead shows it to be the main source of monetary
crisis.
The volume is divided into three sections:
* Part I refutes conventional wisdom holding that any monetary
system lacking government regulation is 'inherently unstable', and
looks at the workings of market forces in an otherwise unregulated
banking system.
* Part II draws on both theory and historical experience to show
how various kinds of government interference undermine the inherent
efficiency, safety, and stability of a free monetary system.
* Part III completes the argument by addressing the popular
misconception that a monetary system is unsound unless it delivers
a stable output price-level.
George Selgin is one of the world's foremost monetary historians.
In this book, based on the 2016 Hayek Memorial Lecture, he shows
how a system of private banks without a central bank can bring
about financial stability through self-regulation. If one bank
stretches credit too far, it will be reined in by the others before
the system as a whole gets out of control. The banks have a strong
incentive to ensure an orderly resolution if a particular bank is
facing insolvency or illiquidity. Selgin draws on evidence from the
era of 'free banking' in Scotland and Canada. These arrangements
enjoyed greater financial stability, with fewer banking crises,
than the English system with its central bank and the US model with
its faulty government regulation. The creation of the Federal
Reserve appears to have increased the frequency of financial
crises. The book also includes commentaries by Kevin Dowd and
Mathieu Bedard. Dowd asks whether free-banking systems should be
underpinned by a gold standard,which he regards as a
tried-and-tested institution at the heart of their success. Bedard
challenges the assumption that the banking sector is inherently
unstable and therefore requires state intervention. He argues that
increases in government control have made the banking system more
prone to crisis.
LARGE PRINT EDITION More at LargePrintLiberty.com. This book sets
out to explain the complexity of why increased production does not
that always bring with it lower prices. According to the book,
those who look upon monetary expansion as a way to eradicate almost
all unemployment fail to appreciate that persistent unemployment is
a non-monetary or 'natural' economic condition, which no mount of
monetary medicine can cure. Selgin explores the differences between
these monetary and natural conditions, and proposes solutions of
his own.
A fascinating story of the important yet virtually unknown episode
in the history of money, this history chronicles the British
manufacturers’ challenge to the Crown’s monopoly on coinage. In
the 1780s, when the Industrial Revolution was gathering momentum,
the Royal Mint failed to produce enough small-denomination coinage
for factory owners to pay their workers. As the currency shortage
threatened to derail industrial progress, manufacturers began to
mint custom-made coins, called “tradesman’s tokens,” which
served as the nation’s most popular currency for wages and retail
sales until 1821, when the Crown outlawed all moneys except its
own. This book not only examines the crucial role of private
coinage in fueling Great Britain’s Industrial Revolution, but
also sheds light on contemporary private-sector alternatives to
government-issued money, such as digital monies, cash cards,
electronic funds transfer, and—outside of the United
States—spontaneous “dollarization.”
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