What Has Government Done to Our Money? and The Case for the 100 Percent Gold Dollar
  • Books
  • What Has Government Done to Our Money?

What Has Government Done to Our Money?

Demonstrates the details of the history of money, from early barter systems, to the gold standard, to present day systems of paper money.

{{ tab }}

Feeds

Demonstrates the details of the history of money, from early barter systems, to the gold standard, to present day systems of paper money. After presenting the basics of money and banking theory, Rothbard traces the decline of the dollar from the 18th century to the present and provides lucid critiques of central banking, New Deal monetary policy, Nixonian fiat money, and fixed exchange rates. He also provides a blueprint for a return to a 100 percent reserve gold standard.

The book made huge theoretical advances. Rothbard was the first to prove that the government, and only the government, can destroy money on a mass scale, and he showed exactly how they go about this dirty deed. But just as importantly, it is beautifully written. He tells a thrilling story because he loves the subject so much.

The passion that Murray Rothbard feels for the topic comes through in the prose and transfers to the reader. Readers become excited about the subject and tell others. Students tell professors. Some, like the great Ron Paul of Texas, have even run for political office after having read it.

Rothbard shows precisely how banks create money out of thin air and how the central bank, backed by government power, allows them to get away with it. He shows how exchange rates and interest rates would work in a true free market. When it comes to describing the end of the gold standard, he is not content to describe the big trends. He names names and ferrets out all the interest groups involved.

Since Rothbard's death, scholars have worked to assess his legacy, and many of them agree that this little book is one of his most important. Though it has sometimes been inauspiciously packaged and is surprisingly short, its argument took huge strides toward explaining that it is impossible to understand public affairs in our time without understanding money and its destruction.
Waiting for feeds data... There are feed errors, check the console! This page has no feed entries.
{{e.tag}} -
{{e.title}}
  Show all entries
Ratings
Overall Rating
Comments

No reviews yet


Notice: Undefined variable: githuburl in coinrated/components/listings/detail.vue on line 383

Notice: Undefined variable: feeds_data in coinrated/components/listings/detail.vue on line 418