E-BookTime
Triumph of the Bankers
Triumph of the Bankers
Couldn't load pickup availability
William F. Hixson
This book discusses crucial monetary events in Colonial America, the United States, and Great Britain over the period 1690 to 1914. It explains some general characteristics of money and its function, the impracticality and undesirability of a gold or silver standard, and how a change in the quantity of money affects the total output of an economy and the level of prices of goods and services. It argues that by 1914 bankers had virtually complete control of the money-creation process and that this was largely the cause of the cataclysm of 1929 and the ensuing years. It contends that the system is still in effect.
Journal of Economic Literature
Vol.32, No. 1, March 1994
Anyone who seeks to understand "the preposterous financial system" which evolved after 1690 cannot do better than to start here. Hixson interweaves economic history with evaluations of theories of the leading economists starting with Adam Smith... The chapters on the financing of the American Revolution and the Civil War are particularly fascinating.
Dr. John H. Hotson
Department of Economics
University of Waterloo,
Ontario
Share
