Tag Archives: The Money Trap
II Searching for Ways Out
Recognising the public demand for reform, governments began a search for alternative policy models and structures soon after the outbreak of the global financial crisis (GFC). This can be viewed at national, regional and international levels. 5. Improving National Policies: At the national level this has taken the form of supplementing inflation targeting with various…
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IV The Power of Global Finance
Under present arrangements, finance too often acts as a malevolent force, rewarding private sectional interests at the expense of the public interest. This is because the globalisation of markets has run ahead of our power to control them. Properly harnessed, global finance could be, again, an enormously powerful force for good. Designing such a harness…
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So what’s up?
Apart from the nomination of Janet Yellen ( a lovely, motherly person) to lead the Fed, what has happened since we departed for our summer/autumn long vacation? As always, the view one takes depends on your perspective. Are you the driver of a car negotiating tricky twists and turns, looking for traffic coming at…
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Are the political conditions for reform out of reach?
Three major failures contributed to the global financial car crash • There was a failure of banking and bankers – imprudence and irresponsibility, tinged with instances of criminal behaviour, insider trading, mis-selling, deceit and fraud; • There was a failure of central bankers – they were seduced into assuming the self-stabilising properties of markets,…
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Which anchor for money?
The supply of money needs to be limited or ‘anchored’ to prevent excessive supply reducing its value. At present money is supposed to be limited by central banks following inflation targeting models. However, this paradigm has lost traction under the strain of the crisis. In effect we have returned to a discretionary monetary policy,…
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Central banks into equities
When I first proposed that central banks might hold a basket of diversified equities on the assets side of their balance sheets, it was an unheard-of notion. My friends advised me to take it out. “People will think you’re crazy”, they said. Now it turns out that that is exactly what a growing number of…
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How central banks undermine the market economy
The risks and dangers for the global economy are like hidden reefs for a ship – invisible but deadly. It is quite possible, for example, that expansionary US monetary policy can cause an asset boom in China so large that its collapse would bring the Chinese economy down with it – and thus throw the…
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Gold, credit and the Ikon: Three kinds of money
What are the differences between a commodity money, credit money and the Ikon – currency of the future ? Using the gold standard as an example of the first, where the price of gold was fixed and money was convertible into it on demand at that price, gold and sure claims on gold were money….
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How the international monetary system holds back recovery
Ever since the end of Bretton Woods, exchange rate volatility driven by diverse monetary policies and diverse expectations about future exchange rates have been frequent sources of shocks to the world economy and national economies. The very existence of independent central banks with independent monetary policies is the common origin of shocks. The more…
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Is “The Money Trap” too radical?
The most common response I have had to the proposals made in my book for a new banking system and global monetary reform is that they are too radical, too ambitious, and won’t happen. When I ask such critics (who are usually of a friendly disposition) what are they suggesting, they usually reply that slow…
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