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Co-operative, Competitive National Currencies: An alternative Eurozone currency arrangement? « Adam Smith Institute

Co-operative, Competitive National Currencies: An alternative Eurozone currency arrangement? « Adam Smith Institute | money money money | Scoop.it

Afsluitend wil ik nog een cijfer meegeven kameraden. In het neoliberale Walhalla van de UK werkt maar liefst 60 procent van de werknemers in dit nieuwe precaire statuut. Zestig procent.

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Historian finds tech bubble that didn't pop (180 years ago)

Historian finds tech bubble that didn't pop (180 years ago) | money money money | Scoop.it

Histories of speculative bubbles are popular these days, in large part because they have driven our economy for the last two decades. First came the tech bubble, whose quasi-utopian promises drew in billions of investment dollars, only to pop its cork in 2000, dragging the United States into a recession. That was followed by our recently retired real estate adventure, which threw us and much of the world into The Great Recession.

 
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Essays in Monetary Theory and Policy: On the Nature of Money ...

Essays in Monetary Theory and Policy: On the Nature of Money ... | money money money | Scoop.it

The discrepancy between the orthodox (primarily neoclassical) and the heterodox (Post Keynesian, Chartalism, MMT, etc.) schools of thought rests fundamentally in their different perception in the way the capitalist economy functions.  Such discrepancy can be described in the contrast between C – M – C’ and M – C – M’.  The orthodox school holds the former view that depicts a barter economy in which the end purpose of production is consumption.  Individuals innately engage in production because of the urge to truck and barter.  Money merely facilitates the exchange of goods and services and cannot affect production decisions.  The heterodox school, however, asserts the latter view that depicts a monetary production economy in which production is always financed through money and would not take place unless more money expects to be realized through sale of goods and services.  Hence, the orthodox school asserts money neutrality (at least in the long run) since money is simply the medium of exchange.  The heterodox school rejects money neutrality since money not only finances production but also serves as its end goal.  The distinction between the barter and the monetary economy, as discussed above, thus necessarily implies a very different understanding of the nature, origin, and role of money between the orthodox and the heterodox school of thought.  The purpose of this paper is, through examining the nature and origin of money in a historically grounded context, to demonstrate that the orthodox school of thought has completely mistaken the nature of money and consequently misinterpreted the nature of the capitalist economy.  Such theoretical misunderstanding is devastating because it manifests wrong policies that continually fail to address economic and social problems threatening a capitalist society.  Based on the heterodox theory of money, the paper also intends to shed light on alternative guiding principles behind monetary and fiscal policies.

 

 

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Globalisation on hold | World Finance - World Finance

Globalisation on hold | World Finance - World Finance | money money money | Scoop.it

The appeal of gated globalisation is closely tied to state capitalism, which allowed China and the other big emerging markets—India, Brazil and Russia—to come through the crisis in much better shape than the rich world. They proudly proclaimed their brand of state capitalism as superior to the ‘Washington consensus’ of open markets and minimal government that had prevailed before 2008. But the system also covered up structural flaws that are now becoming more obvious. In China, state-owned enterprises and state-directed lending have siphoned credit from the private sector and fuelled a property bubble. In India and Brazil, inadequate investment in infrastructure has resulted in rising inflation and sharply slowing growth.

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Max Keiser and George Galloway, watch and learn......

Max Keiser with George Galloway, absolutely magnificent. Watch and Learn. Ditch the corporate floozies....
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Curated by jean lievens
Economist, specialized in political economy and peer-to-peer dynamics; core member of the P2P Foundation