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- Search found 17 items for:
- Jeffrey M. Herbener
- Money and Banks
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Author:
Jeffrey M. Herbener
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Recorded at the Mises Institute, 7–8 October 2005. [31:27]
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Jeffrey M. Herbener
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The stock of the money commodity responds to demand and supply of the consumers and their preferences just as with any other good. Claims to money can be used as money, but fraudulent claims to money would be illegitimate because two owners cannot own the same thing at the same time and the pseudo receipts would add to the money stock. The
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Author:
Jeffrey M. Herbener
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Contrast Austrian Welfare Economics with alternative approaches including Pareto Optimality and Kaldor-Hicks. Recorded at Mises University 2010.
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Jeffrey M. Herbener
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Recorded at the Mises Institute Supporters Summit in Auburn, Alabama, 12-14 October 2023. Sponsored by Paul Dietrich. Download the slides from this lecture at Mises.org/SS23_PPT_17
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Author:
Jeffrey M. Herbener
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Recorded at the Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, on 22 July 2014.
Mises Daily
Author:
Jeffrey M. Herbener
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Submitted to the Wall Street Journal October 14, 1998 To the Editor: What is missing in the debate between proponents of a fixed-exchange-rate regime, such as the editors of the Wall Street Journal (”Reforming the World,” 7 October), and proponents of a floating-exchange-rate system, like Milton Friedman (”Markets to the Rescue,” 13 October), is
Mises Daily
Author:
Jeffrey M. Herbener
Online Publish Date:
Members of Economic and Monetary Union couldn’t even wait for the euro’s official advent on January 1, 1999 to reveal its future. The EMU-wide interest rate cut in December 1998, an Keynesian-style effort to forestall a recession, was the real portent of things to come. Monetary inflation and credit expansion are the fate awaiting Europeans and