Cycles of Inflation and Deflation: Money, Debt, and the 1990s
This work examines the role money and debt play in our economy. It shows why we went from the gold standard to fiat money, why that led to increasing inflation up to 1980, and why inflation has receded since 1980. In addition, it explains how today's economic problems arose, why governments cannot solve those problems, and where those problems will lead us. Challenging conventional wisdom, the author suggests that high real interest rates in the 1980s reduced business' ability to profit by expanding productive capacity and reduced the attractiveness of borrowing for consumption. The resulting drive to buy assets instead, such as stocks and real estate, caused rapidly rising prices in those areas. The author foresees a depression resulting from these economic forces—one which governments will be unable to prevent.

This work is unique for it neither espouses any theory nor uses inductive or deductive reasoning; rather, it observes. Its observations of how economic sectors, central banks, governments, business, and consumers can and do use money and debt are trenchant and alarming.

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Cycles of Inflation and Deflation: Money, Debt, and the 1990s
This work examines the role money and debt play in our economy. It shows why we went from the gold standard to fiat money, why that led to increasing inflation up to 1980, and why inflation has receded since 1980. In addition, it explains how today's economic problems arose, why governments cannot solve those problems, and where those problems will lead us. Challenging conventional wisdom, the author suggests that high real interest rates in the 1980s reduced business' ability to profit by expanding productive capacity and reduced the attractiveness of borrowing for consumption. The resulting drive to buy assets instead, such as stocks and real estate, caused rapidly rising prices in those areas. The author foresees a depression resulting from these economic forces—one which governments will be unable to prevent.

This work is unique for it neither espouses any theory nor uses inductive or deductive reasoning; rather, it observes. Its observations of how economic sectors, central banks, governments, business, and consumers can and do use money and debt are trenchant and alarming.

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Cycles of Inflation and Deflation: Money, Debt, and the 1990s

Cycles of Inflation and Deflation: Money, Debt, and the 1990s

by G. Leigh Skene
Cycles of Inflation and Deflation: Money, Debt, and the 1990s

Cycles of Inflation and Deflation: Money, Debt, and the 1990s

by G. Leigh Skene

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$95.00 
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Overview

This work examines the role money and debt play in our economy. It shows why we went from the gold standard to fiat money, why that led to increasing inflation up to 1980, and why inflation has receded since 1980. In addition, it explains how today's economic problems arose, why governments cannot solve those problems, and where those problems will lead us. Challenging conventional wisdom, the author suggests that high real interest rates in the 1980s reduced business' ability to profit by expanding productive capacity and reduced the attractiveness of borrowing for consumption. The resulting drive to buy assets instead, such as stocks and real estate, caused rapidly rising prices in those areas. The author foresees a depression resulting from these economic forces—one which governments will be unable to prevent.

This work is unique for it neither espouses any theory nor uses inductive or deductive reasoning; rather, it observes. Its observations of how economic sectors, central banks, governments, business, and consumers can and do use money and debt are trenchant and alarming.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275944254
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 09/17/1992
Series: Management; 29
Pages: 178
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.44(d)
Lexile: 1070L (what's this?)

About the Author

G. LEIGH SKENE is an economic consultant specializing in markets, stocks, bonds, real estate, and commodities. For fourteen years, he served as chief economist for Burns, Fry, one of Canada's largest investment dealers.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Was the Gold Standard a Curse or a Blessing? Definitely!
What Is Money?
Cycles in Consumption and Credit
Debt Was Our Most Important Product
Big Brother Believes in Inflation
Winds of Change
Economyths
Can Prices Really Fall?
Making Deflation Work for Us
You Can't Analyze an Irrational Subject
If You Believe in Crystal Balls
The Future Isn't What It Used to Be
Investing in the Future
Are Government Deficits Always Inflationary?
How Much Control Does the Fed Really Have?

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