America's Great Depression (LFB)

America's Great Depression (LFB)

America's Great Depression (LFB)

America's Great Depression (LFB)

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Overview


Economist Murray Rothbard opens America's Great Depression with a theoretical treatment of business-cycle theory, showing how an expansive monetary policy generates imbalances between investment and consumption. He proceeds to examine the Fedís policies of the 1920s, demonstrating that it was quite inflationary even if the effects did not show up in the prices of goods and services. He showed that the stock-market correction was merely one symptom of the investment boom that led inevitably to a bust.

The Great Depression was not a crisis for capitalism but merely an example of the downturn part of the business cycle, which in turn was generated by government intervention in the economy. Had the book appeared in the 1940s, it might have spared the world much grief. Even so, its appearance in 1963 meant that free-market advocates had their first full-scale treatment of this crucial subject. The damage to the intellectual world inflicted by Keynesian- and socialist-style treatments would be limited from that day forward.

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Product Details

BN ID: 2940148403494
Publisher: Laissez Faire Books
Publication date: 09/10/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 400
Sales rank: 587,110
File size: 2 MB

About the Author


Murray Newton Rothbard (March 2, 1926 – January 7, 1995) was an American economist, historian, and political theorist. He was a prominent exponent of the Austrian School of economics and fundamentally influenced the American libertarian movement and contemporary libertarian and classical liberal thought, by theorizing a form of free-market anarchism which he termed "anarcho-capitalism." Rothbard wrote over twenty books and is considered a centrally important figure in the American libertarian movement.
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