Showing posts with label monetary sovereignty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label monetary sovereignty. Show all posts

Thursday, July 10, 2014

NBER: Mutual Assistance between Federal Reserve Banks, 1913-1960

By Barry Eichengreen, Arnaud J. Mehl, Livia Chițu, & Gary Richardson

This paper reconstructs the forgotten history of mutual assistance among Reserve Banks in the early years of the Federal Reserve System. We use data on accommodation operations by the 12 Reserve Banks between 1913 and 1960 which enabled them to mutualise their gold reserves in emergency situations. Gold reserve sharing was especially important in response to liquidity crises and bank runs. Cooperation among reserve banks was essential for the cohesion and stability of the US monetary union. But fortunes could change quickly, with emergency recipients of gold turning into providers. Because regional imbalances did not grow endlessly, instead narrowing when region-specific liquidity shocks subsided, mutual assistance created only limited tensions. These findings speak to the current debate over TARGET2 balances in Europe.

Read rest here (subscription required).

Monday, February 3, 2014

Mosler on Krugman, The Unconcious Liberal

 By Warren Mosler,
Yes, unemployment- source of the greatest economic loss as well as a social tragedy and a crime against humanity, is always the evidence deficit spending is too low. There is no exception as a simple point of logic. The currency is a simple public monopoly, and the excess capacity we call unemployment- people looking to sell their labor in exchange for units of that currency- is necessarily a consequence of the monopolist restricting the supply of net financial assets. 
Read rest here.

Monday, January 6, 2014

European Amnesia: Lithuania Considers Euro Adoption

 
Well, it is quite apparent that the euro crisis had done little to transform the sociology of knowledge concerning inherent problems related to common currencies; Lithuania is on track towards adopting the Euro. Read here. A related post on the issue can be seen here.

PS: Euroization is similar (wrt consequences for countries in the periphery) to the process of dollarization - see here.

Saturday, January 4, 2014

Lessons Unlearned: Latvia Adopts Euro

Latvia officially adopted the euro to start off the new year. The prime minister has noted that although this is not necessarily a guarantee towards economic prosperity, it's an opportunity...I deem it a death sentence - For more on the sinking ship that is the euro, see here.

Was Bob Heilbroner a leftist?

Janek Wasserman, in the book I commented on just the other day, titled The Marginal Revolutionaries: How Austrian Economists Fought the War...