We explore several unaddressed issues in George Selgin’s (1988) claim that the best monetary system to maintain monetary equilibrium is a fractional reserve free banking one. The claim that adverse clearing balances would limit credit expansion in a fractional reserve free banking system is more troublesome than previously reckoned. Both lengthened clearing periods and interbank agreements render credit expansion unrestrained. “The theory of free banking” confuses increases in money held with increases in real savings, resulting in exacerbated economic cycles when fiduciary media is issued equally under both scenarios. Most troubling, these economic cycles generated by the free banking system breed an incentive to create a coordinating agen...
We review arguments for and against reserve requirements and conclude that the main question is whet...
Larry Sjaastad has done what is hard to do. He has written a provocative paper on a subject that has...
Fractional reserve banking is inherently risky, which in large part explains the hundreds of bank fa...
We explore several unaddressed issues in George Selgin’s (1988) claim that the best monetary system ...
We reassess monetary equilibrium theory by focusing on its foundation – price stickiness – and answe...
Anthony Evans and Steven Horwitz readily admit that their own understanding of monetary theory is im...
Since a few decades several sub-disciplines within economics have witnessed a reorientation towards ...
This paper serves as a compilation and analysis of different banking systems with an emphasis on fra...
This paper examines the debate between the so-called fractionalists and the reservists within the Au...
The recent banking crisis laid bare a long standing and inherent defect in fractional reserve bankin...
The author of this article draws special attention to two particular claims of the free bankers conc...
This thesis is a theoretical criticism of fractional reserve banKing The Austrian school (especially...
Despite the distinctive character of the Austrian approach to “microfoundations for macroeconomics”,...
When Deposits are made to a bank, the bank can loan out most of it, while claiming they have the mon...
We review arguments for and against reserve requirements and conclude that the main question is whet...
Larry Sjaastad has done what is hard to do. He has written a provocative paper on a subject that has...
Fractional reserve banking is inherently risky, which in large part explains the hundreds of bank fa...
We explore several unaddressed issues in George Selgin’s (1988) claim that the best monetary system ...
We reassess monetary equilibrium theory by focusing on its foundation – price stickiness – and answe...
Anthony Evans and Steven Horwitz readily admit that their own understanding of monetary theory is im...
Since a few decades several sub-disciplines within economics have witnessed a reorientation towards ...
This paper serves as a compilation and analysis of different banking systems with an emphasis on fra...
This paper examines the debate between the so-called fractionalists and the reservists within the Au...
The recent banking crisis laid bare a long standing and inherent defect in fractional reserve bankin...
The author of this article draws special attention to two particular claims of the free bankers conc...
This thesis is a theoretical criticism of fractional reserve banKing The Austrian school (especially...
Despite the distinctive character of the Austrian approach to “microfoundations for macroeconomics”,...
When Deposits are made to a bank, the bank can loan out most of it, while claiming they have the mon...
We review arguments for and against reserve requirements and conclude that the main question is whet...
Larry Sjaastad has done what is hard to do. He has written a provocative paper on a subject that has...
Fractional reserve banking is inherently risky, which in large part explains the hundreds of bank fa...