The contribution by the Austrian economist Friedrich von Hayek to monetary theory stimulates a far-reaching debate on the role of the government in monetary management and the effects of alternative policies in regulating the issuance of money. Since the early 1930s Hayek had been concerned about the role of money in the theory of production (Hayek, 1931). Influenced by Eugene Bohm-Bawerk’s theory of capital, Hayek deeply examined the effects of monetary policy on the process of capital accumulation. As regards investment decisions, Hayek considered that an inflationary credit expansion by the central bank can lead to capital misallocation over time caused by artificially low interest rates. Indeed, the fundamental problem in economics, fo...