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- Search found 9 items for:
- Douglas French
- Money and Banks
- 2009
Media Asset
Author:
Douglas French
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Presented by Douglas E. French at “Recovery or Stagnation?,” the Mises Circle in San Francisco; sponsored by Mark L. Hart, III, and hosted by the Ludwig von Mises Institute. Recorded Saturday, August 29th,
Media Asset
Author:
Douglas French
Online Publish Date:
Recorded at the Mises Circle in Seattle, September 12th, 2009. Sponsored by James M. Wolfe.
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Author:
Douglas French
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Recorded at the Mises Circle in Greenville, South Carolina, 3 October 2009. Sponsored by Ron Wilson, and Professional Planning of Easley, LLC.
Media Asset
Author:
Douglas French
Online Publish Date:
Recorded at the Mises Circle in Newport Beach, California, on November 14th, 2009. Sponsored by Louis E. Carabini.
Media Asset
Author:
Douglas French
Online Publish Date:
Money originates by free markets via barter and gold and silver, not by governments via fiat. A story of Halloween candy demonstrates this. The double coincidence of wants is solved by money. Money that will last will be six things: generally marketable, divisible, high value per unit weight (portable), durable, recognizable, and homogeneous.
Mises Daily
Author:
Douglas French
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It’s widely acknowledged that hundreds if not thousands of banks are on the ropes and just waiting for regulators to wrap them in yellow tape some Friday evening. However, fewer than forty US banks have been seized this year. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) list of problem banks grew to 305 in the first quarter, the highest number
Mises Daily
Author:
Douglas French
Online Publish Date:
With the great bursting of the real-estate bubble in 2008, the federal government is reforming and expanding its regulatory oversight in hopes of legislating away booms and busts. Recent decades have featured a series of speculative manias followed by harrowing financial busts, with central banks applying the same tonic — a flood of monetary
Mises Daily
Author:
Douglas French
Online Publish Date:
The credit crunch continues, with businesses large and small finding that their bankers remain exceedingly stingy in the wake of the 2008 financial debacle. “We need to see banks making more loans to their business customers,” Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) Chairwoman Sheila Bair told reporters recently after the FDIC released