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Austrian economics, money and finance / Thomas Mayer.

By: Mayer, Thomas, 1954- [author.].
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: New York : Routledge, 2018Edition: First edition.Description: 1 online resource (203 pages).ISBN: 9781315168296; 9781351685511.Subject(s): Austrian school of economics | Monetary policy | FinanceDDC classification: 330.157 Online resources: Click here to view.
Contents:
Introduction -- Money -- The functions of money and money creation -- The nature of inflation -- The concept of interest -- The order of money and its consequences -- Blueprints for monetary reform -- Finance -- Debt and ownership -- The building blocks of modern finance -- The failures of modern finance -- How modern finance has contributed to financial crises -- Building blocks of a theory of austrian finance -- From theory to practice- applications of austrian finance -- Epilogue.
Summary: "The financial crisis has exposed severe shortcomings in mainstream monetary economics and modern finance. It is surprising that these shortcomings have not led to a wider debate about the need to overhaul these theories. Instead, mainstream economists have closed ranks to defend existing theories and public authorities have expanded their interference in markets. This book investigates the problems associated with mainstream monetary economics and finance, and proposes alternatives based on the Austrian school of economics. This school emanated from the work of the 19th century Austrian economist Carl Menger and was developed further by Eugen von Beohm-Bawerk, Ludwig von Mises, and Friedrich August von Hayek. In monetary economics, the Austrian school regards the creation of money by banks through credit extension as a key source of economic instability. From this follows the need for a comprehensive reform of our present monetary system. In a new monetary order, money could be issued by both public and private institutions, and there would be no need for fractional reserve banking. Instead of creating money, banks would intermediate it. In finance, the Austrian school rejects the notion of rational expectations and measurable risk. Individuals use their subjective knowledge to gather and evaluate information, and they act in a world of radical uncertainty. Hence, markets are not "efficient" nor can portfolios be built on the basis of known probability distributions of asset prices as described in the modern finance literature. From this follows the need to develop a new theoretical foundation for asset pricing and investment management that will give practitioners more useful orientation."--Provided by publisher.
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Introduction -- Money -- The functions of money and money creation -- The nature of inflation -- The concept of interest -- The order of money and its consequences -- Blueprints for monetary reform -- Finance -- Debt and ownership -- The building blocks of modern finance -- The failures of modern finance -- How modern finance has contributed to financial crises -- Building blocks of a theory of austrian finance -- From theory to practice- applications of austrian finance -- Epilogue.

"The financial crisis has exposed severe shortcomings in mainstream monetary economics and modern finance. It is surprising that these shortcomings have not led to a wider debate about the need to overhaul these theories. Instead, mainstream economists have closed ranks to defend existing theories and public authorities have expanded their interference in markets. This book investigates the problems associated with mainstream monetary economics and finance, and proposes alternatives based on the Austrian school of economics. This school emanated from the work of the 19th century Austrian economist Carl Menger and was developed further by Eugen von Beohm-Bawerk, Ludwig von Mises, and Friedrich August von Hayek. In monetary economics, the Austrian school regards the creation of money by banks through credit extension as a key source of economic instability. From this follows the need for a comprehensive reform of our present monetary system. In a new monetary order, money could be issued by both public and private institutions, and there would be no need for fractional reserve banking. Instead of creating money, banks would intermediate it. In finance, the Austrian school rejects the notion of rational expectations and measurable risk. Individuals use their subjective knowledge to gather and evaluate information, and they act in a world of radical uncertainty. Hence, markets are not "efficient" nor can portfolios be built on the basis of known probability distributions of asset prices as described in the modern finance literature. From this follows the need to develop a new theoretical foundation for asset pricing and investment management that will give practitioners more useful orientation."--Provided by publisher.

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