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The Rationale of Central Banking: And the Free Banking Alternative

Vera C. Smith
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TLDR
The rationale of central banks was first published in England in 1936 as discussed by the authors and was translated into English by Wilhelm Ropke, Oskar Morgenstern, and Fritz Machlup.
Abstract
THE RATIONALE OF CENTRAL BANKING was first published in England in 1936. Vera Smith spent her professional career in a variety of research positions. She wrote articles and books on money, banking, economic development, and the labor market and translated into English books by Wilhelm Ropke, Oskar Morgenstern, and Fritz Machlup. This book provides a scholarly review and judicious assessments of the experience and theory that bear on the issues of free banking and central banking. Its wide-ranging discussion identifies both the fallacies in the arguments for central banks and the influential fallacies in the arguments against free banking. Vera Smith's work should play a prominent role in any reappraisal of our monetary institutions.

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A Study of the Possible Consequences in the Event of an Accelerated Issuance and Widespread Use of Private e-Money: A Case Study of Montenegro

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed an environment that would arise in the case of parallel use of private and public electronic money in Montenegro, where the main goal of this chapter is to show what changes occur in case of accelerated issuance of private digital money.
Book ChapterDOI

Introducing the Book

TL;DR: For example, in 1965, the US central bank, the Federal Reserve or "Fed", unexpectedly raised the interest rate it charged on loans to banks by a half percentage point.