Time and Money
Professor Roger Garrison discusses Time and Money at the 2002 Austrian Scholars Conference.
Professor Roger Garrison discusses Time and Money at the 2002 Austrian Scholars Conference.
One of the most difficult things to understand about banking is how money is created out of thin air. Current commercial bank liabilities are immediate. The banks do not have the reserves to redeem all demand notes. Thus, banks are inherently insolvent. But, government has eliminated runs on banks. Banks are not allowed to fail when they are mismanaged.
Recorded at the 2003 Supporters Summit: Prosperty, War, and Depression.
(24:29)
Before there was the Federal Reserve there was the second Bank of the United States (1817–1836). Since the late nineteenth century, historians and economists have lauded this institution for its salutary control over the currency, its regulation of the state banks, its prudent stewardship of the government’s funds, and its example of a fruitful private/public partnership in the field of central banking.