Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Page:Georg Freidrich Knapp - The State Theory of Money (1924 translation).pdf/19; Page:Georg Freidrich Knapp - The State Theory of Money (1924 translation).pdf/20; Page:Georg Freidrich Knapp - The State Theory of Money (1924 translation).pdf/214; Page:Georg Freidrich Knapp - The State Theory of Money (1924 translation).pdf/251
Some scholars suggest that the directionality of the imperial boomerang needs to be re-evaluated. Political scientist Stuart Schrader argues for a colony-centered explanation to the boomerang effect, especially in the case of the United States where imperial and racial violence predates the heyday of the American empire. [16]
Robertson worked closely with John Maynard Keynes in the 1920s and 1930s, during the years when Keynes was developing many of the ideas that later were incorporated in his General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money. Keynes wrote that at that time, working with Robertson, it was good to work with someone who had a "completely first class ...
Created Date: 8/30/2012 4:52:52 PM
Georg Friedrich Knapp, a German economist, invented the term "chartalism" in his State Theory of Money, which was published in German in 1905 and translated into English in 1924. The name derives from the Latin charta, in the sense of a token or ticket. [2] Knapp argued that "money is a creature of law" rather than a commodity. [3]
Download as PDF; Printable version ... Appearance. move to sidebar hide. Boomerang effect may refer to: ... (psychology) in social psychology; Imperial boomerang in ...
Without the savings, there is no pressure to lower interest rates, so there is no incentive for businesses to invest. In his theory on money he asserts that investment is an "undependable drive wheel for the economy," and when no new investment can be found, the economy will begin to falter. [5]
In The Theory of Credit he says: [16] Money and Credit are essentially of the same nature: Money being only the highest and most general form of Credit. Macleod's Credit Theory of Money influenced Alfred Mitchell-Innes and later work of the modern Chartalists. John R. Commons considered Macleod's work to be the foundation of Institutional ...