Carl Menger Center for the Study of Money and Banking

Carl Menger Center for the Study of Money and Banking

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Money & Banking News

8/25: US Toughens Penalties on Venezuela by Curbing Its Access to Funds (Wall Street Journal)


8/25: IMF: We See a Broad-Based Global Recovery (CNBC)


8/25: ECB President Draghi Warns of "Serious Risk" to Global Economy From Rising Protectionism (CNBC)


8/25: ECB's Mario Draghi Says Global Recovery Is Firming Up, Euro Climbs (CNBC)


8/25: Treasury Chief Says "Debt Ceiling Will Be Raised" (Reuters)


8/25: White House Slaps New Financial Sanctions on Venezuela (Politico)


8/25: Draghi Tells US Not to Backtrack on Free Trade and Regulation (Financial Times)


8/25: Yellen Defends Post-Crisis Bank Rules Under Assault From Trump, Dimon (MarketWatch)


8/25: Yellen Defends Post-Crisis Bank Rules Under Assault From Trump, Dimon (MarketWatch)


8/25: No One Knows How Much to Pay in Bitcoin Cash Taxes (Wall Street Journal)


8/25: Activists in Jackson Hole Pressure Fed on Inflation, Endorse Yellen (Wall Street Journal)


8/25: As Investors Think Taper, ECB Is Set to Buy More Bonds (Wall Street Journal)


8/25: Why Policy Easing - Not Tightening - Tops Agenda for Some Central Banks (Wall Street Journal)


8/25: Frankfurt Hopes to Become "Little London" After Brexit (CNBC)


8/25: Yellen Says Crisis Has Taught Lessons But Risks Remain (CNBC)


8/25: Central Banks' Pursuit of Inflation Has Turned Sisyphean and Some Are Calling for It to End (CNBC)


8/25: Financial Stability a Decade After the Onset of the Crisis: Speech by Chairman Janet Yellen (Federal Reserve Board)


8/25: Are Central Banks Nationalising the Economy? (Mises Institute)


8/25: If Janet Yellen Goes, the Fed's Current Policy May Go With Her (New York Times)


8/25: China's PBOC Should Unwind Its Ever More Complicated Exchange Rate System (MarketWatch)


8/25: Progressive Campaigners Say They Have No Remorse Over Yellen Era (MarketWatch)


8/25: Yellen: System Is Safer Now, Though "All-Too-Familiar" Risks Remain (CNBC)


8/25: Moody's Economist: The Fed Still Needs to Convince the Market That More Hikes Are Coming (CNBC)


8/25: Fed's Mester Says Central Bank Needs to Be "Pre-Emptive" of Rising Inflation (CNBC)


8/24: Dallas Fed President Says US Needs More Immigrants to Fill Open Jobs (CNBC)


8/24: Fed Chair Yellen to Deliver What Could Be Historic Speech in Jackson Hole (CNBC)


8/24: Two SocGen Managers Accused of LIBOR Manipulation (Financial Times)


8/24: Dallas Fed Chief Rejects Looser Curbs on Big Banks (Financial Times)


8/24: Mobile Phone Price Wars Create a Data Puzzle for the Fed (Financial Times)


8/24: Why the "State Theory of Money" Doesn't Explain the Coinage of Precious Metals (Alt-M)


8/24: Fed Watchers Still Fret About Policy Missteps as Jackson Hole Gets Underway (MarketWatch)


8/24: We Just Might Be in a Bitcoin Bubble When... (MarketWatch)


8/24: Fearful of Awakening Market Bears, Yellen and Draghi to Tread Softly at Jackson Hole (MarketWatch)


8/24: Fed's Kaplan Says a Market Correction Wouldn't Necessarily Be "Troubling" (MarketWatch)


8/24: We Could Do Without Investingn Commentary From the Federal Reserve's Janet Yellen (MarketWatch)


8/24: Janet Yellen's Future at the Fed Unresolved Heading Into Jackson Hole (Wall Street Journal)


8/24: Yellen and Draghi Speeches to Highlight Jackson Hole Conference (Wall Street Journal)


8/24: At Jackson Hole, the Death of an Economic Model May Concern Central Bankers (CNBC)


8/24: Cash Is Useless in Venezuela Thanks to Hyperinflation - So People Are Turning to Bitcoin (CNBC)


8/24: Globalization's Castaways Haunt Central Bankers (Reuters)


8/24: What Happened to the "Too Big to Fail" Banks? (Financial Times)


8/24: Fed's George Pushes for More Rate Hikes Despite Low Inflation (CNBC)

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Upcoming Events

Aug
31
Thu
4:30 PM Fed H.3 Release – Monetary Base
Fed H.3 Release – Monetary Base
Aug 31 @ 4:30 PM – 4:45 PM
The Federal Reserve releases its weekly publication of H.3 – Aggregate Reserves of Depository Institutions and the Monetary Base.

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4:30 PM Fed H.4.1 Release – Balance Sheet
Fed H.4.1 Release – Balance Sheet
Aug 31 @ 4:30 PM – 4:45 PM
The Federal Reserve Publishes its weekly H.4.1. Release – Factors Affecting Reserve Balances of Depository Institutions and Condition Statement of Federal Reserve Banks. This release contains the Fed’s balance sheet.

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Sep
7
Thu
all-day New York Fed – President William...
New York Fed – President William...
Sep 7 all-day
Federal Reserve Bank of New York President William Dudley will speak before the Money Marketeers of New York University.

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9:00 AM ECB Governing Council – Monetary... @ European Central Bank
ECB Governing Council – Monetary... @ European Central Bank
Sep 7 @ 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM
The Governing Council of the European Central Bank will meet to assess the European economic situation and the stance of monetary policy.

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1:45 PM ECB Monetary Policy Decision
ECB Monetary Policy Decision
Sep 7 @ 1:45 PM – 2:00 PM
The European Central Bank will issue a press release about its monthly decision on key ECB interest rates and the conduct of monetary policy.

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2:30 PM ECB Press Conference @ European Central Bank
ECB Press Conference @ European Central Bank
Sep 7 @ 2:30 PM – 4:00 PM
The President and Vice-President of the European Central Bank will hold a press conference to discuss the latest monetary policy decision.

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4:30 PM Fed H.3 Release – Monetary Base
Fed H.3 Release – Monetary Base
Sep 7 @ 4:30 PM – 4:45 PM
The Federal Reserve releases its weekly publication of H.3 – Aggregate Reserves of Depository Institutions and the Monetary Base.

Read more →

4:30 PM Fed H.4.1 Release – Balance Sheet
Fed H.4.1 Release – Balance Sheet
Sep 7 @ 4:30 PM – 4:45 PM
The Federal Reserve Publishes its weekly H.4.1. Release – Factors Affecting Reserve Balances of Depository Institutions and Condition Statement of Federal Reserve Banks. This release contains the Fed’s balance sheet.

Read more →

Sep
14
Thu
12:00 PM Bank of England Monetary Policy ... @ Bank of England
Bank of England Monetary Policy ... @ Bank of England
Sep 14 @ 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM
The Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of England will publish its monetary policy announcement, meeting minutes, and inflation report.

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4:30 PM Fed H.3 Release – Monetary Base
Fed H.3 Release – Monetary Base
Sep 14 @ 4:30 PM – 4:45 PM
The Federal Reserve releases its weekly publication of H.3 – Aggregate Reserves of Depository Institutions and the Monetary Base.

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Joe Salerno Interviewed by Ron Paul on the War on Cash

by Paul-Martin Foss • September 2, 2015

Mises Institute Academic Vice President and Carl Menger Center Board Member Joe Salerno is interviewed by Ron Paul about the war on cash in this episode of the Ron Paul Liberty Report.

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Tags:Joe Salerno Ron Paul War on Cash

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Daily Money & Banking News Update: 09/02/2015 →

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News and Updates

Featured Posts

Dumb and Dumber – From Negative Interest Rates to Helicopter Money

by Paul-Martin Foss • April 1, 2016

Image: Downtrend.com

Image: Downtrend.com

We’ve all run into someone who thinks that all it take to bring about prosperity is to give everyone a million dollars. If everyone is a millionaire, we’ll all be rich and be able to afford anything we want, or so the thinking goes. Any sound economist knows that wouldn’t be the case, however. If everyone were given a million dollars the increased amount of money chasing the existing stock of goods would merely result in a massive rise in prices. No one would be better off, at least not once prices were once again equilibrated. The concept of giving everyone a million dollars is so absurd that no one takes it seriously. That is, they don’t take it seriously when a million dollars is the proposed amount. When the amount is smaller, all of a sudden it becomes a viable and increasingly-discussed policy proposal: helicopter money.

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German Response to Negative Interest Rates: Safe Deposit Boxes

by Paul-Martin Foss • March 18, 2016

Image: -JvL-

Image: -JvL-

The Japanese response to negative interest rates was to buy personal safes. The German response is to pull money out of bank accounts and stick it in safe deposit boxes. Both are perfectly understandable reactions to the prospect of having to pay interest to a bank for holding deposits. It is particularly interesting in Germany, where the Bundesbank a few years ago admitted that the average real rate of return on savings deposits has been negative for nearly the past 40 years. Now that nominal rates have turned negative too, the facade of savings accounts as a safe place to park money to earn a little bit of income has finally been ripped away.

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A Brief Monetary History Of The United States: Part VII

by Paul-Martin Foss • March 3, 2016

Today we bring you Part VII of “A Brief Monetary History of the United States” from the Ron Paul Monetary Policy Anthology. The full series can be found at the following links:

  • Part I – Colonial Money and the Coinage Act of 1792
  • Part II – The Banks of the United States, McCulloch v. Maryland, and Private Coinage
  • Part III – Government Begins to Monopolize Currency
  • Part IV – The Legal Tender Cases and the “Crime of ’73”
  • Part V – The Rise of the Fed
  • Part VI – The Great Depression, Gold Confiscation, and the Gold Exchange Standard
  • Part VII – The Dollar Reigns Supreme: From Bretton Woods to Stagflation
  • Part VIII – The 1980s to the Great Recession and on to the Future
  • V. THE DOLLAR REIGNS SUPREME

    Bretton Woods and Gold

    Mount Washington Hotel, site of the Bretton Woods Conference. Image: Richard Hicks

    Mount Washington Hotel, site of the Bretton Woods Conference. Image: Richard Hicks

    In the aftermath of World War II, the United States cemented its position as the world’s largest and most powerful economy. The new international monetary order created at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire in 1946 was based in part on the gold-exchange standard of the 1920s, only with the dollar as the sole international reserve currency—since it was as good as gold. All countries tied their currencies to the dollar at fixed exchange rates, with the dollar being defined as FDR had left it, at 1/35 ounce of gold (i.e. $35 per ounce of gold). While individuals in the United States were still unable to own gold or to redeem their dollars for gold, foreign governments were able to cash in their dollars to the U.S. government and receive gold in return, a process that became known as the “gold window.” While the United States would pyramid its dollar issue on top of its gold reserves, other countries were supposed to hold dollars, and not gold, as their primary foreign exchange holdings.

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    Mortgage Shenanigans Returning

    by Paul-Martin Foss • March 1, 2016

    Image: Violette79

    Image: Violette79

    In another ominous sign of a returning housing bubble, Bank of America is introducing a new mortgage that requires only a three percent down payment. The reason for doing so is to get around Federal Housing Administration (FHA) backing for mortgage loans, as banks have been penalized in recent years for errors in originating those loans. This new 3%-down mortgage will be targeted toward lower-income households. On the high end, we’ve already seen no down payment jumbo loans.

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    On Menger, Mises, and Not Despairing

    by Paul-Martin Foss • February 26, 2016

    Image: azquotes.com

    Image: azquotes.com

    Three days ago we celebrated Carl Menger’s birthday. Today we mourn his death. For almost the last two decades of his life, the founder of the Austrian School of Economics, one of the three economists who initiated the marginal revolution, did not publish anything. Why did such a great intellect go silent, almost dropping off the face of the earth?

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