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  • March 14, 2017
    CNBC.com
    Why Three Rate Hikes in 2017 May Not Be Enough
    The Fed has painted itself into a policy corner. It cannot extricate itself without causing financial instability somewhere in the world.
    By Gerald P. O’Driscoll Jr.
  • January 15, 2017
    Foundation for Economic Education
    Local Currency Is Like a Car That Can’t Leave Town
    While I applaud the effort of local currency proponents to break the Federal Reserve’s currency monopoly, I regret that they’ve chosen to sabotage this merit-worthy mission by linking it to a much less worthy one.
    By George Selgin
  • January 11, 2017
    Forbes
    The Case for Currency Substitution in Venezuela
    There is no denying the problems of transacting with legacy bolívar notes in hyperinflation Venezuela. But rolling out higher denomination notes is a temporary fix at best.
    By William J. Luther and Guillermo Garcia Montenegro
  • December 28, 2016
    The Hill (Online)
    Currency Bans Benefit Bitcoin and the Like
    Currency bans occurring in India and Venezuela point to the danger of giving governments monopoly power over the issuance of paper currency.
    By James A. Dorn
  • December 16, 2016
    The Wall Street Journal
    At Long Last, the Fed Faces Reality
    Unconventional monetary policy—including years of ultralow interest rates—simply hasn’t delivered.
    By Gerald P. O’Driscoll Jr.
  • December 15, 2016
    CoinDesk
    2016: The Year That Wasn’t for Bitcoin
    The story of bitcoin in 2016 has been one of retrenchment back from the highs and successes that it could be achieving by now, which go beyond capital gains for tech-savvy investors
    By Jim Harper
  • November 28, 2016
    American Banker
    Five Ways Trump Can Use Fed to Aid American Workers
    Let’s hope the Trump administration really cares about America’s forgotten men and women, and that it puts its monetary policy reform agenda where its mouth is.
    By George Selgin
  • October 3, 2016
    National Mortgage News
    How Meddling with Monetary Policy Shaped Modern Mortgages
    The Great Inflation completely changed the face of our mortgage market by changing the industrial structure of mortgage origination and holding, while also changing the variety of products allowed on the market.
    By Mark A. Calabria
  • September 23, 2016
    Orange County Register
    Let’s Not Start a War on Cash
    A crusade against cash would limit the range of choices open to individuals, thus attenuating economic freedom and increasing uncertainty.
    By James A. Dorn
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