Irresponsible monetary policy can undermine prosperity by promoting business cycles and otherwise preventing the price system from reflecting the true scarcity of various goods and services. Sound monetary policy limits such damaging distortions. In a fiat monetary system, it does so by assigning a central bank the overarching objective of maintaining a stable and predictable overall level of spending on goods and services, while insulating it from political pressure to pursue other, conflicting ends. But in a free society that attaches a high value to competition, consumer choice, and innovation, monetary authorities should also allow people the freedom to employ unofficial substitutes for official fiat currency: if the official monetary standard is to prevail, it should do so because it is well-managed and not because alternatives have been suppressed.
Monetary Policy
2,609 results found
Bank Regulation and the Financial Crisis
Against Currency Prohibitionism
Dodd-Frank and Capital, Revisited
Currency Wars, the Devaluation Delusion
Coming Soon: Cato’s Crack Cryptocurrency Conference. Cool!
Graeber, Once More
Were Banks “Too Big to Fail” Before the Fed?
Did Dodd-Frank Increase Bank Capital?
The Myth of the Myth of Barter
Remember the Common Law
Stop Encouraging Homeownership
Private Money, Theoretically
Debating QE: Revising the History of the Crisis
The Administration’s Puerto Rico Jujitsu Threatens the States’ Ability to Borrow