Money / by D. H. Robertson ; with an introduction by C.W. Guillebaud.
Material type: TextSeries: Cambridge economic handbooksPublication details: New York : Pitman Publishing Corporation ; 1948.Edition: US EditionDescription: xviii, 223 pages ; 19 cmSubject(s): DDC classification:- 332.4
- HG 221 .R56 1948
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BOOKS | Niebyl-Proctor Marxist Library General Stacks | The Karl H. Niebyl Collection | HG 221 .R56 1948 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan | NPML20010013 |
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HG 220.A2 M35 1963 Clarification of the monetary standard : the concept and its relation to monetary policies and objectives / | HG 221 .D295 The controversy over the quantity theory of money / | HG 221 .M67 1950 Monetary policy for a competitive society / | HG 221 .R56 1948 Money / | HG 235 .E35 1948 Primitive money : | HG 255 .G46 1939 Currency depreciation and monetary policy / | HG 289 .A6413 1983 Gold--the yellow devil / |
Chapter I The merits and drawbacks of money -- Chapter II The value of money -- Chapter III The quantity of money -- Chapter IV The gold standard -- Chapter V Money and saving -- Chapter VI Money in the great muddle -- Chapter VII The question of the standard -- Chapter VIII The question of the cycle --- Chapter IX Money in the second great muddle -- Chapter X Problems of words, thoughts, and actions.
"This book is intended to be a more or less self-contained unit : but it is also the second volume of a series. Its connection with its predecessor — Mr. Henderson's Supply and Demand — is to be found in the emphasis laid on the theory of money as a special case of the general theory of value. Its bearing upon the remainder of the series is to be found in the conclusion to which the book leads up, that Money is after all a fundamentally unimportant subject, in the sense that neither the most revolutionary nor the " soundest " monetary policy can be expected to provide a remedy for those strains and disharmonies whose roots lie deep in the present structure of industry, and perhaps in the very nature of man himself." -- Preface of First Edition
Donation from Karl Niebyl.
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