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** August 20, 2019 [link removed] [link removed] [link removed] [link removed] [link removed]
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A Rothbardian Take on Negative Interest Rates ([link removed])
by Robert P. Murphy ([link removed])
Joe Weisenthal is questioning whether people should be able to deposit their money in a checking account and be paid interest on it — Rothbardians have been saying that for decades.
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Happy Birthday Ron! ([link removed])
by Jeff Deist ([link removed])
How many people peak after 60?
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Nicholas Oresme and the First Monetary Treatise ([link removed])
by Jörg Guido Hülsmann ([link removed])
Austrian monetary thought can be traced back right to the very founding father of monetary economics, the great Nicholas Oresme, the 14th century Bishop of Lisieux.
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Why $100 Bills Are Now the US Dollar's Most Common Banknote ([link removed])
by Michael J. Hoffman ([link removed])
Perhaps in the future, physical dollars and digital dollars will be recognized as two distinct mediums of exchange.
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Austrian Economics Can Help Investors Look Beyond Short-Term Thinking ([link removed])
by Christian Hubbs ([link removed])
Francsico García Paramés notes that economists who focus on near-term forecasting are generally useless to investors. But principles of Austrian economists — and a long-term view in general — can provide insights outside the mainstream.
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