The Case Against the Fed
The Case Against the Fed is a 1994 book by Murray N. Rothbard criticising the United States Federal Reserve, fractional reserve banking, and central banks in general.[1] It details a history of fractional reserve banking and the influence that bankers have had on monetary policy over the last few centuries.
Rothbard argues that the claim that the Federal Reserve is designed to fight inflation is sophistry, that price inflation is caused only by an increase in the money supply, and that since only banks increase the money supply, then banks, including the Federal Reserve, are the only source of inflation. He writes: "Unlike the days of the gold standard, it is impossible for the Federal Reserve to go bankrupt; it holds the legal monopoly of counterfeiting (of creating money out of thin air) in the entire country. . . . Neat trick if you can get away with it!"[2]
Publishing History
In English
- The Case Against the Fed. Alabama: Mises Institute, 1994; ISBN 978-0-945466-17-8
In Portuguese
- Pelo fim do Banco Central. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Konkin, 2022;
See also
References
External links
The Case Against the Fed – full text web page (2009 edition)
- v
- t
- e
- Man, Economy, and State (1962)
- The Panic of 1819 (1962)
- America's Great Depression (1963)
- What Has Government Done to Our Money? (1963)
- Power and Market (1970)
- For a New Liberty: The Libertarian Manifesto (1973)
- Egalitarianism as a Revolt Against Nature and Other Essays (1974)
- Conceived in Liberty (1975–79)
- The Ethics of Liberty (1982)
- The Mystery of Banking (1983)
- The Case Against the Fed (1994)
- An Austrian Perspective on the History of Economic Thought (1995)
- A History of Money and Banking in the United States (2002)
- The Complete Libertarian Forum (2006)
- Left and Right: A Journal of Libertarian Thought (Complete, 1965–1968) (2007)
- The Betrayal of the American Right (2007)