The Paper Moneys of Europe: Their Moral and Economic Significance
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About This Book
An examination of Europe's shift from metal coinage to widespread paper currency combines historical survey and moral critique. It explains why metals like silver and gold once served as stable measures, outlines earlier practices of debasing coinage, and argues that modern inflationary paper issues operate as a large-scale confiscation of private wealth. The analysis covers monetary mechanics—standards, token coinage, and exchange—and details economic effects such as redistribution from creditors to debtors, price instability, and disrupted exchange relations. It concludes by highlighting the ethical and practical dangers of unbacked paper money compared with metal-based systems.
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