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The Money Trap
Book

The Money Trap

Escaping the Grip of Global Finance

Palgrave Macmillan, 2012 更多详情

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Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Innovative

Recommendation

Reserves of US dollars held by developing countries rose from $1 trillion to $6 trillion between 2001 and 2011, partly because these countries perceived risk in the dysfunctional global financial system. However, high levels of foreign reserves pose serious dangers. Robert Pringle, chairman and founder of Central Banking Publications, contends that surplus savings did not cause the 2008 financial crisis. He blames the excessive elasticity of credit, along with risk-taking bankers and lax monetary policies. Pringle advocates establishing a global monetary standard, anchored to the real economy, to address these issues. getAbstract recommends this thought-provoking – though at times meandering – treatise to economists, financial professionals, policy makers and anyone interested in how money works.

Take-Aways

  • The US dollar has remained the world’s principal monetary unit since the Bretton Woods agreement in 1945.
  • The dollar’s dual role as America’s domestic currency and the world’s reserve currency has caused problems in both arenas.
  • The US pressures other countries to revalue their currencies to tackle trade imbalances, while the dollar’s role as the reserve currency may be the real culprit in its problems.

About the Author

Robert Pringle, the chairman and founder of Central Banking Publications, is a financial commentator, economics editor, entrepreneur, and economic policy consultant.


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