01341nam2 2200289 i 450 VAN001205420170208115620.94439-236-1515-920030203d1995 |0itac50 baitaIT|||| |||||ˆ1: Die ‰Handschriften des weltlichen Rechts(Nr1-327)von Ludwig Burgmann ... [et al.]Frankfurt am Main : Löwenklau, c1995XXVIII466 p. ; 25 cmTit. del dorso: RHBR 1.001VAN00120552001 Forschungen zur Byzantinischen Rechtsgeschichte210 Frankfurt am MainLöwenklau.20001VAN00120532001 Repertorium der Handschriften des byzantinischen Rechtsvon Ludwig Burgmann ... [et al.]205 Frankfurt am Main : Löwenklau210 v.25 cm215 Tit. del dorso: RHBR1FrankfurtVANL001054BleickenJochenVANV009110LöwenklauVANV109614650ITSOL20230616RICABIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI GIURISPRUDENZAIT-CE0105VAN00VAN0012054BIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI GIURISPRUDENZA00CONS XVIII.Bl.18 (1) 00 14539 20030203 Handschriften des weltlichen Rechts1401136UNICAMPANIA05531nam 22006853u 450 991077917700332120230126202915.00-87586-920-3(CKB)2550000000101078(EBL)864151(OCoLC)821198654(SSID)ssj0000738445(PQKBManifestationID)12304526(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000738445(PQKBWorkID)10790547(PQKB)10802890(MiAaPQ)EBC864151(EXLCZ)99255000000010107820130418d2011|||| u|| |engtxtccrA More Imperfect Union[electronic resource] How Inequity, Debt, and Economics Undermine the American DreamNew York Algora Publishing20111 online resource (265 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-87586-918-1 1. Introduction; The Business Cycle; Poverty; Deflation; Overview of Text; 2. Money and Debt; Active and Idle Money; Expansion of the Money Supply; Debt Involvement; Fiat Money; 3. Income; Equation of Exchange; Velocity of Money; National Income; 4. Money Flows; Money-Flow Diagrams; Current Output Market; Noncurrent Output Market; Foreign Transactions; Financial Market; Government Sector; Money Creation; Depreciation and Intermediate Inputs; Composite of Flows; 5. Productivity; Growth in Productivity; Productivity in a Competitive Environment; Index; Bibliography; The Final Word20. Conclusion Summary and Perspective; The Bubble Economy; Deflation Deterrents; Economy Adrift; Moving Forward; 19. Economic Theory; Interest Rates; Cost-Push Inflation; Multiple Follies; Stability; Debt Addiction; Fiat Money; 18. Poverty; Free Markets; Poverty; Government; Debt; Wage-Skill Considerations; New Direction; 17. Foreign Affairs; Competitive Pricing; Overpaid Labor and Capital; Monetary Expansion; Unbalanced Trade; Currency Reserves; Multinational Currencies; Caution and Study Warranted; 16. Debt and the Economic Cycle; Debt Creation and Servicing; Tight-Money PolicyThe Short TermInternational Considerations; Generational-Funding Dilemma; Limited Government; Default and Collapse; Debtless Money; International Context; 15. Labor; Unemployment Causes; Wage Fluctuations; Distortions and Inequities; Wage Inequality; Minimum-Wage Rates; Inadequate Investment; Income Redistribution; Social Contract; Job Creation; 14. Fiscal Policy; Higher Income-Producing Flows; Keynesian Beliefs; Public and Private Debt; Monetary and Fiscal Policy; 13. Monetary Policy; Wealth Transfers; Open-Market Operations; International Transactions; Constant Money SupplyPrice Stabilization An Alternative; 12. Money Demand and Velocity; The Demand for Money; Comments on Money Demand Theory; Velocity and Debt; 11. Profits; Profits and Interest; Profits and Deflation; Legitimacy of Profits; Responses to Profit Growth; Capitalism and Free Markets; 10. The Rate of Interest; Events Following Money Supply Increase; A Fair Interest Rate; An Administered Rate of Interest; Money Supply and Inflation; Deflation; Liquidity-Preference Theory; Debt for Debt Servicing; 9. Investment and Economic Growth; Keynesian Theory; Capital Replacement; New InvestmentGrowth Undermined 8. Government and Inflation; Taxes; Deficit Financing; Public Sector Spending; Regulation; Government Guarantees; 7. Saving, Savings, and Debt; Saving and Spending Flows; Intermediary Policies; Rate of Saving; Debt Expansion; 6. Cycles; Theory in Perspective; Hypothetical Events; Recent Experience; Response of the Government; Free Markets; Productivity in a Noncompetitive Environment; Hidden Inflation; Cost-Push Inflation; Monetary Expansion; Other RamificationsA debt-based financial system is incompatible with a truly competitive economy. Our system exists by choice, not the dictates of immutable economic laws; and it is leading the U.S. to financial collapse. The author highlights essentially ignored inequities and fallacies inherent in major aspects of our economy and of economic theory. The text explains how the system is skewed to big government and a dominant financial sector and undermining our standard of living.Debts, Public -- United StatesMonetary policy -- United StatesUnited States -- Economic conditions -- 21st centuryUnited States -- Foreign relations -- 21st centuryUnited States -- Social conditions -- 21st centuryDebts, PublicUnited StatesMonetary policyUnited StatesUnited StatesEconomic conditions21st centuryUnited StatesSocial conditions21st centuryUnited StatesForeign relations21st centuryDebts, Public -- United States.Monetary policy -- United States.United States -- Economic conditions -- 21st century.United States -- Foreign relations -- 21st century.United States -- Social conditions -- 21st century.Debts, PublicMonetary policy330.973Jennings James L1559383AU-PeELAU-PeELAU-PeELBOOK9910779177003321A More Imperfect Union3824421UNINA