Okay, so I have a little bit of an economic background from having studied micro and macro and econometrics at Uni many moons ago. So a mate recently gave me a copy of Ron Paul's End The Fed book...and its pretty interesting.
Paul certainly makes some very valid points with the expansion of the money supply and the significant inflation that we have all experienced...theres no doubt that certainly after the QE1 & 2 that there is definitely and asset bubble that has to pop at some stage.
So my question is...the Austrians advocate moving back to a gold standard as a legitimate check/balance to ensure that the money supply doesnt get horribly expanded through things like fractional banking etc..so in that case...how do we manage the business cycle?
If the government is unable to expand the currency supply at will and retract it at will doesnt that remove some of the major fiscal tools that they have available to try and cushion/manage the economic cycle? Or do Austrians suggest that these peaks and troughs will smooth out with less government intervention.
I must admit it takes some serious getting your head around this after having come at the problem from a Keynesian point of view. Lots of things lately are making me wonder about the validity of research that has been done into the overall business cycle.
Paul certainly makes some very valid points with the expansion of the money supply and the significant inflation that we have all experienced...theres no doubt that certainly after the QE1 & 2 that there is definitely and asset bubble that has to pop at some stage.
So my question is...the Austrians advocate moving back to a gold standard as a legitimate check/balance to ensure that the money supply doesnt get horribly expanded through things like fractional banking etc..so in that case...how do we manage the business cycle?
If the government is unable to expand the currency supply at will and retract it at will doesnt that remove some of the major fiscal tools that they have available to try and cushion/manage the economic cycle? Or do Austrians suggest that these peaks and troughs will smooth out with less government intervention.
I must admit it takes some serious getting your head around this after having come at the problem from a Keynesian point of view. Lots of things lately are making me wonder about the validity of research that has been done into the overall business cycle.