What sources do you want? Everything I just said about the pre-Fed days has already been very thoroughly discussed and sourced in this thread. Your answer was generally to dismiss all of the data, if I'm recalling correctly, or to say that it was just an illusion. There's no argument to be had from that response; the sources and the data really don't matter to you.
Things you said in your original statement that I responded you did not source and have yet to be sourced in this thread despict your affirmations to the opposite effect:
tokeprep said:
Austrians aren't the only economists who predicted or expected all of these events.
tokeprep said:
The question is which system produces a better result. There the record is exceedingly clear.
tokeprep said:
When we were strictly attached to the gold and silver standards and without a central bank, the economy was in recession or depression almost more often than not.
Don't forget the Federal Reserve is not our first Central Bank, I believe it's the third.
tokeprep said:
The standard of living was substantially lower; a huge portion of the population did nothing but labor away growing food.
You used food prices in an attempt at proving this, then failed to understand how the silver dollar that was used then directly translates into evidence completely opposite of what you are asserting.
tokeprep said:
The economy is the product of expectations. If you let the market determine expectations, perhaps it results in $5 trillion less in economic activity over 10 years versus intervening and seeking to alter expectations. If borrowing $1 trillion now will create $5 trillion in additional economic activity over 10 years, it's a good deal in the long run. Perhaps the debt is $20 trillion in 10 years and the economy is $30 trillion; you'd be better off with a debt of $21 trillion in 10 years and economy of $35 trillion. Central banks try very hard to focus on that long run outcome.
See the economy is not philosophy. It's not full of if's and perhaps'.... Philosophers are leeches for the most part if that's all they do for a living. The economy literally is:
[COLOR=#212121 !important]e·con·o·my[/COLOR]
/iˈkänəmē/
[COLOR=#878787 !important]Noun[/COLOR]
The wealth and resources of a country or region, esp. in terms of the production and consumption of goods and services. |
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