Skip to content

Alt-M

Ideas for an Alternative Monetary Future

Alt-M

Ideas for an Alternative Monetary Future

  • Home
  • Contributors
    • George Selgin
    • Larry White
    • James Dorn
    • Jennifer Schulp
    • Norbert Michel
  • Primer
  • Working Paper Series

repo

Banking Regulation, Inflation & Deflation, Money & Politics, News, The Fed & Central Banks

Vice Chair Quarles' Stigma Problem

George Selgin/February 13, 2020June 19, 2022

Considering all the new tools the Fed has toyed with since the onset of the last crisis, one might find Mr. Quarles' stance refreshing. George Selgin fears, however, that he has chosen the wrong occasion on which to put a kind word in for old-fashioned bureaucratic inertia.

Follow

Print

Subscribe


Contributors

  • Hu McCulloch
  • Jennifer Schulp
  • Norbert Michel
  • Larry White
  • George Selgin
  • James Dorn

Categories

  • Banking Regulation (126)
  • Booms & Busts (59)
  • Commodity Money (80)
  • Currency Boards (19)
  • Digital Money (99)
  • Economic History (210)
  • Economic Thought (167)
  • Events (60)
  • Fiat Money (81)
  • Financial Innovation (50)
  • Financial Markets (138)
  • Free Banking (211)
  • Inflation & Deflation (86)
  • Legal Analysis (3)
  • Monetary Policy Primer (12)
  • Money & Politics (338)
  • News (262)
  • Recommended Reading (99)
  • Securities Regulation (7)
  • The Fed & Central Banks (382)
  • Uncategorized (11)
  • Working Papers (7)

Recent Posts

  • The New Deal and Recovery, Part 26: The RFC, Conclusion
  • The New Deal and Recovery, Part 25: The RFC, Continued
  • The New Deal and Recovery, Part 24: The RFC
  • The New Deal and Recovery, Part 23: The Great Rapprochement
  • The New Deal and Recovery, Part 22: Postwar Monetary Policy
  • Diamond and Dybvig and the Panic of 1907
  • Diamond, Dybvig, and Government Deposit Insurance

About Us

Welcome to Alt-M, a community devoted to exploring and promoting ideas for an alternative monetary future. Our goal is to reveal the shortcomings of today’s centralized, bureaucratic, and discretionary monetary arrangements, and to bring serious consideration of real alternatives to the center stage of current monetary and financial reform debates.

Sponsors

Liberty and Privacy Network
This work by the Cato Institute and the Liberty and Privacy Network is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
DMCA | Privacy Policy
top