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Mises Economics Blog

Gil Guillory Archives

who benefits from credit?

February 28, 2008 12:04 PM by Gil Guillory

While Austrians often trace out the effects that the issuance of unbacked currency has on the structure of production (the so-called Austrian Business Cycle Theory), there is also an effect upon individual households and the social mores surrounding the use of credit.

My favorite personal finance author, Dave Ramsey, writes on his website:

History also teaches us that debt wasn't always a way of life. In fact, three of the biggest lenders today were founded by people who hated debt. Sears now makes more money on credit than on the sale of merchandise. They are not a store; they are a lender with some stuff out front. However, in 1910 the Sears catalog stated, "Buying on Credit is Folly." J. C. Penney department stores make millions annually on their plastic, but their founder was nicknamed James "Cash" Penney because he detested the use of debt.

Henry Ford thought debt was a lazy man's method to purchase items, and his philosophy was so ingrained in Ford Motor Company that Ford didn't offer financing until 10 years after General Motors did. Now, of course, Ford Motor credit is one of the most profitable of Ford Motor's operations. The old school saw the folly of debt; the new school saw the opportunity to take advantage of the consumer with debt.

This historical context makes one wonder whether this is a continuous process that has been going on since 1913, with ever-increasing "leverage" in the household budget. The Washington Post reports today that "Between 1989 and 2004, the net worth of the average American family increased by 35 percent, but household debt more than doubled as more families used debt to finance day-to-day expenses." The graphic accompanying the story is telling:

hhold stats.gif

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Who first proposed crime insurance?

January 18, 2008 10:38 PM by Gil Guillory

Was it Thomas Aquinas? In his Summa Theologica he writes II-II-62-7:

...persons in authority who are bound to safeguard justice on earth, are bound to restitution, if by their neglect thieves prosper, because their salary is given to them in payment of their preserving justice...

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Gold, Money, and Price Volatility

January 3, 2008 12:18 PM by Gil Guillory

Murphy's latest response to Frum is excellent. There is one point that he did not meet that merits special attention. Frum says:

Gold is a commodity. Like all commodities, its price is highly volatile. A money fixed to gold must be highly volatile too. Signing up for a true gold currency would be signing up for an unending monetary roller-coaster ride.

Continue reading "Gold, Money, and Price Volatility" »

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Occupational Licensing = Protectionism, part 4552
December 27, 2007 3:17 PM | Comments (10)

an approach to assessing crime severity
November 1, 2007 5:52 PM | Comments (4)

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Mises Circle a blast
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vice and virtue without a soul
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the myth of zero risk T bills and Landsburg's experience
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debt and the trade against risk
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game theory debate
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dissent on taxation of nonprofits
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The Miracle of Air Conditioning Repair
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