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Courses: -ECON 4710 Personal
Stuff
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Professor of Economics Athens, GA 30602-6254 706-542-2734 (voice) I'm Coming Back!
Though
I enjoyed my year at WVU, and will very much miss my colleagues there, I've
decided to return to UGA for the Fall semester. My Research
My principal
research areas are monetary and banking theory, monetary history, and
macroeconomics. I also dabble in the history of economic thought.
My current major research projects have to do with the potential contribution
of commercial banknotes to economic development and the theory and history of
private coinage. Two other topics that have always interested me are free
banking and deflation. James Watt and the Progress of
Steam Power
In researching my
book on private coinage I learned a lot about the early history of steam
engines. Consequently I found myself co-authoring, with my UGA
colleage John Turner, several papers critically assessing the claim that
James Watt's engine patent held back British industrial progress, including this published
comment on a paper by Michele Boldrin and David K. Levine, and a working
paper, "Strong
Steam, Weak Patents, or, The Myth of Watt's Innovation-Blocking Monopoly,
Exploded." Banknotes and Growth
The paper currency
in circulation today consists almost exclusively of irredeemable notes issued
by public authorities. These notes represent scarce savings to their
holders. But the authorities that issue them, and central banks
especially, squander that savings by investing it in low-return assets.
The waste could be avoided by reviving commercial bank notes--private, paper
IOUs that can perform the same medium of exchange role as fiat money, while
also serving as a vehicle for productive financial intermediation. In
our working paper, "Banknotes
and Economic Growth," Bill Lastrapes and I show that even a
partial commercial banknote revival could give a substantial boost to
economic growth Private Coinage
Lately I've been
exploring historical episodes of private coinage - rare instances in which
governments allowed private mints to flourish. Economists have almost
universally tended to support governments' traditional coinage
"prerogative," claiming that private mints would tend to issue
inferior and irregular coins. They often appeal to Gresham's Law, according
to which bad coins will tend to drive good coins out of circulation.
But Gresham's Law is more properly understood as explaining what tends to
happen when governments do monopolize coinage while trying to force
the public to accept bad (debased or lightweight) coins. On this see my
EH.net Encyclopedia entry on "Gresham's Law"
and my JMCB article " Gresham's
Law: The Good, the Bad, and the Illegal" - JSTOR link.) Far from giving
effect to Gresham's Law, the private coinage episodes I have looked at so far
tended to have the opposite effect, with mints producing inferior coins being
forced out of business by their more reputable rivals. The private
coinage episode that followed the discovery of gold in California is a
relatively well-known instance of this. A less well-known
episode took place during the first, critical decades of Great Britain's
industrial revolution. The Royal Mint struck hardly any copper or silver
coins after 1775, and so left British industry without decent official money
with which to pay workers, who typically made less than 15 shillings a week.
In 1787 a major industrialist began issuing his own copper pennies and
halfpence, and soon a private coinage industry consisting of more than 20
independent mints, most of which had been started by former metal button
makers located in Birmingham, was supplying most of Great Britain's small
change. The story of how private industry managed to solve problems that had
thwarted the Royal Mint's own attempts to supply small change, and of how the
government eventually re-asserted its coinage prerogative, forms the subject
of my recently-published book, Good
Money: Birmingham Button Makers, the Royal Mint, and the Beginnings of Modern
Coinage, 1775-1821 (University of Michigan Press and the Independent
Institute). Here are some blogs concerning the book, from Marginal
Revolution and the Mises
Economics Blog. Here is the YouTube video of
my my F.A. Hayek Lecture, "The Private Supply of Money," concerning
the theme of book. An early version
of the manuscript for Good
Money included a "Ramble 'Round Old Birmingham," which
takes readers on a numismatic tour of Birmingham in 1829. Time-travel affecionados
can take the tour by clicking here.
Two
recent works, Angela Redish's Bimetallism (Cambridge University Press
2000) and Thomas Sargent and François Velde's The Big Problem of Small
Change (Princeton University Press 2002) discuss Britain's 18th-century
small-change problem and how it delayed the emergence of the gold standard.
Both mention the private copper coinage, but wrongly assume that its success
was due to the invention, by Matthew Boulton, of the steam-driven coining
press rather than to the competitive nature of the private coinage regime. My
Economic History Review paper, "Steam,
Hot Air, and Small Change: Matthew Boulton and the Reform of Britain's
Coinage." (Blackwell-Synergy link) refutes this view and
explains the real reasons behind the superiority of the private copper
coinage. A second paper, "The
Institutional Roots of Great Britain's 'Big Problem of Small Change'" (forthcoming
in the European
Review of Economic History) blames the persistance of Great
Britain's small change problem on the monopolistic nature of its official
coinage system. Government
authorities continue to this day to make a botch-job of coinage, as is
evident from Argentina's recent experience, which I discuss briefly in "Argentina
is Short of Cash--Literally" (The
Wall Street Journal, January 5, 2009). If you think my
article exaggerates the situation there, have a look at this video
documentary. Although the
small-value or retail component of modern payments systems has tended to
become less regulated and more fully privatized in recent years, thanks to
global competition and new forms of "electronic" money, government
monetary authorities are now more heavily involved than ever before in large
value or "wholesale" payments. Starting around 1990, government
monetary authorities in many countries began taking steps to limit activity
in conventional "deferred net settlement" arrangements for clearing
wholesale money transfers; and in many places deferred net settlement has
been abolished altogether in favor of so-called "real-time gross
settlement." Most economists have supported these reforms, claiming that
traditional deferred net settlement systems involve inherent "market
failure" problems. "Wholesale
Payments: Questioning the Market Failure Hypothesis"
(ScienceDirect link) presents a contrary opinion. Free Banking
Free banking refers to banking
without government deposit insurance or a lender of last resort and free of
legal restrictions on interest rates, bank portfolios, branch banking, and,
most interestingly, private and competitive note (currency) issuance.
The most general and fundamental question addressed by free-banking theory
is, how would a monetary and banking system operate under laissez faire?
An answer to this question is essential for a proper, critical understanding
of the effects of government intervention in the monetary system. Just as it
would be impossible to understand the full implications of restrictive tariff
policies without reference to a theory of free trade, so to is it impossible
to understand the full implications of legal restrictions in banking without
reference to a theory of free banking--an understanding that is crucial both
to understanding monetary history and to making predictions concerning the
likely consequences of future deregulation and financial innovations.
Surprisingly, monetary economists did not begin to construct such a theory
until the mid 1970s, and there is still much work to be done. Interest in free
banking increased during the 70s owing to the perceived shortcomings of
monetary regulations (including central bank behavior) and also thanks to
studies of the pre-Civil War U.S. "free banking era" by Hugh
Rockoff, Arthur Rolnick, and Warren Weber, showing that that regime was far
more successful than had previously been supposed. The U.S.
"free banking" episode was, nevertheless, far removed from genuine
monetary laissez faire. A closer approximation was the Scottish
free banking era, which ended in 1845 and was the subject of Lawrence H. White's 1984
book, Free Banking in Britain. Since 1984, numerous other
free-banking episodes have been uncovered and examined. My article,
"Free Banking in Foochow" (in Kevin Dowd's volume, The
Experience of Free Banking) examines one of many Chinese cities
that had free banking systems until the early decades of the twentieth
century. My main interest
has been in the general, theoretical implications of monetary
deregulation. My 1987 Economic Inquiry article (with Lawrence
White) on "The Evolution of a Free Banking System" offers a partly
conjectural history of how banking institutions evolve under laissez faire.
Such a conjectural history serves to motivate assumptions about the structure
of a free-banking system. My 1988 book, The Theory of Free
Banking, and my 1994 Economic Journal article "Free
Banking and Monetary Control" (JSTOR link) explore the
determinants of the supply of bank money under free banking. My Cato
Journal article, "Legal
Restrictions, Financial Weakening, and the Lender of Last Resort"
and my 1994 Critical Review article, "Are Banking Crises Free
Market Phenomena?" dispute the claim that banking panics are a problem
inherent to fractional reserve banking, and propose a "legal
restrictions" alternative the the conventional theory of banking
panics. My article, "In Defense of Bank Suspension," for the Journal
of Financial Services Research, argues (contra. Diamond and Dybvig) that,
in the rare event of a general run on a free banking system, solvent banks
could protect themselves without harming their customers by exercizing a
contractual right to suspend payments. Finally, my and Lawrence White's
1994 Journal of Economic Literature article, "How
Would the Invisible Hand Handle Money?" (JSTOR link) surveys
pre-1994 writings on monetary laissez faire. This article as well as most of
the other articles mentioned above are gathered, with an introduction, in my
1996 book, Bank
Deregulation and Monetary Order. (Check my C.V. for details, including the locations of
individual articles.) While my research
treats fractional-reserve banking as a potentially stable and largely
beneficial market-based institutional arrangement, some (though not all)
self-styled "Austrian" economists claim that it is both inherently
fraudulent and inherently inflationary. I respond to some of their arguments
in my Independent Review article "Should We
Let Banks Create Money?" The claim that monetary systems can function
smoothly in the absence of government regulations sometimes raises the
question, Why do governments intervene in money? Although economic misunderstanding
and pressure from special interests within the banking industry account for
many observed forms of intervention, Lawrence White and I suggest, in our
1999 Economic Inquiry paper, "A Fiscal
Theory of Government's Role in Money," that government
intervention in the money industry has largely been a result of fiscal
pressures to extract revenue from money holders. Here
is an interview
I did on free banking for the Richmond Fed's Region Focus magazine,
and here is a podcast
from Russ Robert's EconTalk. Deflation
I began writing about the effects
of deflation in 1987, when the topic seemed quite esoteric. Recently,
though, it has attracted considerable interest, thanks to the
near-eradication of inflation. My main theme is
that deflation isn't always a bad thing, and that it can even contribute to
overall macroeconomic stability so long as the rate of deflation mirrors the
rate of productivity growth. (It is also desirable for prices to rise
when productivity suffers a setback, so my argument is for deflation in good
times only.) Many of today's monetary theorists and central bankers
reject this viewpoint, holding instead that monetary policy should aim at a
more-or-less constant price level. In my opinion, arguments for a
constant price level or "zero inflation" fail to come to grips with
the implications of productivity changes, which these arguments tend to
ignore. In an economy with
constant productivity, a stable price level contributes to macroeconomic
stability in a number of ways, e.g., by fulfilling the expectations of agents
who expect zero inflation (and thereby contributing to the efficacy of fixed
nominal wage and debt contracts), and by minimizing the burden of adjustment
borne by the price system. But a stable price
level is far from being ideal in an economy with changing productivity: it
does not minimize the burden borne by the price system, and it does not
contribute to the efficient working of fixed nominal contracts. The
reason, in a nutshell, is that it is the stability of nominal spending
(domestic final demand), and not that of the price level per se, that is
crucial to general macroeconomic stability. When productivity stays
constant, zero inflation is equivalent to constant final demand, but not
otherwise. Instead, stability of final demand requires that a rate of
deflation equal to minus the rate of productivity growth. I call a
monetary target based on this rule a "productivity norm." I offer other,
brief and incomplete arguments in favor of a productivity norm in short pieces
I have written for The Wall Street Journal Europe ("On Inflation,
Shoot for Less Than Zero," May 16, 1997) for National Review
magazine ("The Price
is Right"), and for The American Conservative ("Deflated
Expectations"). Anyone interested in a fuller treatment of the
subject is encouraged to read my 1997 Hobart paper, Less
Than Zero: The Case for a Falling Price Level in a Growing Economy.
When I first began
developing my thoughts favoring a productivity norm over zero inflation, I
thought I was being quite original. Alas, many came well before me: it
seems the idea was quite prominent in the years prior to the Keynesian
revolution. My 1995 History of Political Economy paper,
"The 'Productivity Norm' versus 'Zero Inflation' in the History of
Economic Thought," reviews earlier writings on the subject. I also
have a History of Political Economy article,
"Hayek versus Keynes on How the Price Level Ought to Behave,"
1999 . (Surprisingly, Keynes himself came very close to embracing a
version of the productivity norm with his suggestion that policy should
stabilize an index of money wages.) For
details concerning articles mentioned above, consult my C.V., where books and articles are listed
by publication dates. Other Research
In addition to my
writings on private coinage, free banking, and deflation, I have various
papers on other subjects including: the Great Depression ("The
Check Tax: Fiscal Policy and the Great Monetary Contraction,"with
Bill Lastrapes; and "By Our
Bootstraps"-- concerning the fallacious "high-wage"
doctrine-- with Jason Taylor); the liquidity effect (Journal of
Macroeconomics 1995), the requirements for a fiat-money equilibrium
("On
Ensuring the Acceptability of a New Fiat Money," Journal of
Money, Credit, and Banking 1994 - JSTOR link), buffer-stock money "Buffer
Stock Money: Interpreting Short-Run Dynamics Using Long-Run Restrictions"
(Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking 1994 - JSTOR link), the
National Banking System (Business History Review 1994), the German
monetary economist L. Albert Hahn (History of Political Economy 1990),
and the real-bills doctrine (JITE 1989). . Some of my more recent
papers apart from those mentioned earlier include an Economic Journal
paper on the origins of fiat money ("Adaptive
Learning and the Transition to Fiat Money"), a paper attacking
the conventional claim that a system of banks expanding in unison will not
face any reserve shortage ("In-Concert
Overexpansion and the Precautionary Demand for Bank Reserves" -
JSTOR link ), and one arguing that consumers were made worse-off by the
forced removal of state-licensed banks from the currency business during the
Civil War ("The
Suppression of State Banknotes: A Reconsideration" --
IngentaConnect link). Personal
Stuff Bike Riding
I got my first 10
speed in 1967--a Legnano brought back from Italy--and started racing back in
the 70s--before Lance, before Greg, even before "Breaking Away"!
The sport was really just getting going in the U.S. back then. I was
still just a mediocre Cat 3 rider when a knee injury forced me to quit racing
in 1981. Now I just stick to club rides. Despite all the
super-light aluminum, carbon, and titanium bikes out there I still love a
good lugged steel bike. Steel doesn't have to be heavy, by the
way: my Bob Brown weighs less than 19 pounds fully equipped, with a
steel fork and no carbon parts save the hub dust covers.
With my Cinelli
Super Coursa
My Bob Brown Custom (Click here
for more pics of Bob's handiwork) My Dogs
Scraggly ca.
1989-Nov. 28th, 2003
meet
PENELOPE!
adopted
July 30, 2005 age app. 6 months Peter Selgin (My embarrassingly
talented twin)
Artist,
writer, teacher, long-distance swimmer, Peter is just loaded with talent, as
you can tell by checking out his web site. I
hate him.
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