Ownership Economics: On the Foundations of Interest, Money, Markets, Business Cycles and Economic Development

Ownership Economics: On the Foundations of Interest, Money, Markets, Business Cycles and Economic Development book cover

Ownership Economics: On the Foundations of Interest, Money, Markets, Business Cycles and Economic Development

Author(s): Gunnar Heinsohn (Author), Otto Steiger

  • Publisher: Routledge
  • Publication Date: 9 Dec. 2016
  • Edition: 1st
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 224 pages
  • ISBN-10: 1138241288
  • ISBN-13: 9781138241282

Book Description

This book presents the first full-length explanation in English of Heinsohn and Steiger’s groundbreaking theory of money and interest, which emphasizes the role played by private property rights.

Ownership economics gives an alternative explanation of money and interest, proposing that operations enabled by property lead to interest and money, rather than exchange of goods. Like any other approach, it has to answer economic theory’s core question: what is the loss that has to be compensated by interest?

Ownership economics accepts neither a temporary loss of goods, as in neoclassical economics, nor Keynes’s temporary loss of already existing, exogenous money as the cause of interest. Rather, money is created as a non-physical title to property in a credit contract secured by a debtor’s collateral and the creditor’s net worth.

This book is an edited English translation of a highly successful German text, and offers the first book-length treatment of a theory which has received much interest since its first appearance in articles in the late 1970s.

Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Gunnar Heinsohn is Professor Emeritus at the University of Bremen, Germany.

Otto Steiger, who passed away in 2008, was a Professor at the University of Bremen, Germany.

Frank Decker is an economist based in Sydney, Australia.

View on Amazon

未经允许不得转载:Wow! eBook » Ownership Economics: On the Foundations of Interest, Money, Markets, Business Cycles and Economic Development