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The New Gold Standard

Rediscovering the Power of Gold to Protect and Grow Wealth

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The New Gold Standard

By: Paul Nathan, Donald Luskin
Narrated by: Alan Robertson
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About this listen

The guide to returning to a gold standard.

All that glitters is gold and gold has never glittered so much as it has in the last decade, reaching staggering new prices in recent years. The definitive modern argument to returning to a gold standard, The New Gold Standard succinctly and clearly explains the nature of sound money, the causes and cures of inflation and deflation, the importance of fiscal responsibility within a sound monetary system, and the reasons for recessions and depressions.

  • Little has been written beyond academic histories of the gold standard, but gold standard expert Paul Nathan fills that void for the first time.
  • Written for beginning and professional investors, the book provides guidance on how a gold standard will strengthen the dollar, reduce debt, and help stabilize the economy, offering easily applied strategies for investing in gold now and in the future.
  • The degree of depressions and recessions and the boom bust cycle can be avoided with a sustainable, stable monetary policy.
  • The international return to gold is not a fad, but a sign of a world in monetary transition.

As long as governments continue to print money and deficits continue to rise, gold will be a hot commodity. As inflation creeps up, more and more talk will turn to returning to some version of the gold standard. The New Gold Standard is the first major work to explicitly address the challenges and benefits of such a move.

©2011 Paul Nathan (P)2012 Gildan Media
Deficit Economics Great Recession Deflation Economic policy Economic disparity US Economy
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Persuasive but possibly biased

Good book for people just getting into this field(like me). Narration is good, writing is good. This book really sells its argument. However, while it does have a counter argument I am left thinking that either his argument is undeniable or that he left info that might cause problems for his argument out. I think you'll come to find you disagree with some things and other things he says while change your perspective or line of thought. Overall great book but I would take it with a grain of salt.

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