14 November 2014

Glossary of Economic Terms and Concepts

Glossary of Economic Terms and Concepts

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V WX Y Z    
   
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Absolute advantage - The ability to produce something with fewer resources than other producers would use to produce the same thing 
Alternatives - Options among which to make choices.  

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Balance of trade - The part of a nation's balance of payments that deals with merchandise (or visible) imports or exports. 
Bank, commercial - A financial institution accepts checking deposits, holds savings, sells traveler's checks and performs other financial services. 
Barter - The direct trading of goods and services without the use of money. 
Benefit - The gain received from voluntary exchange. 
Bond - A certificate reflecting a firm's promise to pay the holder a periodic interest payment until the date of maturity and a fixed sum of money on the designated maturity date. 
Business (firm) - Private profit-seeking organizations that use resources to produce goods and services. 
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Capital - All buildings, equipment and human skills used to produce goods and services. 
Capital resources - Goods made by people and used to produce other goods and services. Examples include buildings, equipment, and machinery. 
Change in demand - see Demand decrease and Demand increase.  
Change in supply - see Supply decrease and Supply increase.
Choice - What someone must make when faced with two or more alternative uses of a resource (also called economic choice). 
Circular flow of goods and services (or Circular flow of economic activity) - A model of an economy showing the interactions between households and business firms as they exchange goods and services and resources in markets. 
Collateral - Anything of value that is acceptable to a lender to guarantee repayment of a loan. 
Command economy - A mode of economic organization in which the key economic functions--what, how, and for whom--are principally determined by government directive.  Sometimes called a "centrally planned economy." 
Comparative advantage - The principle of comparative advantage states that a country will specialize in the production of goods in which it has a lower opportunity cost than other countries.
Competition - The effort of two or more parties acting independently to secure the business of a third party by offering the most favorable terms. 
Complements - Products that are used with one another such as hamburger and hamburger buns 
Consumers - People whose wants are satisfied by consuming a good or a service. 
Consumption - In macroeconomics, the total spending, by individuals or a nation, on consumer goods during a given period.  Strictly speaking, consumption should apply only to those goods totally used, enjoyed, or "eaten up" within that period.  In practice, consumption expenditures include all consumer goods bought, many of which last well beyond the period in question --e.g., furniture, clothing, and automobiles. 
Consumer spending - The purchase of consumer goods and services. 
Corporation - A legal entity owned by stockholders whose liability is limited to the value of their stock. 
Costs - See Opportunity Cost 
Costs of production - All resources used in producing goods and services, for which owners receive payments. 
Craftsperson - A worker who completes all steps in the production of a good or service. 
Credit - (1) In monetary theory, the use of someone else's funds in exchange for a promise to pay (usually with interest) at a later date.  The major examples are short-term loans from a bank, credit extended by suppliers, and commercial paper.  (2) In balance-of-payments accounting, an item such as exports that earns a country foreign currency. 
Criteria - Standards or measures of value that people use to evaluate what is most important. 

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Decision making - Choosing from alternatives the one with the greatest benefit net of costs. 
Deflation - A sustained and continuous decrease in the general price level. 
Demand - A schedule of how much consumers are willing and able to buy at all possible prices during some time period. 
Demand decrease - A decrease in the quantity demanded at every price; a shift to the left of the demand curve. 
Demand increase -  An increase in the quantity demanded at every price; a shift to the right of the demand curve. 
Determinants of demand - Factors that influence consumer purchases of goods, services, or resources. 
Determinants of supply - Factors that influence producer decisions about goods, services, or resources. 
Distribution - The manner in which total output and income is distributed among individuals or factors (e.g., the distribution of income between labor and capital). 
Division of labor -  The process whereby workers perform only a single or a very few steps of a major production task (as when working on an assembly line.) 
Durables - Consumer goods expected to last longer than three years. 

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Earn - Receive payment (income) for productive efforts. 
Economic growth - An increase in the total output of a nation over time.  Economic growth is usually measured as the annual rate of increase in a nation's real GDP
Economic system - The collection of institutions, laws, activities, controlling values, and human motivations that collectively provide a framework for economic decision making. 
Economic wants - Desires that can be satisfied by consuming a good or a service.  Some economic wants range from things needed for survival to things that are nice to have. 
Employment - See Full employment 
Entrepreneur - One who organizes, manages, and assumes the risks of a business or enterprise. 
Entrepreneurship - The human resource that assumes the risk of organizing other productive resources to produce goods and services. 
Equilibrium price - The market clearing price at which the quantity demanded by buyers equals the quantity supplied by sellers. 
Exchange - Trading goods and services with others  for other goods and services or for money (also called trade).  When people exchange voluntarily, they expect to be better off as a result. 
Exchange rates - The rate, or price, at which one country's currency is exchanged for the currency of another country. 
Excise Tax - Taxes imposed on specific goods and services, such as cigarettes and gasoline. 
Exports - Goods or services produced in one nation but sold to buyers in another nation. 

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Factors of production -  Resources used by businesses to produce goods and services. 
Federal Reserve System - The central bank and monetary authority of the United States. 
Final goods - Products that end up in the hands of consumers. 
Fiscal policy - A government's program with respect to (1) the purchase of goods and services and spending on transfer payments, and (2) the amount and type of taxes. 
Functions of money - The roles played by money in an economy.  These roles include medium of exchange, standard of value, and store of value. 
Full employment - A  term that is used in many senses.  Historically, it was taken to be that level of employment at which no (or minimal) involuntary unemployment exists.  Today economists rely upon the concept of the natural rate of unemployment to indicate the highest sustainable level of employment over the long run. 

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Goods - Objects that can satisfy people's wants. 
Government - National, state and local agencies that use tax revenues to provide goods and services for their citizens. 
Gross domestic product (GDP) - The value, expressed in dollars, of all final goods and services produced in a year. 
Gross domestic product (GDP), real - GDP corrected for inflation.

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Households - Individuals and family units which, as consumers, buy goods and services from firms and, as resource owners, sell or rent productive resources to business firms. 
Human capital - The health, strength, education, training, and skills which people bring to their jobs. 
Human resources - The quantity and quality of human effort directed toward producing goods and services (also called labor). 

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Incentives - Factors that motivate and influence the behavior of households and businesses.  Prices, profits, and losses act as incentives for participants to take action in a market economy. 
Imports - Goods or services bought from sellers in another nation. 
Income - The payments made for the use of borrowed or loaned money. 
Increase in productivity - When the same amount of an output can be produced with fewer inputs; more output can be produced with the same amount of inputs; or a combination of the two.
Inflation - A sustained and continuous increase in the general price level. 
Interdependence - Dependence on others for goods and services; occurs as a result of specialization. 
Interest rates - The price paid for borrowing money for a period of time, usually expressed as a percentage of the principal per year. 
Investment in capital goods - Occurs when savings are used to increase the economy's productive capacity by financing the construction of new factories, machines, means of communication, and the like. 
Investment - The purchase of a security, such as a stock or bond. 
Investment in capital resources - Business purchases of new plant and equipment. 
Investment in human capital - An action taken to increase the productivity of workers.  These actions can include improving skills and abilities, education, health, or mobility of workers. 

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Labor force - That group of people 16 years of age and older who are either employed or unemployed. 
Labor market - A setting in which workers sell their human resources and employers buy human resources. 
Labor union - A group of employees who join together to improve their terms of employment. 
Land - Natural resources or gifts of nature that are used to produce goods and services. 
Law of demand - The principle that price and quantity demanded are inversely related. 
Law of supply - The principle that price and quantity supplied are directly related. 
Loss - Business situation in which total cost of production exceeds total revenue; negative profit. 

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Market - A setting where buyers and sellers establish prices for identical or very similar products, and exchange goods and/or services. 
Market economy - An economic system where most goods and services are exchanged through transactions by private households and businesses.  Prices are determined by buyers and sellers making exchanges in private markets. 
Medium of exchange - One of the functions of money whereby people exchange goods and services for money and in turn use money to obtain other goods and services. 
Mixed economy - The dominant form of economic organization in noncommunist countries.  Mixed economies rely primarily on the price system for their economic organization but use a variety of government interventions (such as taxes, spending, and regulation) to handle macroeconomic instability and market failures. 
Monetary policy - The objectives of the central bank in exercising its control over money, interest rates, and credit conditions.  The instruments of monetary policy are primarily open-market operations, reserve requirements, and the discount rate. 
Money - Anything that is generally accepted as a medium of exchange with which to buy goods and services, a good that can be used to buy all other goods and services, that serves as a standard of value, and has a store of value. 
Money market - A term denoting the set of institutions that handle the purchase or sale of short-term credit instruments like Treasury bills and commercial paper. 

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National debt - The net accumulation of federal budget deficits. 
National income - The amount of aggregate income earned by suppliers of resources employed to produce GNP; net national product plus government subsidies minus indirect business taxes. 
Natural resources - "Gifts of nature" that are used to produce goods and services.  They include land, trees, fish, petroleum and mineral deposits, the fertility of soil, climatic conditions for growing crops, and so on. 
Non-durables - Consumer goods expected to last less than three years. 
Non-price determinants of supply - The factors that influence the amount a producer will supply of a product at each possible price.  The non-price determinants of supply are the factors that can change the entire supply schedule and curve. 
Normal profit - The minimum payment an entrepreneur expects to receive to induce the entrepreneur to perform entrepreneurial functions. 
Normative economics - Normative economics considers "what ought to be"--value judgments, or goals, of public policy.  Positive economics, by contrast, is the analysis of facts and behavior in an economy, or "the way things are." 

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Opportunity cost - The next best alternative that must be given up when a choice is made. 
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Physical capital - Manufactured items used to produce goods and services. 
Price - The money value of a unit of a good, service, or resource 
Prices - The amounts that people pay for units of particular goods or services. 
Private goods - A commodity that benefits the individual.  An example is bread, which, if consumed by one person, cannot be consumed by another person. (See public goods.) 
Producers - People who use resources to make goods and services (also called workers). 
Production - The making of goods available for use; total output especially of a commodity or industry. 
Productive resources - All natural resources (land), human resources (labor), and human-made resources (capital) used in the production of goods and services. 
Productivity - The ratio of output (goods and services) produced per unit of input (productive resources) over some period of time. 
Profit - The difference between total revenues and the full costs involved in producing or selling a good or service; it is a return for risk taking. 
Property tax - Taxes paid by households and businesses on land and buildings. 
Public goods - A commodity whose benefits are indivisibly spread among the entire community, whether or not particular individuals desire to consume the public good.  For example, a public-health measure that eradicates smallpox protects all, not just those paying for the vaccinations.  These goods are often provided by the government.  To be contrasted with private goods

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Quantity demanded - The amount of a product consumers will purchase at a specific price. 
Quota - A legal limit on the quantity of a particular product that can be imported or exported. 
Quantity supplied - The amount of a product producers will produce and sell at a specific price.

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Resources - All natural, human, and human-made aids to production of goods and services (also called productive resources). 
Revenue - Payments received by businesses from selling goods and services. 

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Sales tax - Taxes paid on the goods and services people buy. 
Save - Set aside earnings (income) for a future use. 
Saving - Occurs when individuals, businesses, and the economy as a whole do not consume all of current income (or output). 
Scarcity - The condition that results from the imbalance between relatively unlimited wants and the relatively limited resources available for satisfying those wants. 
Services - Activities that can satisfy people's wants. 
Shortage - The situation resulting when the quantity demanded exceeds the quantity supplied of a good or service, usually because the price is for some reason below the equilibrium price in the market. 
Specialists - People who produce a narrower range of goods and services than they consume (also called specialized workers). 
Specialization - The situation in which people produce a narrower range of goods and services than they consume. 
Spend - Use earnings (income) to buy goods and services. 
Standard of living - A minimum of necessities, comforts, or luxuries held essential to maintaining a person or group in customary or proper status or circumstances. 
Standard of value - One of the functions of money whereby the value of goods and services is expressed in money terms (prices). 
Stock - A certificate reflecting ownership of a corporation. 
Store of value - One of the functions of money allowing people to save current purchasing power to buy goods and services in a future time period. 
Substitutes - Products that can replace one another such as butter and margarine. 
Supply - A schedule of how much producers are willing and able to sell at all possible prices during some time period. 
Supply decrease - A decrease in the quantity supplied at every price; a shift to the left of the supply curve. 
Supply increase - An increase in the quantity supplied at every price; a shift to the right of the supply curve. 
Surplus - The situation resulting when the quantity supplied exceeds the quantity demanded of a good or service, usually because the price is for some reason below the equilibrium price in the market. 


Tariff - A tax on an imported good. 
Taxes - Required payments of money made to governments by households and business firms. 
Total cost - Cost of resources used in producing a product multiplied by the quantity produced. 
Total revenue - Selling price of a product multiplied by the quantity demanded. 
Trade - See Exchange.
Trade agreement - An international agreement on conditions of trade in goods and services. 
Trade-off - Giving up some of one thing to get some of another thing. 
Traditional economy - A mode of economic organization which borrows economic decisions made at an earlier time or by an earlier generation 

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Unemployment - The situation in which people are willing and able to work at current wage rates, but do not have jobs. 

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Wages - The payment resource earners receive for their labor. 
Work - Employment of people in jobs to make goods or services. 
Workers - See Producers.

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General Knowledge MCQs

General Knowledge MCQs


  • The United Nations was founded on _________.
    1. March 24, 1945
    2. October 24, 1945
    3. March 24, 1949
    4. October 24, 1950

  • Which country from the following is NOT the member of UNO?
    1. Vatican City
    2. Afghanistan
    3. North Korea
    4. Vaitnam

  • The International Court of Justice is located in _________.
    1. New York
    2. Washigton
    3. Geneva
    4. The Hague

  • There are __________ members of SAARC.
    1. 5
    2. 6
    3. 7
    4. 8

  • Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) has __________ official languages.
    1. 1
    2. 2
    3. 3
    4. 4

  • There are _________ non-permanent members of the security council.
    1. 5
    2. 7
    3. 10
    4. 15

  • The currency of Indonesia is _________.
    1. rupiah
    2. dinar
    3. rangit
    4. riyal

  • The D-8 is an organization of eight ________ countries.
    1. developed
    2. developing
    3. Asian
    4. African

  • The European Union's working capital is in _________.
    1. London
    2. Lisbon
    3. Austria
    4. Brussels

  • The headquarter of NATO is located in _________.
    1. New York
    2. Paris
    3. Geneva
    4. Brussels

    Answers


    1. B
    2. A
    3. D
    4. D
    5. C
    6. C
    7. A
    8. B
    9. D
    10. D

    13 November 2014

    Links For Economics Notes

    O-Levels/IGCSE

    1. Highly Condensed Economics Quick Revision Guide
    2. Economics Revision Notes
    3. Economics Revision Guide
    4. 100 Common O-Level Economic Questions With Answers

    A/AS-Levels

    1. Economics AS-Level Notes of ALL Core Topics orgainzed by Topic.
    2. AS and A2 Economics Revision Guide Organized By Chapter
    3. A-Level Economics Notes By Kevin Bucknall
    4. A-Level Notes By GW
    5. AS-Level Economics Notes By Karan Shah
    6. A-Level Economics Definitions By Wei Seng
    7. A-Level Economics (Macro) Notes By Calvin Wong
    8. A-Level Economics Notes by Zhuoyi At Fiveless
    9. A-Level Economics Money And Price Level Notes
    10. AS-Level Markets And Market Failure Notes
    11. A-Level Economics Labour Market Notes
    12. A-Level Economics Notes Using Fiscal Policy To Manage The Economy
    13. A-Level Economics Market Failure And Government Intervention Diagrams
    14. A-Level Economics – Macroeconomic Policies In And Open Economy
    15. AS-Level Economics Quick Revision Notes

    Adam Smith: The Father Of Economics

    Adam Smith: The Father Of Economics


    When asked “Who is the ‘father’ of modern economics?” most economists answer Adam Smith (A.D. 1723-1790)Smith was a Scottish “ moral philosopher,” pioneer of political economics, and author of The Theory of Moral Sentiments and An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (A.D. 1776)—the first modern work of economics.  (Note Smith’s fixation on “morality”.  He was a “moral philosopher” and his first book involved “Moral Sentiments”.)
    Smith was the quintessential “absent minded professor”.  He was fumbling, forgetful and inoffensive—but highly intellectual.  Alan Greenspan described The Wealth of Nations as “one of the great achievements in human intellectual history”.
    Although Smith is widely cited as the “father of modern economics,” I suspect that someone far less “moral” is the true “father” of modern economics.  Smith may be the “father of economics”.  He is certainly the “father ofclassical economics”.   But, as you’ll read,  the true “father of modern (monetary) economics” is someone far less moral than Smith.
    Smith’s Morality
    Smith entered the University of Glasgow at age fourteen to study “moral philosophy”.  At that University, Smith developed a passion for liberty, reason, and free speech.  In 1748, as an Edinburgh university professor, Smith first expounded his economic philosophy of “the obvious and simple system of natural liberty.”
    Smith was raised as a Christian, but reportedly became a deist (one who believes that a supreme being created the universe, and that this fact and other religious truths can be deduced by using reason and observation of the natural world alone, without need for faith or organized religion.)  Smith’s religious and moral inclinations are important in that they suggest that Smith’s economic theories were built on a “moral” rather than purely “monetary” foundation.
    In his first published his first work (The Theory of Moral Sentiments; A.D. 1759) Smith first referred to his famous “invisible hand” to describe the apparent benefits to society when people behaved in their own interests. In the book, Smith critically examined the moral thinking of his time, and suggested that conscience arises from social relationships.  Smith proposed a theory of sympathy, in which the act of observing others made people aware of themselves and the morality of their own behavior. Again, in Smith’s proposed “sympathy,” we see evidence of Smith’s focus on morality.
    I contend that Smith’s notions of morality colored the economic theories he advanced in his later work The Wealth of Nations.  In that second book, Smith claimed that the free market, while appearing chaotic and unrestrained, is actually “guided” to produce the right amount and variety of goods by a so-called “invisible hand”.  Smith opposed any form of economic concentration or regulation because he believed that it distorted the market’s natural ability to establish a price that provides a reasonable return on land, labor, and capital.  Smith advanced the idea that a true free market economy would produce a satisfactory outcome for both buyers and sellers, and would optimally allocate society’s resources.
    According to Smith, “It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own self-interest. We address ourselves, not to their humanity but to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own necessities but of their advantages.”
    Smith believed that when an individual pursued his own self-interest, he indirectly promoted the good ofsociety.   Smith argued that self-interested competition in the free market tended to benefit society as a whole by keeping prices low, while still building an incentive for a wide variety of goods and services. Nevertheless, Smith was wary of businessmen and argued against monopolies.
    Smith was an early proponent of free markets, limited government and he based his economic theories primarily on human morality.
    For all of that, Adam Smith is truly the “father of classical economics”.
    Classical (Moral) Economics Gives Way to Modern (Monetary/Immoral) Economics
    Smith may be the father of classical (moral) economics, but he is not the father of modern “monetary” (immoral) economics.  Modern economic theory has no “moral” foundation other than “greed is good”.  The classical notions of moral right and wrong that animated Smith and classical economics have been replaced by a “modern economic theory” wherein “right and wrong” have been supplanted by “profit and loss”.
    In modern economic theory, that which makes a profit is “good” and that which loses money is “bad”.  The subtleties and humanities of mankind’s morality have been abandoned for the stark simplicity of mathematical calculations.  Today, it’s simple.  It’s all about the money.  Mo’ money, mo’ money, “SHOW ME THE MONEY!” constitutes the essence of modern, monetary economics.  Is your business in the “red” (bad) or in the “black” (good)?  The mathematical “bottom line” of modern economics has replaced the “moral values” of classical economics.
    Our world is not improved by that change.
    Where Smith advocated a “free market” wherein each individual’s “self-interest” would result in “benefit” to all, our current markets are manipulated and their “benefits” are primarily reserved for a few “insiders” rather than the nation at large.  Smith advocated “natural liberty”; today’s economics push for debtor bondage.  Smith’s classical (moral) economics promoted The Wealth of Nations; today’s monetary economics promotes The Wealth of Special Interests (or perhaps, The Wealth of Bankers).
    The Father of Modern, Monetary Economics
    1st Timothy 6:10 declares “For the love of money is the root of all evil . . . .”  Note that the Bible never declares “money” to be evil.  It’s the love of money that we’re warned against.
    Money, itself, is not bad.   Money is necessary, common to virtually all cultures, and important to operating a complex nation.  Money is morally neutral.  It’s the love of money that tends to immorality.  It’s the love of money that gives rise to prostitution, hit men, and the insatiable greed of some corporate executives and politicians.
    If you want to find the “father” of today’s monetary economics, I suggest you look back in history for the man who most loved money.
    I suggest that man was Mayer Amschel Rothschild (A.D. 1743-1812), the founder of the Rothschild fortune and dynasty that controls much of the world’s economy to this day.  Mayer Rothschild is famous not only for his wealth, but for his primary ambition in A.D. 1790:
    “Give me control of a nation’s money and I care not who makes her laws.”
    I doubt that you can find a clearer expression of the love of money than Rothschild’s hope and dream that if he could control a nation’s money supply, then the lawmakers (both human and divine) would become irrelevant.  In Rothschild’s view, money is the real “god” of this world.
    Rothschild’s “give me control” statement laid the intellectual foundation for modern, monetary economics.
    The Apple Doesn’t Fall Far From the Tree
    In A.D. 1815, twenty-five years after Mayer Rothschild expressed his dream to control a nation’s money supply, his son Nathan reaffirmed his father’s (and family’s) love for money when he declared:
    “I care not what puppet is placed upon the throne of England to rule the Empire on which the sun never sets. The man who controls Britain’s money supply controls the British Empire, and I control the British money supply.”
    The patriarch’s dream of controlling England’s money supply had been achieved.  His son Nathan “cared not” who ruled England as sovereign because Nathan “controlled the British money supply.”  As a result, Nathan was now so rich that he believed himself to be “above the law” of man or God. And Nathan was certain that by controlling the money supply, he and the Rothschild family would accumulate even more wealth and power.
    The Rothschild’s claimed to control England.  But England was not the only nation that had a money supply to control. Each of the world’s nations had its own money supply, and the Rothschild family determined to one day control them all.
    For example, it’s alleged that in A.D. 1791, through Alexander Hamilton, the Rothschilds established a central bank in the USA called the First Bank of the United States.  When Congress voted in A.D. 1811 against renewing that bank’s 20-year charter, Nathan Rothschild warned, “Either the application for renewal of the charter is granted, or the United States will find itself involved in a most disastrous war.”
    The following year, England declared war against the USA in “The War of 1812.”  It’s alleged that the Rothschilds planned to cause the US to build up such an enormous debt in fighting this war that the US would have to surrender to the Rothschilds and allow a new US central bank to be chartered.  If so, we can see the beginnings of an economic and even global system dedicated to “endless war for endless debt.”  (Incidentally, before she died in A.D. 1849, Mayer Amschel Rothschild’s wife “Gutle” nonchalantly remarked, “If my sons did not want wars, there would be none.”)
    In A.D. 1815, as England’s Wellington faced Napoleon at Waterloo, the five Rothschild brothers reportedly supplied gold to both armies.  As condition for Rothschild loans, the warring armies had to agree to honor the debts of the vanquished.  I.e., if Napoleon won, he’d pay whatever England owed to the Rothschilds.  If Wellington won, England would pay whatever Napoleon owed to the Rothschilds.  This began the Rothschild policy of funding both sides in wars in order to generate massive, risk-free debt.  It didn’t matter which country lost the war because the Rothschild loans were given only on the guarantee that the victor would honor the Rothschild debts of the vanquished.
    Pretty slick, hmm?  Heads, Rothschild creditors win; tails, Rothschild debtors, lose.  With this formula, Rothschilds were sure to win every war.  You can see why Rothschilds would favor and even cause wars.
    By means of having great wealth, the Rothschilds were able to acquire even more wealth and power.  Some estimate that in the early 1800s, the Rothschild family controlled over half the wealth of the western world.
    In A.D. 1816, the US Congress rethought its position on having a central bank, and passed a bill permitting yet another Rothschild-dominated central bank, which again gave Rothschilds significant control of the American money supply.  But Andrew Jackson (running on the slogan “Jackson And No Bank!”) was elected 7th President in A.D. 1829.  Jackson planned to take the control of the American money system to benefit the American people rather than allow the Rothschilds’ profiteering.  Jackson succeeded in “killing” America’s 2nd Central Bank.
    Once removed by Jackson, the Rothschilds did not return in force to the US until A.D. 1913 when they established our 3rd central bank:  The Federal Reserve that we all so know and love today.
    In fact, this is the same Federal Reserve that is currently “saving” our country (or at least our country’s bankers) from an economic recession/depression.  And how is the Federal Reserve “saving” us?  Under the fearless leadership of “Helicopter” Ben Bernanke, the Fed has been flooding the country with paper, fiat dollars.
    In other words, by “controlling the supply of money” (exactly the formula advocated by Mayer Rothschild in A.D. 1790), our Federal Reserve proposes to solve our current economic crisis.  The Fed does not see our current economic crises as a result of a loss of national moral values (of the sort Adam Smith advocated).  Instead, operating under the Quantity Theory of Money, the Fed is attempting to prop up the economy with yet another monetary “fix” of the sort that held us together through a number of economic downturns in the 1980s and 1990s.
    As I explained in last week’s article (provocatively entitled, “Vt = nT/M”), the Quantity Theory of Money is the modern world’s predominant economic theory.  It’s based on the primary presumption that if you can control the money supply (“Quantity”), you can absolutely control the economy.   Thus, today’s predominant economic theory can be traced back to Mayer Amschel Rothschild’s 1790 declaration that “Give me control of a nation’s money and I care not who makes her laws.”
    Therefore, I contend that the true father of modern economic theory is not Adam Smith but Mayer Amschel Rothschild.
    It’s interesting that Smith and Rothschild were contemporaries.  Smith published The Wealth of Nations in A.D. 1776 (the same year as our “Declaration of Independence”).  Rothschild declared his love of money and intent to “control a nation’s money” just fourteen years later in A.D. 1790.  Smith advocated a theory of economics that was based on moral values and was intended benefit a “Nation”.  Rothschild advocated an immoral economic principle that was intended to benefit, enrich and empower only the “special interests” of the Rothschild family.  Initially, Smith’s theory seemed predominant, but eventually (and currently) the Rothschild theory of modern, monetary economics (control the money supply) rules.
    If we had adhered to morally-sound economic theories (like Smith’s), our nation would have continued to prosper with benefits and blessings for all.  But—because we’ve embraced the Rothschilds’ theory of economics, we have lost national prosperity, we are the biggest debtor nation the world, and we’re headed for economic and social catastrophe.
    If the Bible is true and the “love of money” is the root of all evil, then by embracing a purely monetary (but immoral) theory of economics (based on the Rothschilds’ “love of money”) we shouldn’t be surprised if the result is something very unpleasant.
    The true “father” of our modern, monetary-based economy theory is not the moral Adam Smith—it’s money-lover Mayer Amschel Rothschild.
    Punch line:  In A.D. 1790, virtually every nation had its own money supply.  Today, there are only five remaining nations without a Rothschild-controlled central bank: Iran; North Korea; Sudan; Cuba; and Libya.  There had been a sixth—Iraq—but their central bank’s independence ended with our A.D. 2003 invasion.
    At arm’s length and within my political choice of venue: The United States of America,
    Alfred Adask