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Credit And State Theories Of Money
The Contributions of A. Mitchell Innes

Edited by L. Randall Wray, Senior Scholar, The Levy Economics Institute, Bard College and Professor of Economics, University of Missouri, Kansas City, US
2004 288 pp Hardback 978 1 84376 513 4 £59.95 on-line discount £53.96
    This book is also available as an ebook 978 1 84376 984 2

‘Most monetary economists today have probably never heard of A. Mitchell Innes, but they should have done. Randall Wray and his colleagues have provided an invaluable service in mapping out the “road not taken” in monetary economics in such detail. Moreover, this is not just a matter of antiquarian interest. The consequences of the profession’s unquestioning acceptance of the more traditional, but arguably quite erroneous, conception of money have been profound, with directly negative consequences for the contemporary understanding of the functioning of capitalism and for policy advice.’
– John Smithin, York University, Canada

‘In Credit and State Theories of Money, Professor Randy Wray continues and extends the influential tradition established by his path-breaking contribution Money and Credit in Capitalist Economies (1990). The focus in the current book is on the work of A. Mitchell Innes and his contributions in the early 20th century which “had caught Keynes’s eye”. This focus enables this important contribution to push the frontiers of our knowledge on monetary and credit phenomena both in terms of analysis and of their historical development.’
– Philip Arestis, The Levy Economics Institute of Bard College, US

In 1913 and 1914, A. Mitchell Innes published a pair of articles that stand as two of the best pieces written in the twentieth century on the nature of money. Only recently rediscovered, these articles are reprinted and analyzed here for the first time. In addition, five new contributions analyze and extend the approach of Innes in a number of directions by including historical, anthropological, sociological, archeological, and economic analyses of the nature of money.

Contents: 1. Introduction 2. What is Money? 3. The Credit Theory of Money 4. The Social Origins of Money: The Case of Egypt 5. The Archaeology of Money: Debt versus Barter Theories of Money’s Origins 6. The Primacy of Trade Debts in the Development of Money 7. The Emergence of Capitalist Credit Money 8. Conclusion: The Credit Money and State Money Approaches Index Contributors: S. Bell, G.W. Gardiner, J.F. Henry, M. Hudson, G. Ingham, L.R. Wray



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