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The new international money game / Robert Z. Aliber.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.Edition: 7th edDescription: xiv, 355 p. ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 0230018947 (hardback)
  • 0230018971 (pbk.)
  • 9780230018945 (hardback)
  • 9780230018976 (pbk.)
Subject(s):
Contents:
1. A system is how the pieces fit -- 2. The name of the game is money, but the disputes are about where the jobs are -- Part I. International monetary arrangements, money, and politics -- 3. Gold: how much is a "barbarous relic" worth? -- 4. The gnomes of Zurich play in the largest market in the world -- 5. The greatest monetary agreement in history -- 6. Radio Luxembourg and the Eurodollar market are both offshore stations -- 7. The dollar and Coca-Cola are both brand names -- 8. They invented money so they could have inflation -- 9. Global imbalances and the persistent US trade deficit -- 10. Five asset price bubbles in 30 years: a new world record -- 11. A new world record: four financial crises in 25 years -- 12. Central bankers read election returns, not balance sheets -- 13. Monetary reform: where do the problems go when assumed to have been solved? -- Part II. The cost of 100 national monies -- 14. Globalization 1.0: the Silk Road to Asia and the salt caravans across the Sahara -- 15. Taxation, regulation, and the level playing field -- 16. Banking on the wire -- 17. The Reverend Thomas Malthus, the OPEC cartel, and the price of energy from 1800 to 2100 -- 18. The world market for bonds and stocks -- 19. MBSs, ABSs, CMOs, CDOs, zeros, swaps, options, and credit default swaps: the revolution in finance -- 20. Why are multinational firms mostly American? -- 21. Japan: the first superstate -- 22. China: the 800-pound gorilla -- 23. From Marxist command economies to market capitalism -- 24. Fitting the pieces together once again.
Summary: "When Robert Z. Aliber's The International Money Game first appeared in 1973, it was widely acclaimed as the best - and most entertaining - introduction to the arcane mysteries of international finance on the market. The seventh edition of this classic work has again been fully rewritten to take account of the immense changes in the world economy since the previous edition, and includes a new chapter on asset pricing and bubbles"--Provided by publisher.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Adult Book Main Library NonFiction 332.042 A398 Available 33111006751701
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

The International Money Game has been fully rewritten to take account of changes in the world economy. It provides a comprehensive overview of international financial developments, including both the structure of payments arrangements and the series of credit and asset bubbles as well as financial crises.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

1. A system is how the pieces fit -- 2. The name of the game is money, but the disputes are about where the jobs are -- Part I. International monetary arrangements, money, and politics -- 3. Gold: how much is a "barbarous relic" worth? -- 4. The gnomes of Zurich play in the largest market in the world -- 5. The greatest monetary agreement in history -- 6. Radio Luxembourg and the Eurodollar market are both offshore stations -- 7. The dollar and Coca-Cola are both brand names -- 8. They invented money so they could have inflation -- 9. Global imbalances and the persistent US trade deficit -- 10. Five asset price bubbles in 30 years: a new world record -- 11. A new world record: four financial crises in 25 years -- 12. Central bankers read election returns, not balance sheets -- 13. Monetary reform: where do the problems go when assumed to have been solved? -- Part II. The cost of 100 national monies -- 14. Globalization 1.0: the Silk Road to Asia and the salt caravans across the Sahara -- 15. Taxation, regulation, and the level playing field -- 16. Banking on the wire -- 17. The Reverend Thomas Malthus, the OPEC cartel, and the price of energy from 1800 to 2100 -- 18. The world market for bonds and stocks -- 19. MBSs, ABSs, CMOs, CDOs, zeros, swaps, options, and credit default swaps: the revolution in finance -- 20. Why are multinational firms mostly American? -- 21. Japan: the first superstate -- 22. China: the 800-pound gorilla -- 23. From Marxist command economies to market capitalism -- 24. Fitting the pieces together once again.

"When Robert Z. Aliber's The International Money Game first appeared in 1973, it was widely acclaimed as the best - and most entertaining - introduction to the arcane mysteries of international finance on the market. The seventh edition of this classic work has again been fully rewritten to take account of the immense changes in the world economy since the previous edition, and includes a new chapter on asset pricing and bubbles"--Provided by publisher.

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