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Opposite Monetarists, Neo-Austrians and Keynesians, Wealth Isn’t Money

“One of the poorest pockets of Asia supplies a primary ingredient for the economy in one of the richest.” Those are the words of New York Times NYT +1.3% reporters Bhadra Sharma and Alex Travelli in an article they filed from Puwamajhuwa, a sadly impoverished locale in eastern Nepal.

It turns out the Japanese love the look and feel of their yen notes, and the bark from the argeli shrub in Puwamajhuwa 2,860 miles away is what makes the notes possible. Sharma and Travelli’s story made the front page of the Times, but it has economic meaning well beyond A1.

First is that everything produced is a consequence of production and materials from all over. Even the paper that the Japanese circulate as money is a consequence of global production, which is a reminder that as opposed to us being taken advantage of, imports give essential life to all that we enjoy and produce.

With imports well in mind, consider the popular notion old as money that devaluation of the monetary note confers low prices on the devaluing country’s goods outside the devaluing country. No, it doesn’t.

Read the full article at Forbes

Author

  • John Tamny

    John Tamny is Founder and President of the Parkview Institute, editor of RealClearMarkets, senior fellow at the Market Institute, and Senior Economic Adviser to mutual fund firm Applied Finance Group. Tamny is the author of eight books. His latest is The Deficit Delusion: Why Everything Left, Right and Supply-Side Tell You About the National Debt Is Wrong. His others are Bringing Adam Smith Into the American Home: A Case Against Home Ownership, The Money Confusion, When Politicians Panicked: The New Coronavirus, Expert Opinion, and a Tragic Lapse of Reason, Popular Economics, Who Needs the Fed?, The End of Work, and They're Both Wrong: A Policy Guide for America's Frustrated Independent Thinkers.

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