THIS IS THE DEV/TESTING WEBSITE IPv4: 3.143.169.173 IPv6: || Country by IP: GB
Journals
Resources
About Us
Open Access

Mephistopheles and Inflation

Year:    1990

Author:    Brunner, Karl

Credit and Capital Markets – Kredit und Kapital, Vol. 23 (1990), Iss. 4 : pp. 425–436

Abstract

Mephistopheles and Inflation

Karl Brunner died on May 9, 1989 in Rochester, New York. Prof. Michele Fratianni of Indiana University, while researching Brunner's academic life, found the unpublished paper "Mephistopheles and Inflation" which he submitted to Kredit und Kapital. The paper deals with one of Brunner's favorite research themes: money, inflation, and public choice. The structure of the paper goes as follows. Inflation is mostly a monetary phenomenon. Money is power. The Faustian Mephisto all too well understood this power when he proposed that the Emporer back his paper money by the unknown and buried treasures of the empire. Modern democracies have improved on the Mephisto's scheme only technologically. Politicians resort to inflation because it embeds a lower cost than either cutting expenditures or raising tax rates. Permanent inflation reflects a pervasive political crisis of modern societies and pushes us closer to Leviathan.

Journal Article Details

Publisher Name:    Global Science Press

Language:    Multiple languages

DOI:    https://doi.org/10.3790/ccm.23.4.425

Credit and Capital Markets – Kredit und Kapital, Vol. 23 (1990), Iss. 4 : pp. 425–436

Published online:    1990-04

AMS Subject Headings:    Duncker & Humblot

Copyright:    COPYRIGHT: © Global Science Press

Pages:    12

Author Details

Brunner, Karl