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Money Credit and Commerce.
312
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1923
Year
Monetary PolicyEconomicsMonetary TheoryMacroeconomicsPayment SystemBalance Of PaymentTrade FinanceAlfred MarshallBusinessCredit MarketMonetary AnalysisInternational Monetary SystemAlternative Monetary RegimeEconomic HistoryMonetary Policy MoneyFinanceMoney CreditFinancial Crisis
Alfred Marshall’s monetary analysis remained largely unpublished until his later years, culminating in his final major work, *Money, Credit, and Commerce*, which remains a valuable resource for economists and policymakers. The book explores Marshall’s view that business fluctuations and the credit market influence overall unemployment. Marshall advocated symmetalism—using both gold and silver as the monetary base—and identified reckless credit inflation as the primary cause of economic distress.
Among Alfred Marshall's areas of expertise was monetary analysis, but he did not have the opportunity to publish a systematic presentation of his views until his later years. Money, Credit, and Commerce, devoted to this subject, was his last major work. Among the proposals made in this work for which he is most remembered is the adoption of 'symmetalism', a plan for the combined use of gold and silver as the monetary base. Marshall also expressed his views on the relation of business fluctuations and the credit market to general unemployment. He saw reckless inflation of credit as the main cause of economic troubles. For students of economics and monetary policy Money, Credit, and Commerce remains a valuable book.