The Article:<\/strong> The Bankers Who Broke the World<\/a> by Matthew Yglesias in Slate.<\/p>\n
The Text:<\/strong> I’ve come to believe that the best book about the global recession of 2008-present is Liaqart Ahamed’s Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World<\/a><\/em>, a history of central banking in the interwar period. The mistakes being made today are not “the same” as the mistakes of the central bankers of the 1930s but the basic plot is the same. This morning the Bank of England team up with the European Central Bank to issue a steady-as-she-goes policy statement, just as the Federal Reserve did yesterday.<\/p>\n
What do monetary policy statements look like in that world?<\/p>\n