03-21-2023, 05:42 AM
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?
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John Law was an interesting figure with a colorful past. He was convicted of murder in London but, with the help of friends, escaped to the continent, where he became a millionaire through his skill at gambling. Like South Sea Company Director John Blunt in England, Law believed that a trading company could be leveraged to exchange the monopoly rights of trade for the ability to make low-interest-rate loans to the government. And like Blunt, in 1719 Law formed a trading companyââ¬âthe Mississippi Companyââ¬âto exploit trade in the Louisiana territory. But unlike Blunt or the South Sea Company, the Mississippi Company made an earnest effort to grow trade with the Louisiana territory.
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http://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed...risis.html
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When paper money was better than metal money
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In 1715, Louis XIV died. Known as the ââ¬ËSun Kingââ¬â¢, he built the lavish palace at Versailles, he believed his reign was ordained by God ââ¬â and he left France on the verge of bankruptcy. His government owed three billion livres, but only took in 142 million in taxes.
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The Duke of Orleans assumed the reins of government after Louis died. Remembering his old friend Lawââ¬â¢s ambitious ideas for transforming the monetary system, he summoned him to Paris.
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First in Scotland, then in Saxony, Law had tried to convince the government to issue new paper money backed by the nationââ¬â¢s land, with no success. But Franceââ¬â¢s new ruler was desperate, and so more receptive.
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Law convinced him that Franceââ¬â¢s metallic money supply was restrictive, and that expanding the money supply with new paper currency would stimulate trade and employment. The regent allowed Law to try his scheme on a small scale.
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Flush with success, Law proposed a more ambitious scheme. At the time, France controlled the Mississippi river territories ââ¬â which included the present states of Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota. The area was sparsely populated.
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By 1720, he had assembled and fused together all of the French trading companies, the tobacco farm, the mint, the tax firms, the French national debt and a quasi-central bank under a giant conglomerate known as the Mississippi Company.
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http://moneyweek.com/john-law-the-gamble...nce-58412/
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It was one of the most sensational get-rich-quick schemes heard of in a long time, but it eventually burst over the head of its originator, John Law. This "rags to riches to rags" story, in which the plan was to open a bank and exchange banknotes (paper!) for gold at wildly inflated share prices, ends when John Law, having been cleaned out as a result of a rush to cash in the notes, is left broke and broken-hearted.
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https://www.nfb.ca/film/john_law_and_the...pi_bubble/
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https://youtu.be/4KNW9o7wG3g
Â
https://youtu.be/4KNW9o7wG3g
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John Law was an interesting figure with a colorful past. He was convicted of murder in London but, with the help of friends, escaped to the continent, where he became a millionaire through his skill at gambling. Like South Sea Company Director John Blunt in England, Law believed that a trading company could be leveraged to exchange the monopoly rights of trade for the ability to make low-interest-rate loans to the government. And like Blunt, in 1719 Law formed a trading companyââ¬âthe Mississippi Companyââ¬âto exploit trade in the Louisiana territory. But unlike Blunt or the South Sea Company, the Mississippi Company made an earnest effort to grow trade with the Louisiana territory.
Â
http://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed...risis.html
Â
When paper money was better than metal money
Â
In 1715, Louis XIV died. Known as the ââ¬ËSun Kingââ¬â¢, he built the lavish palace at Versailles, he believed his reign was ordained by God ââ¬â and he left France on the verge of bankruptcy. His government owed three billion livres, but only took in 142 million in taxes.
Â
The Duke of Orleans assumed the reins of government after Louis died. Remembering his old friend Lawââ¬â¢s ambitious ideas for transforming the monetary system, he summoned him to Paris.
Â
First in Scotland, then in Saxony, Law had tried to convince the government to issue new paper money backed by the nationââ¬â¢s land, with no success. But Franceââ¬â¢s new ruler was desperate, and so more receptive.
Â
Law convinced him that Franceââ¬â¢s metallic money supply was restrictive, and that expanding the money supply with new paper currency would stimulate trade and employment. The regent allowed Law to try his scheme on a small scale.
Â
Flush with success, Law proposed a more ambitious scheme. At the time, France controlled the Mississippi river territories ââ¬â which included the present states of Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota. The area was sparsely populated.
Â
By 1720, he had assembled and fused together all of the French trading companies, the tobacco farm, the mint, the tax firms, the French national debt and a quasi-central bank under a giant conglomerate known as the Mississippi Company.
Â
http://moneyweek.com/john-law-the-gamble...nce-58412/
Â
Â
It was one of the most sensational get-rich-quick schemes heard of in a long time, but it eventually burst over the head of its originator, John Law. This "rags to riches to rags" story, in which the plan was to open a bank and exchange banknotes (paper!) for gold at wildly inflated share prices, ends when John Law, having been cleaned out as a result of a rush to cash in the notes, is left broke and broken-hearted.
Â
https://www.nfb.ca/film/john_law_and_the...pi_bubble/
Â
https://youtu.be/4KNW9o7wG3g
Â
https://youtu.be/4KNW9o7wG3g
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