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| Management number | 220509129 | Release Date | 2026/05/03 | List Price | US$10.00 | Model Number | 220509129 | ||
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THE COURAGE TO LEADMonetary Policy, Democratic Accountability, and the Case for Reinventing the Federal Reserve For more than two centuries, the United States has conducted a consequential and largely unexamined experiment: delegating control over the nation's money to institutions whose formal mandate is public welfare but whose structural design has consistently delivered its greatest benefits to those already closest to financial power. The Courage to Lead is the first comprehensive account of that experiment and the first serious proposal for what must come next.Drawing on more than 230 primary and secondary sources, this meticulously researched work traces the full arc of American monetary history from Alexander Hamilton's Report on a National Bank in 1790 through the Federal Reserve's post-pandemic inflation crisis of 2021–2023. It is history told with prosecutorial precision and narrative force, asking a question that has been posed in every generation but never honestly answered: when the government creates a central financial institution and endows it with vast power over the nation's money, for whose benefit does it act?A History That Refuses to Flatter - The answer, documented across eight chapters and more than two centuries of evidence, is not flattering to the received narrative. The First Bank of the United States returned dividends averaging eight percent annually to its shareholders at a time when most Americans had no access to interest-bearing instruments of any kind. The Second Bank's credit contraction of 1819 drove tens of thousands of farmers across Kentucky, Ohio, and Tennessee into foreclosure — transferring land from households to creditors through the cold mechanism of institutional design. The Federal Reserve's failure to act during the Great Depression allowed the money supply to contract by a third while nearly ten thousand banks closed, devastating ordinary depositors who had no hedge against failure.The pattern holds across every era. The Greenspan-era "implicit put" sheltered financial markets from their own excess while laying the groundwork for the 2008 crisis. The Federal Reserve's post-crisis quantitative easing programs restored the S&P 500 to its pre-crisis peak by April 2013, three years before median household income recovered.The Structural Critique - The Courage to Lead situates this pattern within a broader argument about institutional architecture. The FOMC is not a rogue body. It is a committee-based, human-discretionary system placed at the execution layer of the world's most consequential monetary authority, where precision, consistency, and resistance to political pressure matter most, and where human judgment introduces precisely the delay, inconsistency, and personality dependence that the institution's own independence was designed to prevent.The book's analysis of the FOMC's communication failures is particularly sharp. From Paul Volcker's credibility-at-any-cost tightening to Jerome Powell's single press conference remark in December 2018 that sent the S&P 500 down nearly eleven percent in days, The Courage to Lead demonstrates that an institution governing money for three hundred and forty million Americans cannot responsibly depend on the temperament of a single individual however capable to maintain the stability of twenty-eight trillion dollars in economic output.For Readers Who Take Government Seriously - The Courage to Lead is not a polemic. It is a work of institutional history and constitutional argument, written for readers who understand that the design of governing structures is the most consequential political act a republic can undertake.History has kept the ledger. The balance is overdue. And the instruments to settle it, for the first time, are at hand.232 footnotes · Eight chapters · Illustration specifications for nine original figures Read more
| ISBN13 | 979-8251194906 |
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| Language | English |
| Publisher | Independently published |
| Dimensions | 6 x 0.8 x 9 inches |
| Item Weight | 1.34 pounds |
| Print length | 355 pages |
| Publication date | March 8, 2026 |
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