Hugh Rockoff on Optimal Currency Areas, Yellowbacks, and Free Banking

Published: Nov. 28, 2022, 5:30 a.m.

b'

Hugh Rockoff is a professor of economics at Rutgers University and has done extensive work in U.S. monetary history. He joins the show to discuss the criteria for an ideal monetary union and argues that the U.S. didn\\u2019t really become an optimal currency area until the 1930s. David and Hugh then discuss whether a present-day example, the Eurozone, fits these criteria. They also talk about interesting chapters in U.S. monetary history, including the Civil War, the Free Banking Era, and the bimetallism debate of the late 1800s.

\\xa0

Transcript for the episode can be found here.

\\xa0

Check out our new Macro Musings merch here, and use the promo code NGDP for 10% off!

\\xa0

Hugh\\u2019s Rutgers profile

\\xa0

David\\u2019s Twitter:\\xa0@DavidBeckworth

Follow us on Twitter:\\xa0@Macro_Musings

Click\\xa0here for the latest Macro Musings episodes sent straight to your inbox!

\\xa0

Related Links:\\xa0

\\xa0

*History of the American Economy* by Hugh Rockoff and Gary Walton

\\xa0

*How Long Did It Take the United States to Become an Optimal Currency Area?* by Hugh Rockoff

\\xa0

*"The Wizard of Oz" as a Monetary Allegory* by Hugh Rockoff

\\xa0

*The Free Banking Era: A Re-Examination* by Hugh Rockoff

'