This blog gives an update to the e-gold saga.
I have been a member of e-gold for a long time, but I haven't used it for anything serious, mainly because of a lack of counterparties. I was reminded of it when I listened to Russ Roberts latest podcast. It seems very odd to me that national central banks remain a nationalised monopoly provider of money. It seems obvious that there are plenty of candidates for money, and that the 'modern' reserve banking, with arcane rules for money creation all centrally controlled by a central banker, or cartel of them, can't be the right way to ensure good banking. The latest crisis certainly strengthens this conviction.
Anyway, I would recommend listening to Russell interviewing George Selgin about free banking (i.e. unregulated banking, not the absence of explicit charges for running current accounts). It's fairly clear that Russ doesn't 100% understand what George is talking about, which is what I think makes the Econtalk podcast so good. I should probably listen a second time, because I certainly got lost at various points. My previous experience of doing this, with other podcasts, though is that I am bored for most of the time and fail to understand exactly those points I mis-understood the first time through. Maybe I should get the book.
Traditional banking is occupying my hours a lot a the moment, certainly too many for me to spend long writing this. So I'll have to stop.
