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Banking Secrets: Historical Money Control
Kitap hakkında
Control over money has always been control over society. From the establishment of the Bank of England in 1694 through the Federal Reserve Act of 1913, the Bretton Woods conference, and the era of fiat currency dominance after 1971, private-public banking institutions have shaped national economies, international trade, and war finance through mechanisms that remain deliberately opaque to public scrutiny. Banking Secrets examines this hidden architecture—not through speculation, but through the documented history of how central banks create credit, manipulate interest rates, and coordinate across borders to maintain monetary supremacy.
Drawing on central bank charters, congressional hearings, BIS meeting records, and the scholarship of monetary historians, each chapter reconstructs a pivotal moment in banking power: the goldsmiths who invented fractional reserve lending, the nineteenth-century banking panics that justified centralization, the interwar coordination failures that amplified the Great Depression, and the post-1945 dollar hegemony that weaponized reserve currency status. The book traces how these institutions evolved from emergency lenders to architects of economic policy, with authority that often exceeds that of elected governments.
The final section examines the contemporary system: quantitative easing programs, negative interest rate experiments, and the shift toward digital currencies that promise—or threaten—to centralize monetary control further. Banking Secrets is a rigorous historical accounting of money's true masters, written for readers who understand that financial literacy begins with knowing who controls the ledger.
