We are working to make available online our comprehensive archive of supporting literature. You can help us do this by obtaining copyright permission or donating: please contact us if you would like to contribute.
Displaying 21 to 30 of 38 files.
Cobden Centre
ICB-Interim-Report-110411.pdf
» 2.2 MiB - 2,519 hits - 12 April 11
The full 2011-04-11 Interim Report from the Independent Commission on Banking
ICB-Interim-Report-Executive-Summary.pdf
» 442.8 KiB - 870 hits - 12 April 11
Executive Summary of the Interim Report from the Independent Commission on Banking
ICB-Interim-Report-Opening-Remarks-JV.pdf
» 84.4 KiB - 876 hits - 12 April 11
Opening Remarks by Sir John Vickers on the 2011-04-11 Interim Report from the Independent Commission on Banking
ICB-Press-Release-13.pdf
» 73.6 KiB - 1,101 hits - 12 April 11
Press Release for the Interim report from the Independent Commission on Banking
Inflation Update
» 260.4 KiB - 2,630 hits - 27 February 11
Morgan Stanley's Inflation Uncertainty and Corporate Finance report
Mechanistic vs Institutional Government: Britain's 3 pin energy policy
» 854.4 KiB - 1,951 hits - 11 May 11
Renewing the incentives to invest in renewables Bruno Prior, Director, Summerleaze Ltd AEP Seminar, Britain's 3 pin energy policy (5 Apr 2011)
Planning for Freedom
» 10.1 MiB - 2,039 hits - 7 February 12
Planning for Freedom
Ludwig von Mises
Prices & Production and Other Works
» 2.1 MiB - 4,050 hits - 20 February 12
Prices & Production and Other Works
F.A. Hayek on Money, the Business Cycle, and the Gold Standard
Edited by Joseph T. Salerno, with a Foreword by Toby Baxendale.
PUBLIC ATTITUDES TO BANKING
» 374.3 KiB - 7,768 hits - 14 June 10
PUBLIC ATTITUDES TO BANKING
A student consultancy project by ESCP Europe for The Cobden Centre June 2010
Tutor: Anthony J. Evans, Assistant Professor of Economics, ESCP Europe
Structural Economic Issues and Your 5-Year Plan
» 805.9 KiB - 1,651 hits - 18 June 10
Structural Economic Issues and Your 5-Year Plan
Caitlin Long of Morgan Stanley shows how the major nations' inter-indebtedness, and their particular reliance on the US dollar to finance sovereign debt, will more than likely lead to only one policy conclusion: monetise the debt.