Richard Salsman
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Richard M. Salsman is an American economist and lecturer. His work incorporates Objectivist philosophy and Austrian economics. He is most well known for his support of the gold standard and his opposition to central banking. He taught courses on economics at Duke University [1].
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[edit] Work
- 2000–present: InterMarket Forecasting, Inc. (Chapel Hill, NC): founder, president, chief market strategist.
- 1993–2000: H.C. Wainwright Economics, Inc. (Boston, MA): senior vice president and senior economist.
- 1989–1992: Citibank (New York, NY): corporate finance and capital-markets analyst.
- 1984–1989: The Bank of New York (New York, NY): corporate lending officer.
[edit] Publications (books and chapters)
- 2005. “The False Profits of Antitrust”, chapter in The Abolition of Antitrust, edited by Dr. Gary Hull (New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers).
- 1996. “Using Market Prices to Guide Sector Rotation”, chapter in Economic Analysis for Investment Professionals (Charlottesville, VA: Association for Investment Management and Research).
- 1995. Gold and Liberty (Great Barrington, MA: American Institute for Economic Research).
- 1993. “Bankers as Scapegoats for Government-Created Banking Crises in U.S. History”, chapter in The Crisis in America Banking, edited by Dr. Lawrence H. White (New York, NY: New York University Press, 1993).
- 1993. “‘Corporate Environmentalism’ and Other Suicidal Tendencies”, chapter in Environmentalism: What Does It Mean for Business?, edited by Jaana Woiceshyn (Faculty of Management Lecture Series, The University of Calgary).
- 1993. “Banking without the ‘Too-Big-to-Fail’ Doctrine”, chapter in Bankers and Regulators, edited by Hans Sennholz (Irvington-on Hudson, NY: Foundation for Economic Education).
- 1993. The Collapse of Deposit Insurance—and the Case for Abolition (Great Barrington, MA: American Institute for Economic Research).
- 1990. Breaking the Banks: Central Banking Problems and Free Banking Solutions (Great Barrington, MA: American Institute for Economic Research).
[edit] Education
- Duke University — Ph.D. (political economy)
- 1988. Stern School of Business, New York University (NYU), MBA (economics)
- 1981. Bowdoin College, BA (law and economics)
[edit] Related People
- Ayn Rand
- Jean-Baptiste Say
- Carl Menger
- Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk
- Friedrich Weiser
- Frederic Bastiat
- Henry Hazlitt
- Ludwig von Mises
- George Reisman
- Alan Greenspan
[edit] Related Concepts
- Objectivism (the philosophy of Ayn Rand)
- the Austrian School of economics
- Free banking
- the Gold standard