Kenneth Rogoff: Por qué necesitamos una 'sociedad con menos efectivo'
Kenneth Rogoff sostiene que debemos reducir la cantidad de dinero en efectivo en la sociedad, en particular billetes en denominaciones más altas.
1975, BA (Hons), Yale University; 1980, PhD in Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Former: Economist, Board of Governors, Federal Reserve System; Charles and Marie Robertson Professor of International Affairs, Princeton University; Counsellor and Director, Research Department, International Monetary Fund; Director, Center for International Development, Harvard University. Member: National Academy of Sciences, American Academy of Arts and Science; Council on Foreign Relations; Group of Thirty. Former Guggenheim Fellow. Author on policy issues in international finance, including exchange rates, international debt issues and international monetary policy. Co-Author, This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly (2009), Author, The Curse of Cash (2016). Monthly columnist on global economic issues for Project Syndicate.
Kenneth Rogoff sostiene que debemos reducir la cantidad de dinero en efectivo en la sociedad, en particular billetes en denominaciones más altas.
Kenneth Rogoff argues that we should reduce the amount of cash in society, particularly higher denomination notes.
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