Ethics and Morals in Central Banking — Do They Exist, Do They Matter?

  • Otmar Issing
Part of the Studies in Banking and International Finance book series (SBIF)

Abstract

Money and interest rates have always been discussed in an ethical and moral context. For a long time charging interest was considered disreputable, and at times liable to hard secular and ecclesiastical punishment. The second Lateran Council, for example, decided in 1139:

Furthermore, we condemn that practice accounted despicable and blameworthy by divine and human laws, denounced by Scripture in the Old and New Testaments, namely, the ferocious greed of usurers; and we sever them from every comfort of the church, forbidding any archbishop or bishop, or an abbot of any order whatever or anyone in clerical orders, to dare to receive usurers, unless they do so with extreme caution; but let them be held infamous throughout their whole lives and, unless they repent, be deprived of a Christian burial.1

Keywords

Monetary Policy Central Bank Public Choice Monetary Economic Money Stock 
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

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Copyright information

© Forrest Capie and Geoffrey E. Wood 1996

Authors and Affiliations

  • Otmar Issing

There are no affiliations available

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