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- Q4913892 subject Q6903226.
- Q4913892 subject Q7036098.
- Q4913892 subject Q8805607.
- Q4913892 abstract "Binary economics, also known as Two-factor Economics, is a theory of economics that endorses both private property and a free market but proposes significant reforms to the banking system.According to theories first proposed by Louis Kelso, widespread use of central bank-issued interest-free loans to fund employee-owned firms can finance economic growth whilst widening stock ownership in a way which binary economists believe will be non-inflationary.The term "binary" derived from its heterodox treatment of labor and capital (but not in the sense of binary opposition). Kelso claimed that in a truly free market wages would tend to fall over time, with all the benefits of technological progress accruing to capital owners.".
- Q4913892 wikiPageExternalLink www.binaryeconomics.net.
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- Q4913892 wikiPageWikiLink Q6903226.
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- Q4913892 wikiPageWikiLink Q7036098.
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- Q4913892 wikiPageWikiLink Q8805607.
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- Q4913892 comment "Binary economics, also known as Two-factor Economics, is a theory of economics that endorses both private property and a free market but proposes significant reforms to the banking system.According to theories first proposed by Louis Kelso, widespread use of central bank-issued interest-free loans to fund employee-owned firms can finance economic growth whilst widening stock ownership in a way which binary economists believe will be non-inflationary.The term "binary" derived from its heterodox treatment of labor and capital (but not in the sense of binary opposition). ".
- Q4913892 label "Binary economics".