How the Money Supply is Expanded

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Sharpshooter
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The best resources you could find are wikipedia? Really?

Surprising perhaps, but Wikipedia does have some good articles on academic topics. Generally, the more obscure or complex the article, the better as people will stay away from it. If you would like to take a class on Money and Banking I would encourage it, but Wikipedia is within most people's budgets :D

Ok, I'll agree not to use this terminology any more if you'll agree to never call people who illegally break into computer and data systems "hackers".

Deal! I don't think I have used that term in that context myself before in the past, but I'll watch for it going forward :)
 

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Sharpshooter
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Because you should be citing primary sources in academic writing, and Wikipedia is a secondary source. I haven't done any "HERE IS MY HISTORY REPORT ON WWII" type writing since high school, so for all I know they've loosened up on Wikipedia recently.

Asking for peer-reviewed primary sources on an Internet forum is unreasonable. I'm used to slogging through academic papers, but I don't think many people are.

+1

Off-topic, but Wikipedia is a good avenue to find sources on a topic (i.e. to review any journal articles that may be cited as a sourse on the Wiki page. For example, the Money Creation page cites Mankiw's Macroeconomics, which is a standard text for most Intermediate Macroeconomics courses nowadays (it was the text I used).
 

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I believe "y u mad brah" would be the correct response these days. :blahblah:

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