Harry C. Veryser is director of the graduate program in economics at the University of Detroit Mercy and the former chairman of Walsh College's Department of Economics and Finance. He is also a businessman who owned an automotive supply company for many years. Veryser lives near Detroit.
\u201cHarry Veryser has written an excellent book not only on
Austrian economics but also on a century and a half of economic
history. His is a penetrating analysis of the most recent economic
crisis. Professor Veryser's careful analysis of the case for the
gold standard is, in itself, outstanding scholarship.\u201d--LEWIS
E. LEHRMAN, cofounder of the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American
History, author of The True Gold Standard
\u201cHarry Veryser provides an excellent introduction to the
Austrian School of economics and an excellent account of the
economic history of the twentieth century, chronicling the rise,
fall, and (hopefully) rebirth of classical liberalism or
libertarianism. I highly recommend this book to the growing number
of Americans interested in learning more about sound
economics.\u201d--RON PAUL, bestselling author of End the Fed and
Liberty Defined
\u201cI am blown away by how much ground Harry Veryser covers in
this important book, and how skillfully he covers it. This book
will give you a quick yet solid grounding in the recent financial
crisis, U.S. and world economic history, the history of economic
thought, and more. I strongly recommend it.\u201d--THOMAS E. WOODS
JR., bestselling author of Meltdown, senior fellow of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute
\u201cProfessor Harry Veryser is in the forefront of teaching sound
economics in the tradition of the Austrian School. In this
much-anticipated book, he powerfully demonstrates how much further
advanced the United States and the world would be if our leaders
had followed the grand principles of sound money and free markets.
I love every page of this book.\u201d--MARK SKOUSEN, editor of
Forecasts & Strategies, author of Investing in One Lesson
\u201cToo much of mainstream economics is rooted in dubious
presumptions and outright error; at the same time it's adorned with
equations that provide a thin veneer of mathematical precision. If
the insights of the Austrian School had come to dominate the
profession in the past century as I expect they will in the future,
many calamities could have been avoided. Harry Veryser has given us
a book that not only tells all of us what we need to learn but also
provides economists with truths they should never have
forgotten.\u201d--LAWRENCE W. REED, president of the Foundation for
Economic Education
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