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Social Credit Economics

"Most comprehensive review of Douglas Social Credit perhaps ever authored!"

     The author has meticulously gathered the essential ideas of Social Credit as advanced originally by Clifford Hugh Douglas and put them between two covers where they can be readily accessed by students and interested parties. This book should readily qualify as an authoritative text for academics, students and public policy makers. It presents the most realistic analysis of modern financial civilization, its core inherent defect--a growing deficiency of effective consumer purchasing-power necessitating the exponential growth of financial debt--and offers the appropriate remedial measures, being primarily a progressive issue of consumer credits, originating without being accounted as debt and taking the form of universal consumer dividends and compensated retail prices to effect a falling general price-level. A brilliant compilation of essential information that should be read and studied by every responsible citizen.

                                                                                                                                                                    Wallace Klinck

 

     By presenting the key economic ideas of Major Clifford Hugh Douglas (1879-1952) in a clear, systematic, and comprehensive fashion, this work constitutes an academic standard of reference for those who wish to obtain a more advanced understanding of Social Credit economics. It is divided into three parts covering Douglas' diagnosis regarding the nature and cause of economic dysfunction in the modern, industrialized world, his prognosis, including an evaluation of the conventional methods of macroeconomic management, and, finally, his remedial principles and proposals. Just as Douglas' analysis goes to the very heart of what is structurally wrong with the financial and economic systems of contemporary civilization, Social Credit Economics effectively captures and distills the essence of his economic thought, rendering it more easily accessible to the broadly educated and reflective reader.

 

     The book is available on-line through the amazon network in the following countries:

     Canada

     France

     Germany

     India

     Italy

     Japan

     Spain

     The United Kingdom

     The United States

 

     It is also available in most other countries through Createspace's extended distribution network, for example, via Bookdepository.com: Book Depository.

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Latest Articles

  • The Accounting of Abundance: A Structural Critique of Inflationary Theory
    Mainstream economic thought treats inflation as a phenomenon of monetary volume—the "Too Much Money" paradigm. However, by applying the engineering logic of C.H. Douglas’s A+B Theorem, we can deduce that inflation is not primarily a result of consumer behaviour, but a mathematical consequence of debt-based cost accounting in an industrial society.
    Written on Saturday, 14 February 2026 12:56 Read more...
  • A Douglas Social Credit Critique of Gesell’s Monetary Analysis and Proposals
    Silvio Gesell believed that the two great economic evils were stagnation and inequality. He attributed stagnation to hoarding (the “retention” of money that slows circulation) and inequality to both hoarding and the payment of interest on money. His remedies were therefore twofold: demurrage (a carrying charge that makes money lose value if held, forcing it into rapid circulation) and interest-free credit. From a Douglas Social Credit standpoint, Gesell’s take on monetary reform rests on a fundamentally flawed diagnosis and thus the remedies he proscribes are inadequate, in addition to being coercive and counterproductive.
    Written on Tuesday, 10 February 2026 14:00 Read more...
  • THE THEOLOGY OF THE INHERITANCE: A Social Credit Synthesis of Patristic Thought and Economic Reality
    Social Credit stands alone in its pursuit of the Economics of Grace. It recognizes that the "price" of our life has been paid by the gifts of God and the genius of our ancestors. By replacing the bondage of the gold standard and the indignity of the Job Guarantee with the National Dividend and the Price Discount, we move from an "Economics of Toil" to an Economics of Leisure.
    Written on Tuesday, 10 February 2026 07:54 Read more...