Henry Hazlitt has a way of explaining things that is clear - crystal clear. In this book he explains what inflation is. It is nothing more than the expansion of the money supply. That definition, however, has undergone change. Now inflation is defined as an increase in prices. Shifting the definition, however, has not made things clearer. It has instead hidden the relationship between the quantity of money on the one hand, and the quantity of goods on the other. This ratio is expressed as a price, and when the quantity of money expands faster than the quantity of goods, prices rise.
That money supplies everywhere are manipulated by national banks such as the Fed in the USA, is evidence that governments everywhere have formed an alliance with their central bankers to expand the money supply whenever it suits them. This, in turn, is the cause of the boom-bust cycle which is now common place throughout the world. It is hidden by improvements in productivity, but as events in Europe have highlighted, that does not last forever.
Hazlitt thus gives a clear explanation of inflation - expansion of the money supply - and its disastrous effects on the economy. But there is only one way to resolve the economic crisis brought on by inflating the money supply. You just have to stop inflating. Period. That's the rather unique - but only - solution to what is increasingly an inflation crisis around the world.
But no one, it appears, is looking for the genuine solution to the one issue that has brought on the global financial crisis.