The other side to this story is the ideological reason Brown 'hated' gold. He believed it sat there doing nothing, whereas he believed a better option would be to have the money tied up in gold 'working' by earning interest of some sort. To calculate the real effect of his blunder, one has to offset that against the potential loss of selling when he did.
The other side to this story is the ideological reason Brown 'hated' gold. He believed it sat there doing nothing, whereas he believed a better option would be to have the money tied up in gold 'working' by earning interest of some sort. To calculate the real effect of his blunder, one has to offset that against the potential loss of selling when he did.
The other side to this story is the ideological reason Brown 'hated' gold. He believed it sat there doing nothing, whereas he believed a better option would be to have the money tied up in gold 'working' by earning interest of some sort. To calculate the real effect of his blunder, one has to offset that against the potential loss of selling when he did.
Yes