The Week in Review: September 24, 2016
From near-zero interest rates to price controls to easy home loans, it is clear that government is now more in need of sound economics than ever.
From near-zero interest rates to price controls to easy home loans, it is clear that government is now more in need of sound economics than ever.
The cure for the curse of the Federal Reserve and its grand experiment is to install a sound monetary order. The next US president must clean house.
Real income and wealth growth in the United States peaked in the 1990s, and has been declining since.
There is an emerging literature on the subject of skyscrapers and business cycles. We present new empirical evidence supporting the skyscraper curse.
More than a decade ago, some South American countries were moving to the left in an effort to create a new paradigm. Things have not gone well for them.
Mainstream economics is fraying at both ends. It is vague, and lacks precision. Austrian economics, meanwhile, is rooted in concrete human action.
Delving further into the jobs report, we see that many of the jobs that were supposedly created were jobs in government.
The media is telling us how excellent the latest jobs numbers are. Unfortunately, it's more of the same for what is the weakest recovery in decades.
The major threat to any economy is not deflation, but the policies used to count it.