Schumpeter vs. Keynes
Schumpeter went on to remind the audience that the heart of the capitalist process was its endless dynamism, which was the opposite of Keynesian stagnationism.
Schumpeter went on to remind the audience that the heart of the capitalist process was its endless dynamism, which was the opposite of Keynesian stagnationism.
The Black Book of Communism is a standing rebuke to any living soul who claims that economic understanding doesn't matter.
Mises says that all expansion of bank credit must absolutely cease: "no more legal tender banknotes and no more credit expansion!"
No one wanted to hear the message that voting by itself produces nothing, and that force by itself wastes resources and "produces" less and less.
In the same way that we need some junior historian to devote his career to exposing every nefarious plot of the New Deal, so we need an economist to refute the General Theory.
"Egyptian workers during this period suffered badly from the abuses of the state intervention of the economy…"
"Public estimation of eminence runs in reverse ratio to its genuineness," writes Mencken, anticipating Obama, "the sort of eminence that the mob esteems most highly is precisely the sort that has least grounding in solid worth and honest accomplishment."
The government can prevent market forces from operating by channeling resources into artificial channels.
"We are seeing the disintegration of the fractional-reserve banking system all over the world. It is being held together by bailouts, which are the government equivalent of bailing wire and chewing gum."
My own preference is, first to allow market adjustments to take place.