Soak the Rich?
From the Buffett Rule to France's 75% tax on the wealthy, "soaking the rich" is all the rage once again.
From the Buffett Rule to France's 75% tax on the wealthy, "soaking the rich" is all the rage once again.
The average yearly rate of growth in Estonia stood at 8.4 percent in 2011 against overall eurozone performance of 1.5 percent.
"What should we do in case of war," it is said, "if we are placed at the mercy of England for iron and coal?"
Ralph Raico studied with Ludwig von Mises in the formative stages of his intellectual development. As his book <i>Classical Liberalism and the Austrian School</i> — a collection of nine essays — demonstrates, he has himself become one of the pillars of the modern Austrian School.
In Milton Friedman's view, if you are not tolerant, you cannot be a libertarian.
The Massachusetts Bay Colony's authorities, with their old self-governing charter, had good reason meanwhile to fear the onset of the Restoration.
Roger Bootle's advice for Greece stems from a misunderstanding of basic economics in which he views symptoms as causes.
Ignorance is incorrigible in those who venture to proclaim that there are no absolute principles.
The changes wrought in America during the First World War were so profound that one scholar has referred to "the Wilsonian Revolution in government."