Booms and Busts
Australia & The Inverted Yield Curve
One myth upheld even by many people who has a basically sound outlook on monetary issues is the view that an inverted yield curve (where short term
The Dark Side of the Credit Boom
Being fully aware of the dark side of the credit boom — that is its socially destructive ramifications — Mises argued for returning to free-market money, which he saw as the only monetary regime that would allow preserving the ideal of the free society.
14. Herbert Hoover and the Great Depression
Boom-busts were a feature of markets. Under consumption caused the depression. WWII ended the Great Depression. All three Keynesian beliefs were inaccurate. Only the Austrian Business Cycle Theory got it right.
An Update to Henry Hazlitt’s “Uruguay: Welfare State Gone Wild”
Back in 1969, Henry Hazlitt’s Man Versus the Welfare State appeared.
Recession 2007
Where is Bernanke going to create the next bubble, the one that will mask the hangover from the housing bubble in the same way that the housing bubble masked the hangover from the tech stock bubble?
Zimbabwe: Best Performing Stock Market in 2007?
Though western central banks have not been printing nearly as fast as their Zimbabwe counterpart, they do have a long history of increasing the money supply. It forces one to ask how much of the growth in Western stock markets over the preceding twenty-five years has been created by a vastly increasing money supply, and how much is due to actual wealth creation.
Bubblicious
If history is any judge, financial meltdowns like what's happening in the subprime arena prompt the Federal Reserve to act in the only way it knows how. The Fed's playbook was written with its inception in 1913 and anointed by easy money cranks like Alan Greenspan and his successor in crime Ben Bernanke along the way.