Switching to Sound Money Before it’s too Late
Patrick Barron discusses how switching to sound money could change the global economy for the better.
Patrick Barron discusses how switching to sound money could change the global economy for the better.
Interviewed by host Albert Lu, Mark Thornton talks about the collapse in oil prices.
Our #1 show of the year is Patrick Barron in a two-part interview on the end of US dollar supremacy.
Interviewed by host Scott Horton, Mark Thornton discusses the relation between oil prices and the world economy, and how Colorado’s first year of m
One thing the Chinese regime has not managed to do is erase the Chinese fondness for saving money. But in America, where over one-third of the population is on public assistance, it spends as much as possible.
The supply side matters. Fernández-Villaverde and Ohanian point out, “In short, incentives to hire, invest and start new businesses need to be a priority, lest the sclerotic U.S. economic growth of the past six years returns and, as in Europe, becomes a permanent condition.”
In January 2014, 33 Russian rubles exchanged for 1 dollar. In December 2014, the amount has more than doubled, reaching 77.2 rubles per dollar. At the bottom of it lie the actions of the Bank of Russia.
Despite little liberalization, global trade grew rapidly over the last decades only to collapse in 2009. Was this growth healthy, though?
Interviewed by Marina Dzhashi on the Agree or Disagree radio program, Mark Thornton of the Mises Institute and Vladimir Rojankovsky, head of resear