The Japanese Love of Keynesian Economics Might Finally Be Coming to an End
Decades of Keynesian policy have crippled the Japanese economy. Only a turn toward free markets offer a real way out.
Decades of Keynesian policy have crippled the Japanese economy. Only a turn toward free markets offer a real way out.
The ECB can disguise the risk for a while, but the reality of the mounting debt and tax burden ahead is probably going to end in a debt crisis.
The eurozone needs to understand that if it decides to increase taxes to address the rising debt due to the COVID-19 response, its ability to recover will be irreparably damaged.
Governments can increase GDP numbers simply by spending more, and this can reduce debt as a percentage of GDP. But what if we calculate GDP using only private spending?
Join the Mises Institute and economist Daniel Lacalle for a special live seminar on the COVID-19 crisis and what it means for your economic future.
As the federal government embarks on racking up an estimated $3.7 trillion in extra debt this fiscal year alone, it’s critical for the public to understand just how destructive such action will be.
The new Fed policy proposals being floated carry significant political risk, because they enjoy support not just from the redistributionist left, but also “business conservatives” happy to raid our future to make their pain stop.
Central banks are at the heart of government mega–bailout packages. Their ongoing expansion of the money supply won't end well.
Central banks are at the heart of government mega–bailout packages. Their ongoing expansion of the money supply won't end well.
As states in various areas of the Continent embarked on centralization and territorialization in the fourteenth century, communities very often took up arms against forms of taxation. The Cornish Rebellion of 1497 against national taxation is an example of this trend.