The Political Economy of Centralization and Secession
Sponsored by the Mises Institute and held at the College of Charleston in South Carolina; 7-9 April 1995. Includes an Introduction by Llewellyn H.
Sponsored by the Mises Institute and held at the College of Charleston in South Carolina; 7-9 April 1995. Includes an Introduction by Llewellyn H.
Why do the proponents of global warming try to stamp out dissent? As Horner makes clear, billions of dollars are at stake.
If it were possible to lift real economic growth by means of money pumping, world poverty would have been eradicated a long time ago.
"Fred Reed's Reprehensible Curmudgeonry" is a breath of fresh air.
Instead of permitting the necessary economic adjustments to be made in the wake of this unsustainable boom, the political classes — and their court economists — insist on even more government spending, more debt, and more destruction of the dollar.
The art of economics consists in looking not merely at the immediate but at the long effects of any act or policy; it consists in tracing the consequences of that policy not merely for one group but for all groups.
The Austrians (including me) who predicted these problems based on Greenspan's low-interest-rate policy know of course that the main cause was that low-interest-rate policy, with his numerous bailouts of failed financial institutions also creating a moral hazard that encouraged risky behavior.
As always, the little guys are told to give up their way of life to preserve the high-paying jobs of corporate and union executives — along with the jobs of people who make cars no one wants to buy.
Given the poor quality of the reasoning behind Samuelson's remarks we should doubt his advice, not F.A. Hayek and Milton Friedman's.