Keynesian Policies Gave Us High Debt, Inflation, and Weak Growth
The global economy is entering a recession because recent unprecedented government spending has zombified hugely indebted economies and has crowded out the private sector.
The global economy is entering a recession because recent unprecedented government spending has zombified hugely indebted economies and has crowded out the private sector.
As the history of large states shows very well, choosing security without freedom leads to losing both rights and peace.
Economists like Paul Krugman have claimed that practice of austerity in government would damage the US economy. As Mark Thornton points out, the opposite is true: austerity works.
The Fed is winging it, but most on the FOMC believe only two more rate hikes are in the works, and then it's back to flooding the market with easy money.
In the name of "protecting workers," progressive legislators put people out of work. For their own good, of course.
Only Father Time helps us cut through the policy nonsense and understand interest rates conceptually.
Critics of capitalism claim that it is responsible for creating inequality in society. Yet the precapitalist societies enforced inequality in a rigid social structure.
Keynesians believe that economic growth can occur only with an expanding supply of money. Growth doesn't need more money; it needs more savings.
Cutting taxes does not add units of currency to the economy. It is the same quantity of currency only a bit more in the pocket of those who earned it.
It's odd for Joe Biden to celebrate an inflation report that still has price inflation growth over 7 percent, especially when real wages are falling and a recession looks more likely every hour.