Does Demand Create Supply?

By popular thinking, increases in demand cause economic growth. According to such thought, whenever the economy falls into a recession what is required is to strengthen demand. Since government is seen as an important part of total demand, what is then required is to increase government outlays, thereby lifting overall demand and hence increasing economic growth.

The Wicked Witch of Eccles Hates Sound Money

The Federal Reserve has presided over a steady erosion of the dollar’s purchasing power—by design. See for yourself using the government’s inflation calculator that begins in 1913, the year President Wilson signed the Fed into law. Its definition of “price stability” as a perpetual two percent rise in prices would have struck earlier generations as an admission of failure rather than a policy goal.

A Schumpeterian Analysis of the Eurobond Scandal through Rothbard’s Cui Bono

Joseph Schumpeter, in Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy (1942), offered a starkly realistic definition of democracy: it is not the rule of the people by the people, but “that institutional arrangement for arriving at political decisions in which individuals acquire the power to decide by means of a competitive struggle for the people’s vote.” In this view, democracy functions as an elite contest, politicians and their coalitions vie for office, much like firms compete in a market.