Why Does Brazil’s Bolsonaro Refuse To Lock Down His Country’s Economy?

When reports regarding COVID-19 illnesses began to surface, media outlets initially downplayed the risks. But they soon followed the World Health Organization’s (WHO) claims that the virus was more serious than the seasonal flu and that a high volume of cases could prove burdensome to healthcare systems, and governments around the globe scrambled to keep the virus from spreading rapidly.

Why Has There Been So Little Consumer Price Inflation?

Listen to the Audio Mises Wire version of this article.

Every once in a while economists want to go out on a limb with their models and publicly make forecasts on what the future rate of price inflation will be. The current COVID-19 lockdown is no exception. Many economists have warned us of potentially very high rates of price inflation, because monetary stimulus on a massive scale meets a negative supply shock.

The Problem with Universal Suffrage

In the modern west it is seen as a sign of backwardness if a country does not have universal suffrage for all adults. As a clear stakeholder in the state, why are those below the arbitrary age of eighteen disenfranchised, clearly subjected to the status of second-class citizenship?

That they don’t pay taxes; that they don’t work; that they are dependents—the same can be said for many who currently enjoy the right to vote. In fact, whatever the reason given, it can usually be shown to be empty, for most turn on the question of competency.