There Are Two Sides to Every Trade. And Both Sides Benefit.

In a recent tweet, the US president said, “When you’re almost 800 Billion Dollars a year down on Trade, you can’t lose a Trade War! The U.S. has been ripped off by other countries for years on Trade.”

Trump continues to ratchet up tariffs on China claiming it is stealing billions of dollars by running large trade surpluses with the USA. If this view was held by a country bumpkin it would be irrelevant, but it becomes a serious problem when held by a man who can reduce the real incomes of billions of people, both American and Chinese.

How Central Banks Promote Money-Creation by Private Banks

Some commentators consider fractional reserve banking as a major vehicle for the expansion in the money supply growth rate. What is the nature of this vehicle?

Fractional reserve banking arises because banks legally are permitted to use money placed with them in demand deposits. Banks treat this type of money as if it was loaned to them. However, is this really the case?

Let Alaskans Decide The Fate of Alaska’s Forests

Mother Jones today reports on how the Trump administration is loosening some restrictions on logging in some public-lands areas of Alaska.

In response, a group of indigenous women traveled to Washington to oppose the plan.

Most of the article goes into how the forests — left untouched — are good for local residents, and how the forests are allegedly a defense against global warming.

What John Law Taught Us About the Perils of Printing Money

In the same year that the Bank of England was created – 1694 – John Law became a fugitive. He killed a man in a duel, was thrown in prison awaiting execution, and escaped to Europe. After some years of gambling his way through the European courts and writing surprisingly prescient texts on monetary economics he landed in France. One of history’s first grand experiments with unbacked paper money was about to begin.