Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn Born 116 Years Ago
Considered by many contemporaries as one of the smartest men to have ever lived, Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn was born 116 years ago today.
Considered by many contemporaries as one of the smartest men to have ever lived, Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn was born 116 years ago today.
Discussions of wages often miss the all-important economic concept of a worker‘s diminishing marginal value product (DMVP), and the WNBA is no exception.
The proper answer to who should be Fed chairman is…nobody. Nobody knows the “correct” interest rate.
In Syria the damage is done, and future generations will continue to suffer from the cruel folly of those convinced they know how to run everyone else’s lives.
The biography of Hans F. Sennholz reads like a paradoxical novel—as if the protagonist had journeyed backward through the twentieth century.
Just as no one in the world could possibly make something as simple as a pencil all by himself, as the great Leonard Read explained in his famous essay, I, Pencil, so it is with Mises University.
While we’re not yet seeing a trend toward widespread layoffs, it is increasingly difficult to get hired.
Steve Hanke criticizes Trump and Fed Chairman Powell for their flawed focus on interest rates over money supply, blames the Fed for exacerbating income inequality, and argues that tariffs cause temporary price blips while money supply drives long-term inflation trends.
When the President is harping about the Fed lowering the interest rates, this means that he wants more easy money created.
The same conservatives who act aghast at Mamdani's proposed government grocery stores turn around and support government schools and government healthcare.