Two Months In: Life in Biden’s America
Ryan McMaken and Tho Bishop discuss why Biden can't reverse the loss of faith in America's institutions.
Ryan McMaken and Tho Bishop discuss why Biden can't reverse the loss of faith in America's institutions.
Once the economics profession embraced the "perfect" competition theory which, as Hayek has said, means "the absence of all competitive activities," it also embraced antitrust regulation.
Medical doctor Keith Smith returns to the show to explain how government intervention allows insurance companies to distort health care prices.
If leaders are serious about economic recovery after lockdowns, they need to dispense with authoritarian controls and let markets work. Daniel Lacalle considers interest rates, inequality, stakeholder theory, global debt, and much more in this powerful discussion of today's economic reality.
Ryan McMaken and Tho Bishop discuss five reasons why Rothbard's work is so memorable.
The refusal of the SCOTUS to consider the merits of a case concerning 2020 election laws is the sort of behavior that we have come to expect from spineless politicians, and that is what you find on America's highest court—politicians in robes.
Echoing Hoppe and public choice theory, Professor Philipp Bagus explains how politicians enjoy asymmetric rewards for exaggerating risks and creating fear. The result is gross policy errors we will all pay for over many decades. Don't miss this show!
Tho Bishop and Zachary Yost join Ryan McMaken to discuss covid politics in three states, and whether anyone is paying any attention to social distancing rules anymore.
After decades of financialization and government favors, Wall Street has largely become an adjunct of the central bank. Entrepreneurship is out, and bailouts are in.
These regulations have a clear message: "You don't know what is good for you so you must be forced to do what the government thinks is good for you."