Jay Taylor: Austrian Economics and the Next (Bigger) Crash
Jeff Deist and Jay Taylor discuss markets, business cycle theory, and the Fed's latest bubble.
Jeff Deist and Jay Taylor discuss markets, business cycle theory, and the Fed's latest bubble.
The world is teeming with skyscraper building from China to London, and a new record-setting skyscraper is planned for 2016 in Saudi Arabia. Will this skyscraper herald the next global economic crisis as Dubai's Burj Khalifa presaged the 2009 crisis?
More evidence the future of Austrian economics is in good hands is Patrick Newman’s excellent piece of scholarship recently published in the QJAE as "The Depression of 1873: An Austrian Perspective."
People accuse Austrian economics of being overly theoretical—but our guest John O’Donnell proves them wrong.
Korea's economy has taken off since the 1997 financial crisis, and so has Korea's cultural and economic prominence on the world stage. But is Korea repeating the mistakes of Japan and other centrally-planned boom economies?
For many years, I have been critical of the Austrian theory of depressions and this led Walter Block to ask me to put my criticisms in print.
Central banks and their favorite economists are everywhere worried that central banks may be too weak to keep the current “expansion” going. If central banks are too weak now, what will happen when they get the strength they want?
According to a new report just out by McKinsey, global debt has increased by $57 trillion since the Great Recession, outpacing world GDP growth during this time period.
While the policy may appear to work ─ the effect is temporary. One can achieve a short term lower unemployment rate but only at the cost of higher unemployment long term and increased instability.