Corporate Welfare

Displaying 261 - 270 of 323
Christopher Westley

Perkins called his job that of an economic hit man — the person who makes the initial case for the infrastructure development with such optimistic (and purposely misleading) biases that they become deals that cannot be refused.

William L. Anderson

Lay and Skilling are hardly alone. The difference is that they are going to prison. This was not a case of executives looting their company and then hiding those assets in offshore bank accounts and absconding with their ill-gotten gains. Instead, it was a case of executives who believed their own hype — and that of the financial press — and failed to apply the fundamentals of sound business practices to their decisions.

Hans-Hermann Hoppe

In this excerpt from his new book, Hans-Hermann Hoppe shows how taxation corrupts the political culture and harms social well being.

Grant M. Nülle
American textile producers have been coddled by Washington for several decades, writes Grant Nulle, and the new agreement is more of the same.
William L. Anderson

Is Google the next target of the government's antitrust police? William Anderson says it is possible.

Gary Galles

Henry George's 1886 book on trade is a devastating critique of the arguments of protectionists.