Corporate Welfare
Op-ed Warriors Defend the Bailout
Bailing out Bear Sterns while letting Lehman fail, the two TARP votes, and the incessant clamor about (nonexistent) systemic risk were geared toward bailing out Wall Street firms on the wrong side of housing risk.
Less Government, Less Economic Trouble
Government spending — whether on our current armed forces and their more than 800 foreign bases or on "green" energy and other government-favored projects — does not produce prosperity. It only diverts resources.
The Corporation and the Free Market
What is the corporate form of organization, where did it come from, how does it work, and do corporations take advantage of consumers, investors, a
Not Exactly Sweet Reason
The United States imposes import quotas that substantially raise domestic sugar prices, harming domestic consumers to benefit politically powerful domestic sugar producers.
The Economics of Libertarianism, Confused
In this article I'll walk through Glaeser's critical observations, most of which misfire.
What’s Really Wrong with the Healthcare Industry
The only solution to increasing costs is to eliminate government interference in the market and to allow the price mechanism to work as it should.
Barbecue Defined in the Process of Its Emergence
Social order is like barbecue. Both are defined in the process of their emergence.
GDP and Extended Low Rates
So no matter what GDP numbers the Commerce Department spins out, the interest rate Chairman Bernanke controls will stay low "for an extended period."
American’s Crazed Corn Habit
Until corporate welfare takes a backseat to real, proven solutions that help stateside consumers save a bundle at the pump (and help our less-prosperous allies financially), corn will remain king.