The Surplus Hoax
If a corporation were to engage in the deceit that is the government's daily business, the SEC would intervene with severity, says Hans Sennholz
If a corporation were to engage in the deceit that is the government's daily business, the SEC would intervene with severity, says Hans Sennholz
Some economists say measuring inflation is as easy as checking a thermometer. Gene Callahan debunks this view.
The Austrian Theory has come under fire; Gene Callahan responds in defense.
Neither the Fed nor Wall Street can undo the ill effects of past monetary expansions, says Frank Shostak.
With its latest move to boost interest rates, the Fed is again clouding its role as the sole source of economy-wide price increases.
Frank Shostak rebuts the claim that markets are driven to unsustainable highs by waves of investor enthusiasm. Actually, the Fed itself is the real culprit.
Like a man who douses a large pile of rags with gasoline and then warns of a fire hazard, Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan has begun issuing dire warnings of impending inflation after orchestrating several years of explosive monetary growth.
The meltdown on Wall Street can't be corrected through intervention; if it is headed down further, it needs to run its course.
He talks like an old Keynesian but has early intellectual ties to the Austrian School, once calling the Fed's creation "a historic disaster."
The oil price, the stock market, the yield curve, and other factors suggest the boom may be fading. But several quick steps to free markets would shorten the pain.