Do Food Makers Want to Kill You?
Congress just passed another regulatory bill, Lew Rockwell reports, because people with food allergies are under the impression that food sellers are indifferent to whether they live or die.
Congress just passed another regulatory bill, Lew Rockwell reports, because people with food allergies are under the impression that food sellers are indifferent to whether they live or die.
Competition is a productive aspect of the market economy, writes Ninos Malek, but sometimes businesses urge the government to intervene when their competitors pose a threat. This is the driving force behind antitrust legislation.
After so much fighting for so long, at last France and Germany find a common cause: resist economic reform and shore up the state apparatus as long as possible. Grant Nülle examines the scene.
The root of the pension problem, writes Carl Horowitz, is the inherent unsoundness of State-granted guarantees to firms (and unions) against market failure.
Sponsored by the Mises Institute and held in Houston, Texas; September 22-23, 1995.
Even if most hedge funds were dogs, writes Gregory Bresiger, why is it the business of the government to regulate them?
Frank Quattrone sent a 22-word e-mail to his employees reminding them of an existing policy. Now he is going to jail for it, writes Chris Westley.
Whether or not he had committed any crimes (and, apparently, he had not), Quattrone had plenty about which to be nervous, write Bill Anderson and Candice Jackson.
Eric Mattei explains the implications of 'civil rights' interventions: some must serve others regardless of their own personal choices.
Harry Valentine writes that South Africa's long term economic future appears bleak due to the policies that the nation's government has already enacted.