Did Tariffs Make America Great?
Economists Stephen Cohen and Bradford DeLong are spouting an unfortunate amount of enthusiasm for Alexander Hamilton's corporatist economics.
Economists Stephen Cohen and Bradford DeLong are spouting an unfortunate amount of enthusiasm for Alexander Hamilton's corporatist economics.
This is the main fallacy of term limits: it presumes the problem is the people in government, and not the government itself.
An adoption of digital currencies by central banks could bring the next generation of central bankers more power than their predecessors imagined.
The federal government is using the threat of foreign hackers as an excuse to further nationalize elections in the United States.
When government creates special demographic categories for groups of people, the effects on public policy can be far reaching.
The US Dept. of Justice wants to extract billions in fines from Deutsche Bank. German taxpayers may then be on the hook for the inevitable bailout.
Frightened by an unstable economy and low returns, savers are saving even more and frustrating the plans of central bankers.
No functioning government in Spain for the last 10 months, and the country is prospering.
High-frequency trading is not the nefarious scheme policymakers would have you believe it is. It serves a real purpose in the marketplace.
Henry Hazlitt brings to his only novel, Time Will Run Back, the same clarity and ease for the reader he brought to Economics in One Lesson.