Free Markets are the Road Map to Economic Improvement for All
Free-market economists often point out how the government's economic policies cause poverty and hurt the poor. The response is often to shoot the messenger.
Free-market economists often point out how the government's economic policies cause poverty and hurt the poor. The response is often to shoot the messenger.
At 35 percent, our corporate tax rate is the highest among developed countries. The Land of the Free has a higher corporate tax rate than socialist-run France.
An out of print (1991) publication of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago provides an excellent summary of Fed money mechanics.
I am interviewed on Power Trading Radio about the Skyscraper Curse and Cyber Security Issues—Biggest Bank Heist in History!
Mises Daily Friday by Ryan McMaken:
J.C. Chandor, writer and director of 2011's Wall Street drama Margin Call tackles economics once again with his new film A Most Violent Year. This time, Chandor explores barriers to entrepreneurship in a world dominated by corrupt government, labor unions, and organized crime.
Mises Daily Thursday by Frank Shostak: True credit can only expand if the stock of real savings and real wealth expands. Unfortunately, fractional reserve banking and central banks facilitate the expansion of false credit which diverts resources from true wealth producing activities.
Richard Ebeling's three essays on highlighting Mises's work when he was a senior economic analyst for the Vienna Chamber of Commercein Vienna are a marvelous introduction to the great Austrian economist, and a must read for economists, historians, and curious laymen.
Mises Daily Wednesday by Frank Hollenbeck: The Europeans have decided to limit funding and credit extended to the Greeks. This puts the Greek financial system under pressure, but there are free-market solutions that could set the Greeks on the path to a sound economy.
Martin Feldstein, Professor of Economics at Harvard, President Emeritus of the National Bureau of Economic Research, and chair of Ronald Reagan’s Council of Economic Advisers from 1982 to 1984 joins Joe Salerno and most Austrians by speaking out against the Fed’s and central banks in general fear of deflation and by implication their irrational commitment to a 2% inflation target.
Mises Daily Tuesday by Gary Galles: The Jones Act and similar laws have been behind a precipitous decline in global American shipping. Passed for "national defense" purposes, such laws only serve to raise the cost of shipping to US ports while restricting consumer access to goods.