The Economics of Arts and Culture
Both artists and athletes perform for others. When governments get involved it either is for subsidies or censorship. Neither is satisfactory.
Both artists and athletes perform for others. When governments get involved it either is for subsidies or censorship. Neither is satisfactory.
After years of inflationary intervention, the Federal Reserve has no more rabbits to pull out of the hat.
Today is the 30th anniversary of the Waco Massacre in which the media and the government self-congratulated each other in absolving the FBI of any crimes. Nothing has changed since then.
Walter Bagehot, as Jim Grant writes, believed that bankers and central bankers should exhibit financial discipline. He would not recognize today's banking world.
Washington elites and especially their media have denounced what they once praised: leaking of official documents that show the government has been lying.
Official Washington and its Court Media are up in arms that someone has told the truth via leaking government documents. They won't rest until he is punished severely.
As markets settle down after the last set of bank failures, political elites claim the crisis is behind us. But it is not over, not by a long shot.
American politicians are beating war drums. They forget that bad relations are costly in many ways.
With negative growth now dipping below negative 6 percent, money-supply contraction is approaching the biggest declines we've seen in decades.
Contrary to Krugman, DeSantis and others warning about a CBDC aren’t being paranoid: they are simply drawing the obvious conclusions from history.