Money-Supply Growth Accelerates to 28-Month High
During October 2019, year-over-year growth in the money supply was at 4.95 percent. That's up from September's rate of 3.10 percent, and was up from October 2018's rate of 3.49 percent.
During October 2019, year-over-year growth in the money supply was at 4.95 percent. That's up from September's rate of 3.10 percent, and was up from October 2018's rate of 3.49 percent.
The ECB, always happy to repeat the mistakes of Japan, is likely to start new programs of debt monetization for green projects and claim it is a different, radical and new measure.
Paternalism has in recent years made a comeback, but its philosophical foundation is quite flimsy.
Paul Cantor's new book provides a new look at how the "American dream" is shown in pop culture as offering both hope and frustration.
Behavioral economists are masters of comparing apples to oranges and dressing up incorrect statements in fancy language and mathematics.
If governments really want to help former criminals get jobs, they should stop turning so many small-time offenses into crimes.
To prohibit discrimination in employment is to infringe upon freedom of association, freedom of thought, private property, and freedom in general.
For many Brazilian voters, Jair Bolsonaro offered a chance to break with decades of failed economic policies. Time will tell if they were right.
It is up to us to reconsider Misesian liberal nationalism for the twenty-first century and create a vision for the present and beyond.
School children learn that there are three branches of government. In actual practice, there is a fourth branch, the permanent bureaucracy which includes legions of civilian and military agents, officers, and administrators committed to protecting their own interests.