Banks use Other People’s Money — So What?
Since we don't know the future, all investment is a type of speculation, and this doesn't mean banks are behaving nefariously when investing other people's money.
Since we don't know the future, all investment is a type of speculation, and this doesn't mean banks are behaving nefariously when investing other people's money.
While government spending re-allocates and distorts resources, it is not necessarily inflationary. Inflation really just stems from money creation and fractional-reserve lending carryied out by central banks and private banks — thus creating money "out of thin air."
The US government clearly wants to invade Venezuela. But oil is likely not a significant reason, in part because Venezuela's oil is hardly the gold mine some think it is.
Keynesian economics is the economics of debt-addicted, lower-class spendthrifts: modern governments.
The UK has plenty of opportunities to thrive outside of the EU’s jurisdiction.
The recent controversy over Jeff Bezos has spawned an interesting debate among free-market economists on whether blackmail should be legalized.
Steven Kates has composed a modern version of Leonard Read’s classic essay “I, Pencil.”
Programs like Medicare are a great deal for early participants, but they create huge liabilities for taxpayers later down the line.
New research is sparking fears that junk debt could trigger a repeat of the 2008 crash.
When the topic involves poverty, bank failures, unemployment or inequality, the advocates of fashionable policy implore us to take immediate action, almost regardless of the costs down the line. Enter climate change and this seemingly changes everything.