• W.H. Economics Adviser Stephen Moore: ‘We Don’t Need’ More Covid Relief Legislation after Positive Jobs Report

    W.H. Economics Adviser Stephen Moore: ‘We Don’t Need’ More Covid Relief Legislation after Positive Jobs Report

    White House Economic Adviser Stephen Moore said Friday that the unexpectedly positive May jobs report makes approving a “phase four” coronavirus relief package unnecessary. “It takes a lot of the wind out of the sails of any phase four. We don’t need it now,” Moore said. “There’s no reason to have a major spending bill. …
  • Why the stock market is up amid chaos in the streets

    Why the stock market is up amid chaos in the streets

    A global pandemic, racial strife, political upheaval — and a rising stock market amid the chaos. While it sounds a lot like 2020 it also has echoes all the way from 1968. Both years featured history-making levels of tumult, and both could end up being good years for investors. While the current market still has some …
  • 18 Facts on the US National Debt That Are Almost Too Hard to Believe

    18 Facts on the US National Debt That Are Almost Too Hard to Believe

    There is hesitation among the political class as to what must be done to pay down and eliminate this debt. At around $22.5 trillion, the United States national debt sits at 106 percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP). There is no disputing that this gigantic debt will someday become due and payable. However, there is …
  • Q&A: Free Trade and the Poor

    Q&A: Free Trade and the Poor

    Question: I am a proponent of trade liberalization and a free market, but I keep coming back to the issue of the severe inequality that free international trade can create. How would an Objectivist view the marginalization of the poor in developing nations, where they have absolutely no way to rise above poverty and hunger without …
  • It’s important to understand that the trade-off isn’t just the economy vs. lives. It’s also lives vs. lives.

    It’s important to understand that the trade-off isn’t just the economy vs. lives. It’s also lives vs. lives.

    A recent Bloomberg article discussed the opposing arguments in the debate over COVID-19 lockdowns. The article described the epidemiological way of thinking versus the economic way of thinking. In the simplest terms, epidemiologists think in terms of reducing the spread of disease, while economists think in terms of balancing trade-offs. While expert epidemiologists are much …
  • The Cobra Effect: Lessons in Unintended Consequences

    The Cobra Effect: Lessons in Unintended Consequences

    Human beings react to every rule, regulation, and order governments impose, and their reactions result in outcomes that can be quite different than the outcomes lawmakers intended. Every human decision brings with it unintended consequences. Often, they are inconsequential, even funny. When Airbus, for example, wanted to make its planes quieter to improve the flying …
  • What Caused the Great Depression?

    What Caused the Great Depression?

    The definitive guide to the key events and policies that caused the Great Depression. Few areas of historical research have provoked such intensive study as the causes of America’s Great Depression—and for good reason. Tens of millions of humans suffered intense misery and despair. How bad was the Great Depression? The dimensions of the economic …
  • Massive Inflation May Be Coming, Because the US Government Has Cornered Itself into a Fiscal End Game

    Massive Inflation May Be Coming, Because the US Government Has Cornered Itself into a Fiscal End Game

    Years of deficit spending has made monetary policy a slave to fiscal policy. The federal government is moving into the final stages of its fiscal life. Deficits have gotten so enormous that the Federal Reserve simply prints the money the government needs. Why? Because that’s the only option left on the table. For years, we …
  • Poverty in the U.S. Was Plummeting—Until Lyndon Johnson Declared War On It

    Poverty in the U.S. Was Plummeting—Until Lyndon Johnson Declared War On It

    Yet again, government intervention hurts those it is intended to help. ne of the more elementary observations about economics is that a nation’s prosperity is determined in part by the quantity and quality of labor and capital. These “factors of production” are combined to generate national income. I frequently grouse that punitive tax policies discourage capital. There’s less …
  • Review: In Money We Trust?

    Review: In Money We Trust?

    “So you think money is the root of all evil?” That is the question the wealthy, dashing copper magnate Francisco d’Anconia asked at the beginning of his famous “money speech” in Ayn Rand’s 1957 novel Atlas Shrugged. D’Anconia was addressing a roomful of people who seemed confused about the meaning of money. Sixty-two years later, …