Category: Bailouts
By Peter Klein on Nov 19, 2009 in Bailouts, Budget and Tax Policy, Economics, Employment, Government subsidies, Labor, Presidential Power, unemployment | 1 Comment
How many jobs has the “stimulus” package created? Sensible economists of course know this question cannot possibly be answered. Government spending directs resources toward politically favored projects at the expense of others, but the net effect on resource allocation, including the net effect on “jobs” — a heterogeneous category that depends on hours worked, job [...]
By Anthony Gregory on Nov 13, 2009 in Bailouts, Economics, Housing, Politics, Presidential Power, Regulation, socialism | 18 Comments
George W. Bush is launching a free-market think tank. The Washington Times reports:
With the Obama administration establishing far-reaching controls in the auto, real estate and financial sectors, Mr. Bush said that “the role of government is not to create wealth, but to create the conditions that allow entrepreneurs and innovators to thrive.”
So the guy who [...]
By Peter Klein on Nov 10, 2009 in Bailouts, Business, Economics, Money and Banking | 1 Comment
The rediscovery of Keynes is one of the official storylines of the financial crisis and global recession. The problem is that Keynes was, in my judgment, a charlatan, a clever man obsessed with his own cleverness who never paid serious, thoughtful attention to economics (or any subject). You have to learn a little about Keynes [...]
By David Theroux on Nov 8, 2009 in Bailouts, Budget and Tax Policy, Economics, Employment, Federal Reserve, Government subsidies, Labor, Money and Banking, Politics, Presidential Power, The State, inflation, unemployment | 2 Comments
The House Republican Conference has just released the following graph on the unemployment effects of Barack Obama’s “stimulus” package:
Also, please see the following, award-winning Independent Institute book:
Out of Work: Unemployment and Government in Twentieth-Century America, Updated Edition
By Richard K. Vedder and Lowell E. Gallaway, Foreword by Martin Bronfenbrenner
(New York University Press)
By David Theroux on Oct 31, 2009 in American History, Bailouts, Books, Budget and Tax Policy, Business, Economics, Employment, Fascism, Federal Reserve, Government subsidies, Great Depression, Labor, Media, Money and Banking, Nationalization, Presidential Power, Regulation, The State, Video, inflation, socialism, unemployment | 0 Comments
Independent Institute Senior Fellow Robert Higgs is interviewed here by Judge Andrew Napolitano on Fox News’ program, “Freedom Watch,” regarding the utter folly of the gigantic federal spending programs first started under George W. Bush and now enormously expanded by Barack Obama and the U.S. Congress. Prolonging the recovery amidst enormous economic confusion and new [...]
By Robert Higgs on Oct 3, 2009 in Bailouts, Economics, Employment, Government subsidies, Politics, unemployment | 7 Comments
Despite all of the smiley faces that journalists for the mainstream news media continue to paste on their reports about recent economic developments, the official unemployment rate now verges on 10 percent, and various economic indicators signal a discouraging prospect for the near-term future. Republican partisans, willing to grasp and exploit any passing news that seems to discredit the ruling Democrats, [...]
By David Theroux on Oct 3, 2009 in American History, Bailouts, Books, Budget and Tax Policy, Business, Constitution, Economics, Employment, Fascism, Government subsidies, Great Depression, Nationalization, Presidential Power, Regulation, Taxation, The State, Trade, Video, socialism, unemployment | 1 Comment
Independent Institute Senior Fellow Robert Higgs is interviewed on Fox News’ “Freedom Watch with Judge Andrew Napolitano” on how Barack Obama is Herbert Hoover’s true “Progressive” heir as an economic interventionist, corporatist and protectionist. Hoover’s policies caused the Great Depression and Franklin Roosevelt then continued and greatly expanded such policies as his New Deal, deepening [...]
By Randall Holcombe on Sep 30, 2009 in Bailouts, Budget and Tax Policy, Economics, Federal Reserve, Money and Banking, Nationalization, The State, free market, socialism | 6 Comments
The Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) is a year old now. On September 19, 2008, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson announced the need for a $700 billion program to purchase toxic assets held by banks to prevent a financial meltdown, and after some modification TARP was rapidly approved by Congress on October 3. Looking back after [...]
By Carl Close on Sep 28, 2009 in Bailouts, Education, Government subsidies, Politics, Welfare, corruption | 1 Comment
The 2010 Sir John M. Templeton Fellowships Essay Contest is underway. Open to college students (undergraduates and grad students) and untenured college teachers from around the world, the contest will award a total of $26,500 in prize money for the best essays addressing a question prompted by political economist Frederic Bastiat.
“Everyone wants to live at [...]
By Mary Theroux on Sep 24, 2009 in American History, Bailouts, Budget and Tax Policy, Business, Economics, Healthcare, Money and Banking, Politics, Regulation, corruption, free market | 3 Comments
Judging from the previews, Michael Moore’s latest, “Capitalism: A Love Story,” ought better be titled as above. Someone, quick, give him a copy of Adam Smith’s A Wealth of Nations and explain to him that the best way to stop corporations from taking advantage of government largesse distributed at the expense of the politically impotent [...]