Saturday, April 04, 2020

The Fed is Running Out of Bubbles to Create

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The Fed is Running Out of Bubbles to Create


The Fed Is Running Out of Bubbles to Create
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April 4, 2020

Mises Institute

By Klajdi Bregu

The Fed Is Running Out of Bubbles to Create

With each passing recession, the Fed finds it harder to refuel the last bubble, but the market moves on to the new bubble as the Fed keeps interest rates artificially low.

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By Mihai Macovei

Japan's Productivity Has Been Slashed By Government Meddling, Not Demographics

The popular narrative is that demographics are driving Japan's declining worker productivity. But the real culprit is government regulations and a lack of entrepreneurship.

READ ARTICLE

By Christopher E. Baecker

The Problem with the "Renters' Rights" Movement

Both renters and landlords have plenty of troubles when it comes to working together. But putting government regulators in the mix won't help matters.

READ ARTICLE

MISES WIRE AND
POWER & MARKET 


Equality and Levelling Down by David Gordon

Capital Accumulation: The Way to Increase Wages by Jacob Maichel

How Easy Money Is Increasing the Devastation of the COVID-19 Panic by Brendan Brown

Do the Textbooks Get Money and Banking Backwards? by Robert P. Murphy

Price Controls Mean Shortages, Even during Pandemics by Baruti "Libre" Kafele

Bureaucrats Can't Fix This by Frank Shostak

The Crisis Has Exposed the Damage Done By Government Regulations by José Niño

It's Time to Track the FDA's Death Toll by James Bovard

Want Political Change? Get Rid of Campaign Finance Regulations. by José Niño

In a Crisis, the Most Innovative Entrepreneurs Make the Most Money. That's a Good Thing. by Peter G. Klein

The Federal Government Owns 92 Percent of Student Loans. Why Do Politicians Lie About It? by Chris Calton

End the Shutdown by The Editors

The Feds Are Suing Oracle for Discrimination, Even Though No One Has Complained by Elijah J. Henry
 

Even Partial Liberalization Can Save a Nation from Poverty by Germinal G. Van

Why the World Has a Dollar Shortage, Despite Massive Fed Action by Daniel Lacalle

How The Fed Sows Social Division and Mistrust by Nick Hankoff

What If the Fed Did Nothing? by Noah Bonn

The Political Management of the Coronavirus Crisis by Rahim Taghizadegan

This Is Not a Recession—This Is a Government-Imposed Shutdown of the Private Sector by Hunter Hastings

What Would Rothbard Say About the COVID-19 Panic? by Philipp Bagus

 


THIS WEEK'S PODCASTS
AND LECTURES


The Accad and Koka Report: Hospital Ethics in the Face of COVID-19

Economics for Entrepreneurs Podcast: Sean Ring: What Successful Entrepreneurs Understand About Iteration

The Bob Murphy Show: Oren Cass and the Conservative Critique of Pure Laissez-Faire

 




1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Low interest rates for a long time now. Even as a kid they used to give a minimum of 3 % on a mere savings account. Even that long gone.