On Economic Issues, the Populist Right and Left Share a Lot of Common Ground
That's bad news for Americans.
That's bad news for Americans.
As we step into 2024, it's crucial to adopt a more informed perspective on these dubious claims.
We're often told European countries are better off thanks to big-government policies. So why is the U.S. beating France in many important ways?
Over the last several years, they have worked nonstop to ease the tax burden of their high-income constituents.
This progress has been widely shared, to the great benefit of the people at the bottom of the distribution.
Plus: "Flipping the proverbial bird is a God-given" right, administrative state abuses, and more...
While some Republicans may have had misguided motivations, a few disrupted McCarthy's campaign in order to enact fiscal restraint. Their colleagues were fine with business as usual.
The idea that the Fed has the knowledge necessary to control the economy with perfectly calibrated policies was always an illusion.
Government should not penalize investment, thwart competition, discourage innovation and work, or obstruct production.
Bezos pitched in by creating an online marketplace of cheap consumer goods that people can get delivered to their homes in two days flat.
It's the world of the present, not the controversies of the past, that motivated voters.
What is the correct reward for the person who creates something that millions of people want badly enough to pay for it?
Of those who reported a negative view of capitalism, 20 percent say it's exploitative or corrupt.
The Massachusetts senator pandered to the left—and so did everybody else, just not as expertly.
Contrary to what most of the media says, the poor are getting richer and income mobility is high.
Why we should not let fears about inequality stand in the way of technological progress that could potentially make the next generation healthier, happier, and smarter.
The BU Law Review Online has a symposium on this important new book, with contributions by Richard Epstein, Dan Markovits, K. Sabeel Rahman, David B. Lyons, and myself.
The Pontiff ought to stick to flock-tending and lay off capitalism.
Leftists don't own the poor even though they've done their best to keep them in poverty.
The income inequality obsession leads to whiplash.
George Mason University economist Tyler Cowen suggests that it might be.
Regulatory and cultural capture means a government-induced upward redistribution of wealth.
The basic-income scheme is meant to save Finland money and reduce the country's high unemployment rate.
Is confiscating half of GDP and high energy prices a winning Democratic strategy?
The Economics Nobel Laureate worries that crony capitalism will kill off economic growth
"We've seen a remarkable decrease over the past 20 years, and I do forecast that will continue."
Corporate CEO pay is, however, way out of hand.
We shouldn't choose policies based on how they make us feel. And yet...
The new watch from Cupertino will help reduce income inequality in the way that really matters.
Politicians aiming to reduce inequality end up unintentionally making it worse.
No, the richest 1 percent will not soon have as much wealth as the rest of us.
Political-economic systems throughout the world are built on deeply rooted and long-established systems of privilege for the well-connected.
Meanwhile U.S. intergenerational income mobility has not slowed.
Former Obama auto czar Steven Rattner uses weak data in attempt to advance tax-and-spend policies favored by the left.
Has Thomas Piketty really found "the central contradiction of capitalism"?
New York's clownish political leaders are in a tizzy.
Meet the most 'unequal' public university in America.
So what if the rich are richer than ever? American income mobility is still strong.
Inequality in poor countries is much worse than inequality in rich countries
Has Thomas Piketty really found "the central contradiction of capitalism"?