Posts Tagged ‘Gerald P. O’Driscoll Jr.’
The Fed Can’t Solve Our Economic Woes
A policy of low interest rates is a textbook response of monetary authorities to the economic weakness brought on by deficient aggregate demand. The policy is justified by pointing to various ways in which money can promote economic activity—including by stimulating investment, discouraging savings,...
August 16th, 2010 | Commentary | Read More
Summer Reading III
According to Reinhart and Rogoff, “for the advanced economies during 1800-2008, the picture that emerges is one of serial banking crises.” In This Time is Different, the authors bring us up to the present by examining the history of banking crises. Banking crises are not only frequent , but often...
July 22nd, 2010 | Commentary | Read More
Summer Reading II
Summer reading is eclectic and before getting to my second installment of notes on This Time is Different, I want to recommend a non-economics book. A Chance in Hell by Jim Michaels is a riveting account of how the military and political situation turned in Anbar province in Western Iraq. It is first...
July 19th, 2010 | Commentary | Read More
Keynes vs. Hayek: The Great Debate Continues
The debates raging over what policies will pull the U.S. economy out of its Great Recession replicate one that occurred during the Great Depression. Thanks to the efforts of Richard Ebeling, a professor of economics at Northwood University, we have compelling and concise documentary evidence. He has...
July 7th, 2010 | Commentary | Read More
The Gulf Spill, the Financial Crisis and Government Failure
The Gulf oil spill and the global financial crisis both demonstrate the failings of big government. Partisan politics obscures the linkage, with the consequence that each political party repeats the mistakes of the other as its turn to govern arrives.
First, consider the oil spill. BP and its contractors...
June 14th, 2010 | Commentary | Read More

