Why not some fiscal therapy and go over the cliff?
At a recent talk in Minnesota, William G. Gale of the Brookings Institution makes the case to deal with three deficits.
At a recent talk in Minnesota, William G. Gale of the Brookings Institution makes the case to deal with three deficits.
Welch provided no evidence and smeared professional economists for no reason.
In reality, Romney supports “military Keynesianism.”
When people ask that question they are totally ignoring counterfactuals.
He had a profound influence on macroeconomic policy that continues to this day.
The future of Social Security and Medicare might be very different if Ryan is successful in getting Friedman’s ideas adopted.
The company is fighting to stay alive amidst recent changes sweeping through retailing.
Europe is only 60 years into the process, while we’ve had more than 230 years to sort out our monetary and fiscal issues — and it’s still a work in progress.
In economic terms, it comes down to “income elasticity.”
The debate over the sugar support program and repealing the medical device tax offer two good examples.
The benefits of Ron Paul’s suggested changes are hard to imagine.
His ideas for ending the Federal Reserve are the latest chapter in an age-old American argument dating to Hamilton and Jefferson.
Narayana Kocherlakota thinks unemployment is stuck at 8 percent and inflation is on the horizon.
A look back at Minnesota’s Fortune 500 companies helps put the layoffs in a larger context.
It’s wrong to base a higher education finance system on the premise that social benefits are shrinking, compared with private benefits.
His perspective misses the fact that the resources and income in an economy are not created by business alone.
Why we don’t make Tonka trucks in Minnesota anymore illustrates free trade’s benefits and costs.
The move makes a lot of sense for both companies – and it would be a win-win for the Minnesota economy.
To answer that question, let’s look at the tax system from an economist’s perspective.
Best Buy’s fall may seem abrupt, but the company faces the same question mass retailers faced the last 100 years