All Posts Tagged With: "market correction"

The Canard of “Underutilized Resources”

Last November the Federal Open Market Committee announced plans to purchase, by printing money, $600 billion of long-term government bonds over the next 6 months. This “quantitative easing,” Fed Chairman Bernanke assures us, is necessary to aid an economy that is suffering from “a very high level of underutilization of resources.” In other words, there’s [...]

24Feb2011 | Tyler Watts | 1 comment | Continued

The Recurring Crisis

Recently the governor of the Bank of England announced that the “nice” times had come to an end. (In the Bank’s lexicon, NICE = “Non-Inflationary Constant Expansion”). This news will not come as any shock to the many Americans who have had their homes repossessed recently, but it does appear to have startled many of [...]

1Jul2008 | Stephen Davies | 0 comments | Continued

The Anatomy of Economic Advice, Part II

How can positive science (consisting entirely of “is” statements) be translated into “ought” statements within the framework of economic understanding? In the first part of this series we drew attention to some of the paradoxes surrounding economic advice.

1Sep2006 | Israel M. Kirzner | 0 comments | Continued
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