All Posts Tagged With: "wartime expansion"

America’s Turning Point

The Civil War represents the simultaneous culmination and repudiation of the American Revolution. Four successive ideological surges had previously defined American politics: the radical republican movement that had spearheaded the revolution itself; the subsequent Jeffersonian movement that had arisen in reaction to the Federalist State; the Jacksonian movement that followed the War of 1812; and [...]

23Mar2011 | Jeffrey Rogers Hummel | 22 comments | Continued

Private Capital Consumption: Another Downside of the Wartime “Miracle of Production”

Although the so-called miracle of production in the United States during World War II persuaded many economists and others to accept the validity of the basic Keynesian model, this interpretation rests on important errors of commission and omission to which I have called attention over the years. (See especially the studies brought together in my [...]

24Mar2010 | Robert Higgs | 3 comments | Continued

Some Questions

I’m writing these words in the early-morning serenity of my home, two weeks after the September 11 terrorist attacks. All appears peaceful, fine, and as it was before September 11. My son, Thomas, is upstairs sleeping the sweet sleep of a child too young to comprehend what is happening. The world that he understands is [...]

1Jan2002 | Donald J. Boudreaux | 0 comments | Continued
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