Tuesday items: Kadlec on JP Morgan; Benko on sound money; Romney on tax cuts.
From Forbes, Charles Kadlec explains how the market disciplined JP Morgan. At Forbes, Ralph Benko argues sound money is needed for the economy to boom. On
From Forbes, Charles Kadlec explains how the market disciplined JP Morgan. At Forbes, Ralph Benko argues sound money is needed for the economy to boom. On
From Econlog, David Henderson rebuts Paul Krugman’s claim that Reaganomics was explained by the Keynesian economic model. NASDAQ reports Robert Mundell handicapping a Greek euro exit
From The WSJ, Harvey Golub advocates tax reform. At Forbes, Peter Ferrara critiques the President’s spending record. On Fox Business News, Steve Forbes suggests the
From Forbes, Charles Kadlec sees tightening money slowing growth. At NRO, Larry Kudlow suggests the dollar’s rise against the euro is creating deflationary headwinds for
From TGSN, Ralph Benko recounts the history of Republican presidential platforms that included a gold money plank and wonders about 2012. At International Liberty, Dan
From Forbes, Brian Domitrovic rebuts Howard Gold’s attack on supply-side economics by noting the centrality of stable money to the policy mix. In The WSJ,
From Forbes, John Tamny critiques Ramesh Ponnuru for supporting monetarism. On NRO, Ponnuru responds. At PJ Media, David Goldman opposes Germany’s bailout of Spain. On
From The Financial Post (Canada), supply-side guru Robert Mundell sees a bright future for the euro, but blames excessive spending and unstable exchange rates for
From Forbes, Steve Forbes urges reading of Nathan Lewis’ Gold: The Once and Future Money. On NRO, Larry Kudlow links Wednesday’s Dow surge to Scott
From TGSN, Lew Lehrman argues the gold standard would raise savings and restore economic growth and full employment. In The WSJ, Stephen Moore suggests the country