Thursday items: Woodhill on the dollar; Forbes on housing; Tamny on California.
From Forbes, Louis Woodhill provides a tutorial on monetary issues. On Forbes, Steve Forbes critiques the Fed’s approach to rescuing the housing market. AP reports
From Forbes, Louis Woodhill provides a tutorial on monetary issues. On Forbes, Steve Forbes critiques the Fed’s approach to rescuing the housing market. AP reports
At Supply-Side Forum, Ed Breen critiques the Romney tax plan. The WSJ notes the Fed is weighing sterilized bond purchases (h/t: Larry Kudlow). Reuters reports China
From The WSJ, Bill McGurn argues Ronald Reagan looked like a sure-loser at this point in the 1980 campaign. In The WSJ, Stephen Moore reports
From Forbes, Ralph Benko revisits the sage wisdom of Arab historian Ibn Khaldun. In The WSJ, Andy Laperriere highlights the negative effects of the Fed’s quantitative
From Forbes, Richard Salsman urges Mitt Romney to strengthen his supply-side rhetoric. On NRO, Larry Kudlow suggests Romney won last week by focusing on tax cuts
The WSJ suggests Mitt Romney won in Michigan by focusing on the economy. In The WSJ, Larry Lindsey rebuts Tim Geithner’s claim that the wealthy
In Forbes, Ralph Benko chides Rick Santorum for opposing the gold standard. From Bloomberg, Ramesh Ponnuru explains small business opposition to the President’s corporate tax
From The WSJ, Rick Santorum outlines a strong economic freedom agenda, but omits dollar stability. On Forbes, John Tamny critiques Mitt Romney’s Asia policy, including
From NRO, Larry Kudlow applauds Mitt Romney for using supply-side language in his new tax plan rollout. In The WSJ, Stephen Moore reports Newt Gingrich
The WSJ applauds Mitt Romney’s tax cut proposal. On International Liberty, Dan Mitchell notes Romney’s Keynesian view of spending cuts.National Review’s editors give two cheers