BWR on the Cain and Gingrich surge.
Reprinted courtesy of Bretton Woods Research: Cain & Gingrich: Megaliths of the Tea Party Movement? Oct 26 2011 By Slate… [The front-runner status of businessman Herman
Reprinted courtesy of Bretton Woods Research: Cain & Gingrich: Megaliths of the Tea Party Movement? Oct 26 2011 By Slate… [The front-runner status of businessman Herman
From The WSJ, Allan Metzler dissects the Keynesian model’s flaws. Cato Journal features several good articles on monetary policy, including from David Malpass, Steve Hanke,
From The WSJ, Fr. Robert Sirico explains the Vatican’s recent linking of the current economic crisis to Bretton Woods’ breakdown. At Forbes, Louis Woodhill compares
From Globe Asia, Steve Hanke argues inflation targeting is a flawed analytical tool. At Alhambra Investments, John L. Chapman suggests the economy can’t be fixed
From Forbes, Brian Domitrovic counters the claim that 1933-37 were America’s strongest growth years. KosmosOnline interviews Domitrovic on his book, Econclasts: The Rebels Who Sparked
From Forbes, John Tamny suggests President Obama can’t win if Republicans advocate sound money. In The WSJ, Stephen Moore reports details of the Perry flat
In The WSJ, Kim Strassel suggests Mitt Romney suffers “guilty Republican syndrome.” On Mallory Factor’s website, John Tamny discusses financial and monetary reform. At Asia
From Forbes, Brian Domitrovic explains that monetary reform is President Reagan’s crucial unfinished business. In The WSJ, US Rep Ron Paul (TX) blames the Federal
In The WSJ, Art Laffer supports Herman Cain’s 9-9-9 plan. At Bloomberg, National Review’s Ramesh Ponnuru critiques Cain’s plan. The NY Sun chides the GOP
At Forbes, Charles Kadlec supports Herman Cain. In The WSJ, Paul Gigot suggests the sales tax makes the 9-9-9 plan vulnerable. The Hill reports Stephen