Thursday items: Reynolds on tax rates; Woodhill on Keynesian claims; Tamny on Zandi.
In a must-read from The WSJ, Alan Reynolds demolishes tax increase arguments. At Forbes, Louis Woodhill responds to Keynesian claims. On The Kudlow Report, Dan
In a must-read from The WSJ, Alan Reynolds demolishes tax increase arguments. At Forbes, Louis Woodhill responds to Keynesian claims. On The Kudlow Report, Dan
From NRO, Larry Kudlow predicts the stock market will stabilize. At Asia Times, David Goldman recommends expelling Greece from the eurozone. On Politico, Ben Smith
On Forbes, Brian Domitrovic outlines ten mistakes to avoid under a gold standard. At Forbes, Ralph Benko proposes a fusion of Robert Mundell and John
From RCM, Louis Woodhill explains why Tim Pawlenty is right about five percent annual growth. The NY Sun congratulates Pawlenty for his pro-growth message but
From Forbes, Nathan Lewis has an astounding account of how hyperinflationary Germany relinked its currency to gold. At IBD, Alan Reynolds counters Paul Krugman’s claim
In The American Spectator, Lew Lehrman suggests the choice of monetary policy is between Robert Mundell’s idea for an exchange rate peg between the dollar
From Forbes, Louis Woodhill contrasts the current recovery with the Reagan Boom and notes the weak dollar as a factor. In The WSJ, Martin Feldstein
From Forbes, Brian Domitrovic contextualizes the current recovery’s extraordinarily slow growth. On RCM, John Tamny argues the weak dollar is responsible for the economy’s weakness.
From Forbes, Lawrence Hunter disputes Robert Mundell’s call for fixing the euro/dollar exchange rate. In The Washington Times, Sol Sanders suggests Europe’s economic diversity means
From Forbes, David Malpass explains the weak dollar is sending capital overseas. On RCM, Larry Kudlow suggests the President’s policies are responsible for the slow