Archive for the ‘Blog’ Category

Judge Andrew Napolitano on Debt and Private Pensions


Wednesday January 5th, 2011   •   Posted by Emily Skarbek at 2:44pm PST   •   0 Comments

On Fox Business News, Judge Andrew Napolitano, host of “Freedom Watch,” discusses the record-breaking national debt of more than $14 trillion, encouraging Congress to say no to more spending. And below (at the 11:00 minute mark) the Judge talks with economics professor Dan D’Amico about the possibility of government seizing private retirement and pension…
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U.S. National Debt Hits New Record High of $14 Trillion


Tuesday January 4th, 2011   •   Posted by David Theroux at 8:36pm PST   •   2 Comments

According to CBS News, on the last day of 2010 the U.S. National Debt hit a record level of more than $14 trillion or $14,025,215,218,708.52, up from $9 trillion just over three years ago and a whopping 55% increase since just before 2008. As the report states: It took just 7 months for the…
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Your Paycheck in 2011


Tuesday January 4th, 2011   •   Posted by Craig Eyermann at 10:37am PST   •   0 Comments

Compared to how January 2011 might have played out, where every taxpayer in the United States would have received a smaller paycheck if the 111th U.S. Congress hadn’t acted to extend the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts, the Congress’ late action to extend those tax rates for another two years, while also throwing in…
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To Reduce U.S. Debt, Cut at Least 85% of Federal Government Spending


Saturday January 1st, 2011   •   Posted by David Theroux at 3:47pm PST   •   8 Comments

In an article in the Wall Street Journal, “The Right Way to Balance the Budget,” Andrew Biggs, Kevin Hassett and Matt Jensen report that new research of 21 countries over the past 37 years shows that to reduce government debt, a major reduction of spending must be adopted instead of higher taxes. On average,…
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New York City Government Employee Unions Snarl Blizzard Cleanup to Protest Budget Cuts?


Thursday December 30th, 2010   •   Posted by David Theroux at 11:41pm PST   •   0 Comments

In a stunning article in the New York Post, “Sanitation Department’s slow snow cleanup was a budget protest,” Sally Goldenberg, Larry Celona and Josh Margolin report that “a group of guilt-ridden sanitation workers” have now confessed that government union leaders in New York City “ordered their drivers to snarl the blizzard cleanup to protest…
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The Lessons of History


Thursday December 30th, 2010   •   Posted by Craig Eyermann at 8:15am PST   •   2 Comments

Now that we’re almost to the end of the year, where many look back at the previous twelve months to find lessons to learn and apply in making their New Year’s resolutions, what can we learn from history where the U.S. national debt is involved? Quite a lot actually, as Arnold Kling recently did…
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Housing Regulation, Taxation and Population Growth


Wednesday December 29th, 2010   •   Posted by Emily Skarbek at 10:57am PST   •   0 Comments

In a great post over at Economix, Ed Glaeser makes the point that the absence of disastrous housing regulation explains why states like Arizona and Texas have the highest growth rates in population. “The future shape of America is being driven not by quality of life or economic success but by the obscure rules…
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And Now a Bailout for the U.S. Postal Service?


Monday December 27th, 2010   •   Posted by David Theroux at 6:16pm PST   •   0 Comments

Angela Greiling Keane reports in a recent article at Bloomberg Businessweek, “A Bailout for the U.S. Postal Service?”, that the U.S. Postal Service’s costs “will exceed revenue by $2.7 billion, even after borrowing $3 billion from the U.S. Treasury, the annual legal limit. Total debt, now $12 billion, by law can’t exceed $15 billion….
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Closing the Books on the Worst Congress


Sunday December 26th, 2010   •   Posted by David Theroux at 8:37pm PST   •   1 Comment

In a new editorial in the Washington Examiner, “Closing the books on the worst Congress,” the 111th U.S. Congress is described as “reckless and destructive.” This is the Congress that passed Obamacare, against the wishes of a substantial majority of the public, on Christmas Eve of last year. In the dead of night, Democratic…
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The Debt-Inflation Cycle and the Global Financial Crisis


Wednesday December 22nd, 2010   •   Posted by Emily Skarbek at 10:16am PST   •   2 Comments

Is the title of a new working paper by Peter Boettke and Chris Coyne of George Mason University. The abstract of the paper reads: Writing over 230 years ago, Adam Smith noted the ‘juggling trick’ whereby governments hide the extent of their public debt through ‘pretend payments.’ As the fiscal crises around the world…
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