Economy | The Daily Reckoning
- Is the US a nation of dependents?
When too many people and companies depend on government subsidies, Bonner writes, your society consumes more wealth than it produces.
- Welfare. Old elephants. And the entitlement cliff.
Welfare states depend on growth to fuel their spending. But when growth slows to a crawl....
- Is there such a thing as too much energy?
Government moves energy from the future to the past, Bonner writes, from what will be to what used to be, and finally, to what will be no more.
- The ideal economy: How do we get what we really want?
In a completely free market, we can assume people will get what they want, or at least what they deserve, Bonner writes.
- Hitler and the false lure of more is better
Nazi Germany's economy was not a central planning success, it was a disaster. Is there a lesson for today?
- Are economists useful anymore?
Modern economists – especially the famous ones – close their eyes to how an economy actually works, focusing instead on a make-believe world of numbers and theories, with little connection to the world in which most people live.
- Defense spending and the declining 'bang' for the buck
Does the US really need to spend more money on an M1 tank that won't be a part of the next war?
- Mario Draghi's big bazooka: a weapon, not a cure
Mario Draghi's vow to do 'whatever it takes' to save the euro isn't an empty promise. But his new powers to act with overwhelming force at the central bank won't solve the eurozone's crisis.
- Falling retail sales could spell recession
It looks like the US economy is headed into another recession. That’s what usually happens when retail sales go down for three months in a row.
- France's debt crisis could doom the European Union
France's economy is hanging by a thread – and French President Hollande is reaching for the scissors.
- On the prowl for insight into economists
The folks over at The Daily Reckoning are on a mission. Their treasure? Insight. Insight into why it is that the smartest economists in the world are so stupid. Incidentally, they hope to understand why the GDP is such a fraudulent measure of prosperity
- A crisis veiled in public spectacle
Over the course of three odd decades, billions of dollars were lent to people who shouldn’t have been allowed to borrow lunch money. And now, there are losses in the trillions. The real question is, will the market finally be allowed to correct itself?
- Did the Feds rig the system?
Bill Bonner and the analysts over at The Daily Reckoning are feeling fairly vindicated this week. They have been investigating how the federal government may have rigged the system over the past 30 years, directing funds to help the rich get richer.
- How to 'contain the depression?' More credit, economists claim
Bill Bonner is not too pleased with economists right now. In his latest post he claims that as a result of their conceits and delusions, trillions of dollars have been clipped from the world’s GDP, billions of people are poorer and their lives shorter.
- Why many in Ukraine oppose a ‘land for peace’ formula to end the war
- Howard University hoped to make history. Now it’s ready for a different role.
- Cover StoryWomen in construction find solidarity as ‘sisters in the brotherhood’
- Facing Trump 2.0, Palestinians voice rising concern: What’s our plan?
- Matt Gaetz drops bid for attorney general, the first setback for Trump’s presidency