Anthony Randazzo is the director of economic research at the Reason Foundation.
Are Demographics Destiny?
Self-interest, sex, snakes, and the making of our political preferences
Self-interest, sex, snakes, and the making of our political preferences
If we're to get even close to balancing the books, "mandatory" spending is in for deep cuts.
There is no practical, objective way for an outside observer to define another individual's best interest.
The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act failed to create lasting employment.
After decades of over spending, European nations are now being forced to adopt serious debt control measures.
Bloomberg's recently (and quite rightly) christened "Forbes 30 Under 30" superstar Josh Barro is inside my head. Or at least that's what the title of his recent post for The Ticker implies. But since he kindly didn't dig deeper in exploring the depths of our depraved "Hard-Money Advocate" Brains, let me clear up a few things.
If the mortgage interest deduction were to be phased out, who would lose out on the subsidy?
Judges in the Bay State will soon have the power to determine whether a bank can foreclose on a home or must modify the mortgage.
And why the Occupy movement should be up in arms.
There won't be a recovery until credit card and household debt levels come down.
From a long-term perspective, the Federal Reserve is doing more harm than good right now to economic stability.
Sometimes leading indicators are deceiving.
The American Enterprise Institute's Peter Wallison on how government, not greed, was the essential ingredient in the 2008 meltdown.
The headline unemployment statistics are wrong. Unemployment is higher than 8.1 percent and it will be for a while.
A laundry soap has developed as much legitimacy as the dollar to serve as currency. What's going on?
Anyone who says we are in the midst of a housing recovery is wrong.
Banks that comply with Chicago's new law may be liable for burglary, trespassing, or similar crimes.
The Federal Reserve was supposed to be a lender of last resort, not an ATM for Wall Street.
Banking fees are becoming more expensive and less transparent thanks to Wal-Mart and Sen. Dick Durbin.
Solving unemployment requires stripping away unnecessary regulations, encouraging entrepreneurs, and restructuring the American economy.
The mortgage interest deduction no longer primarily benefits the middle class
A perfect storm brews on the economic horizon while the Fed looks the other way.
Minnesota failed to fix its budget with a cigarette tax in 2005. And the state will fail if tries again.
If Congress and the president can't agree on spending cuts, they should consider ending Fannie and Freddie in exchange for a short-term increase in the debt ceiling.
Consumer advocates have their priorities backwards.
What the June 12 Turkish elections mean for the Middle East and global finance
Will the Al Qaeda leader's death impact the unfolding political battles over defense spending and the debt ceiling?
After three years of ignoring the mortgage monsters, House Democrats now think Congress is moving too fast to get rid of them.
The new mortgage servicing regulation proposals are good for regulators, bad for homeowners.
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