Trump Trade Speech Undermines Beleaguered Free Trade Consensus
Free trade benefits all participants.
Free trade benefits all participants.
The U.S. may have won the cold war, but the ideological struggle never ended.
The Trump administration should look at America's participation in other U.N. offshoots too.
Economic growth, capitalism, improves standards of living, health, life expectancy.
Genetically-engineered hens, embryo surgeries, and robot farmers.
Angela Merkel will likely have to form a coalition with a free-market party and an environmentalist one.
Venezuelan grocery stores have products shoppers don't want.
Communism's death toll overshadows other contemporary human cruelty.
The cost of Africa's refusal to grow GMO crops are incredible in human health and economic terms.
The EU can be quite protectionist, particularly vis a vis its eastern members.
Imperialism is not the highest stage of capitalism, as Karl Marx claimed.
Nostalgic accounts of life under communism avoid the broader perspective of widespread oppression and economic failure.
But not a desire for greater fairness.
Let them eat chlorine-washed chicken.
Let them eat chlorine-washed chicken.
Economic dynamism and concomitant abundance are best served by a good dollop of freedom, which, alas, we are in the process of slowly losing.
Coming to terms with one's own delusions is a difficult task.
The long-ruling African National Congress is on its way to losing power, but could go with the "Zimbabwe option."
Socialism and big government remain popular, particularly among young people.
Lack of single payer hasn't seemed to hinder superior progress made in terms of life expectancy gains in the U.S. since UN records start in 1960.
In general, the world is becoming a more peaceful place as the percentage of the total labor force represented by armed forces personnel declines.
Fortunately, even if conditions don't improve, economic freedom (and consequently growth) benefits not only the people who have it, but also people who don't.
Nigeria will have a higher population than the U.S. by mid-century, when one in four people on Earth will live in Africa.
They paper over the fact that America enjoys extraordinary latitude when choosing how to interact with the rest of the world.
The consequences of France's presidential election, irrespective of the final results, will be less dramatic than many people think.
How much more developed would Russia be if it didn't suffer from nearly a century of communism?
The historical evidence in favor of "free minds and free markets," is there for everyone to see.
Nicolas Maduro's Venezuela is one place where Friedrich Hayek's most dire warnings remain relevant.
Over the last decade, GDP per person and life expectancy are up around the world while infant mortality and undernourished rates are down.
An overcommitment to renewables has already had negative consequences.
The public thinks so, and with freer countries having higher incomes, longer lifespans and lower rates of infant mortality, why wouldn't they?
The U.S. has successfully decoupled economic growth and energy demand.
Zambia sees Zimbabwe's economic missteps as South Africa looks to repeat them.
Jacob Zuma promising accelerated "land reform."
Brexit is creating the opportunity for a lot of progress in the United Kingdom.
The World Bank recently updated the "Pink Sheet."
The population doomsayer's back!
Considering Russia's economic problems, the country may not be able to sustain its aggressive international posturing indefinitely.
Despite airplane crashes like the one in the Black Sea that grab headlines, air travel is getting better.
Her resignation cannot come too soon.