Social Security Is Running Toward Insolvency
Despite a few encouraging analyses, the numbers just don't add up.
Despite a few encouraging analyses, the numbers just don't add up.
The IRS isn’t just a powerful federal agency, it’s a weapon against the public.
Several studies have found that the vast majority of costs incurred by increased corporate taxes are passed along to workers in the form of lower wages.
Congress should stop preventing the private sector from making its own coins.
Some want to solve the problem with subsidies for gas, housing, child care, and more. That only risks greater stagnation.
The president's anticipated executive order stopped short of feared regulations but suggests federal unease with uncontrolled development.
We must face the reality that the debt does matter.
The alcohol sector has seen more than 6,000 new entrants, but the Treasury still thinks it has an antitrust problem.
"Greed is constant. If it's greed, how do we explain prices falling?"
There are five instances of the Treasury defaulting on the debt.
The pick lends ammunition to those who have warned of a slippery slope toward socialism.
Imposing a wealth tax may not even be among the enumerated powers of Congress.
The push for central bank digital currencies is an assault on privacy and freedom.
The president says the IRS needs just two bits of information: all the money that goes into your bank account, and all the money that comes out.
What if every one of your noncash financial transactions was automatically reported to a beefed-up, audit-hungry IRS?
In comments to The New York Times Magazine published this week, the new treasury secretary says free trade has been "so negative" for "a large share of the population." That's just wrong.
By lowering the “travel rule” threshold to $250, the government could access more of our financial data.
Why does media coverage conclude the problem is that the government hasn’t done a good enough job of spying?
Plus: Gun groups for black Americans are growing, a promising new study on opening schools, and more...
As much as $1.4 billion might have been paid to deceased Americans. The IRS says that money must be returned.
The $349 billion loan program is meant to help small companies hit hard by social distancing.
Unclear terms, unrealistic loan forgiveness, a site unprepared for launch, and a bottomless demand for cash
The extension allows some individuals and businesses to keep more of their money for three extra months at a time when millions of Americans are likely to be out of work and struggling to make ends meet.
Actually, it's a bailout.
Plus: Fashion versus the police state, a truce in the Kansas-Missouri border war, and more....
Don't worry about China's currency manipulation. It only hurts China's own people, and benefits American consumers and businesses.
Stocks plunge as China cuts off purchases of American agricultural goods, U.S. responds by labeling China a "currency manipulator" because the Chinese government is no longer artificially propping up the yuan.
In a new report, the Treasury Department declares it will begin scrutinizing any nation that runs a bilateral trade imbalance of more than $40 billion with the United States
Why do we need the government to do that in the first place?
Of course, June's deficit represents just a small fraction of our overall national debt.
Producers prohibited from sharing information with consumers about the year their apples were harvested.
Allison wants to repeal all Dodd-Frank regulations, which didn't fix the problem of banks being "too big to fail."
The Iowa congressman called the move to replace Andrew Jackson "liberal activism" on the part of President Obama.
Alexander Hamilton, meanwhile, will stay on the $10 note.
California's participation in federal program threatened just by calling for better due process.
What part of free speech don't they understand?
Cash-on-hand will be $30 billion
Has accused the IRS of obstructing congressional investigations
Administration officials were aware of problems prior to election
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