09/20/2021
Today

As 100% Vaccination Rationale Sputters, Censorship Soars

Bret Swanson, RCM

A trove of internal Facebook documents obtained by The Wall Street Journal confirms what has been obvious for several years: Facebook exempts select VIPs from its content moderation rules while imposing harsh censorship on disfavored influential figures and regular joes. This evidence highlights several untested clauses of Section 230, one of which immunizes online platforms from liability if they moderate their sites in "good faith." Does good faith include some measure of neutrality and equal application of rules? We don't know because this law has never been fully adjudicated. Supreme...

100 Isn't a Magic, So Why Is It Part of the Vaccine Mandate?

Stacy Cowley, NYT

The threshold of 100 employees adds to a patchwork of small-business rules. It shows up in no other major small-business laws. The reasoning behind the number is a mystery.

Stop Vandalizing Reason: End The Worldwide Travel Bans

John Tamny, Forbes

If a virus is spreading, it's unwise to take away a right that many would take from themselves voluntarily.

Wall Street Journal Exposes Facebook's Monstrous Empire

Ryan Cooper, Week

A 'Wall Street Journal' series reveals how the platform's problems are directly produced by its operations and design

The Inevitable Failure of Socialism

Donald Boudreaux, Am. Inst. for Economic Research

"As Mises summarized the fate of a fully socialized economy, 'As soon as one gives up the conception of a freely established monetary price for goods of a higher order, rational production becomes completely impossible.'" ~ Donald J. Boudreaux

Xi Jinping Doesn't Care About Your Portfolio

Kim Iskyan, American Consequences

Ignore BlackRock's self-serving proclamation for investors to stampede into Chinese markets – Xi Jinping doesn't want (or need) your money.

Biden Should 'Follow the Science' for Econ. Wellbeing

Michael LaFaive, The Hill

It is frustrating to hear so many in Congress buy into bigger spending, higher taxes and profoundly coercive regulation.

No, Richest 1 Percent Don't Pay 40 Percent of Taxes.

Jonathan Chait, New York

A misleading conservative talking point that refuses to die.

Antitrust Is Dying Before Our Eyes. Judges Are the Reason

Brian Albrecht, RCM

The Round 1 bell of the antitrust fight just rang, and despite taking a beating, Big Tech is still standing. But the brawl is far from over, and by the looks of the way they're judging the matchup, a win for Tech in the long term seems unlikely. Last Friday, a federal judge handed down decisions on Epic Games' lawsuit against Apple (go here for a blow-by-blow). The judge ruled in Apple's favor on nine out of ten counts. That might seem like a win for Big Tech (9/10 can't be bad, right?), but the tenth count makes all the difference. Under California law, the judge forced Apple not to enforce...

Stagflation Rocked Economy Before. Is it Coming Back?

Julia Horowitz, CNN

Mention the word "stagflation" to someone who followed the economy in the 1970s, and you can expect a strong reaction.

Still-Young Crypto Will Soar, If the SEC Allows It

Charles Gasparino, New York Post

With the cryptocurrency market rising, Securities and Exchange Commission boss Gary Gensler wants to push it away by adding too much red tape for crypto businesses, Charles Gasparino writes.

Headlines Overstate Impact of Power Cost Spike

Market Minder, Fisher Investments

Spiking power costs are hitting factories, but the economic impact should be smaller than headlines suggest.

Is the Treasury Bond Market About to Wake Up?

Kathy Jones, Charles Schwab

The bond market has been in hibernation for months, and investors may have become complacent about risks.

Payback Time With a Potential Payoff

Jeffrey Kleintop, Charles Schwab

A gradual slowing of stimulus heralds a potential drop for the world's stock markets, but the evidence suggests a possibility for a positive outcome.

The Global Supply Chain & Path Of Inflation

macromon, Global Macro Monitor

As summer fades, the global economy is downshifting from months of super-charged growth, pumped up by unprecedented fiscal and monetary policy measures. Growth will continue throughout the year but at a sharply decelerating rate, and inflation will remain stubbornly high.

Expecting Inflation: The Case of the 1950s

Employ America, Medium

The combination of macroeconomic data-points and policy responses observed in the 1950s would suggest — under models of the 1970s — that runaway inflation was imminent. Instead, inflationary pressures quickly resolved themselves as the economic situation changed and new capacity was built out.

Household Formation Is Driving Housing Demand

Bill McBride, Calculated Risk

Some preliminary data and analysis

U.S. States Spending the Most on Welfare

Marko Csokasi, Commodity.com

Find out which 50 US states spend the most money on welfare. We also cover statistics like local spend and cash assistance, and vendor funds.

How Bad is the Labor Shortage in Every State?

Editors, CareerCloud

With more than 10 million job openings reported by the federal government and almost 9 million people jobless, the simple math would seem to indicate there's a job for every person. But businesses across the country are facing a huge labor shortage. Some businesses have changed their hours because t

What If Housing Was Built More Like Cars?

Candace Jackson, New York Times

The pandemic put a general crimp in housing construction, but made a California factory that churns out prefabricated housing extra busy.

The Complicated Legacy of the "Chicago Boys"

Daniel Matamala, ProMarket

How did a group of University of Chicago-trained economists manage to turn Chile into the cradle of neoliberalism?

V.A. Loans Are a Lifeline For Vets, But With a Catch

Debra Kamin, NY Times

The mortgages have helped millions of soldiers buy homes, but they carry a mostly unfair stigma that has kept many families out of today's competitive market.

Where Has All the QE Money Gone?

Robert Skidelsky, Project Syndicate

Quantitative easing risks generating its own boom-and-bust cycles, and can thus be seen as an example of state-created financial instability. Governments must now abandon the fiction that central banks create money independently from government, and must themselves spend the money created at their behest.

The $700 Billion Gimmick In Biden's Tax Plan

Eric Boehm, Reason

Biden's plan will raise taxes on individuals earning as little as $30,000 annually by 2027, but that's just a trick to make the overall cost of the bill look lower than it really is.

Is Evergrande China's Lehman Moment?

Matt Egan, CNN Business

The implosion of Lehman Brothers, 13 years ago this week, showed how the collapse of a single entity can send shockwaves around the world.

7 Wide-Moat Stocks in Healthcare to Buy

Jakir Hossain, Morningstar

We think the market is over-reacting to new drug pricing proposals, creating a buying opportunity.

Can The Fed Control Inflation With High Debt Levels?

John H. Cochrane, PS

Generally speaking, inflation can be stabilized with little recession if people believe the necessary policy tightening will be seen through, rather than abandoned at the first signs of pain. Unfortunately, US economic authorities have done little to inspire such confidence.

Democrats Want A Little SALT For The Rich

Steve Malanga, City Journal

Democrats press the president to reinstate a tax break for the wealthy.

A Much Underappreciated Danger of Investing

Amy Arnott, Morningstar

Sequence-of-returns risk matters for both retirees and savers. Here's why.

They Paved the Port & Put up a Parking Lot

Charles de Trenck, Evergreen Gavekal

Shortages are the biggest theme right now.

The Psychology of Betting Big and Losing it All

Ben Carlson, AWOCS

Norm Macdonald and others who bet big and lose big.

Nurses Are Burned Out & Quitting

Rayna M Letourneau, The Conversation

Long-term solutions to the nursing shortage call for changes that value nurses and offer them a safe place to work.

The Panic Series (Pt. III) - 1825

Jamie Catherwood, Investor Amnesia

Wars are expensive.
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