09/17/2021
Today

Legal Barriers To Companies Going Public Cost Us Greatly

Ike Brannon, The Hill

Companies that delay or forgo going public grow more slowly, which means job growth and wages grow more slowly.

Global Valuations Made Almost Perfect Round Trip

Jerry Bowyer, Vident Financial

Last year, the world went through one of sharpest economic contractions in history. Markets responded in kind. And then they made the long trip back home.

Biden's Tax the Rich Plan Is Doomed to Fail

Trish Regan, American Consequences

AOC's fashion statement at the $30,000-a-plate Met Gala encapsulates the Dems' ethos: empty theatrics that spell economic doom for Americans.

The Method to Mitch McConnell's Debt-Ceiling Madness

James Antle, The Week

"They have the House, the Senate, and the presidency. It's their obligation to govern," McConnell said. "And, you know, the essence of governing is to raise the debt ceiling to cover the debt."

These Mindless Covid-19 Travel Restrictions Must Go

Jeffrey Tucker, Brownstone

On matters epidemiological, I'm a dedicated follower of Professor Sunetra Gupta of Oxford University, scientist and novelist. It was she who granted me a broad understanding of the relationship between society, freedom, and infectious disease.

The Ongoing War Against Innovation In the Rail Industry

Michael Gorman, RCM

The Biden Administration's recent executive order designed to boost competition across the economy has served to highlight the fact that this administration and Congress do not appear to be fans of freight rail. In the last six months they have tried to roll back innovations designed to improve productivity, re-regulate prices, and scuttle even minor acquisitions. The net result of the government's nonsensical assault on freight rail--if they ultimately achieve their intended goal--will be reduced rail competitiveness and more goods shipped via trucks, which would increase road congestion,...

The Billionaire Winners & Losers of Cal. Recall

Michela Tindera & Matt Durot, Forbes

Of the more than two dozen billionaire donors who made political contributions tied to Gov. Newsom's recall election, the overwhelming majority gave in favor of defeating the recall and supporting Newsom.

IMF Should Cease Writing Checks to Rogues, or to Rich

Rep. French Hill, RCM

After months of standing on the sidelines, it took the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan for the Biden Administration to finally listen. I recently led a letter with 17 Republicans on the Financial Services Committee to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen urging her to intervene to ensure that no SDRs from the IMF are made available to a Taliban-led Afghanistan. As a result, the Treasury Department announced that it is taking steps to prevent the Taliban from accessing an estimated $450 million in SDRs earmarked for Afghanistan, while the IMF confirmed that it is suspending Afghanistan's access to...

As You Plan for Your Retirement, Is a 401(k) Worth It?

Rachel Hartman, U.S. News

While 401(k) plans typically come with benefits that promote long-term saving, you might find some drawbacks as well. Understanding the potential downsides of 401(k)s, along with how to resolve or work around them, can help you better plan for your financial future.

Does Another Inflation Decade Loom?

James Butkiewicz & Burton Abrams, Examiner

Fifty years ago, President Richard Nixon's administration began a futile attempt to fight inflation. The specifics surrounding its efforts are being eerily repeated today. Consumers and policymakers should be concerned.

They're Ignoring That There's Too Little Money

Jeffrey Snider, RealClearMarkets

John Maynard Keynes was no fan of gold. Neither he nor any human being could eat it, and the amount of effort and labor expended at times to dig the metal up out of the ground seemed to him, and then his followers, weird to the point of harm. Yet, the inescapable conclusion remained: whatever costs expended they were clearly worth it. Not just to the individual or group working with picks, shovels, or eventually explosives striking it rich on discovery and successful removal. The systemic benefits are historically validated, as Keynes wrote in his General Theory: "At periods when gold is...

Housing Crisis Is the Top Concern For Urban Residents

Jerusalem Demsas, Vox

A new poll shows people are fed up with housing costs. And they want to build more housing.

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

Can I Open a Roth IRA for My Teen?

Carrie Schwab-Pomerantz, Charles Schwab

A custodial IRA can be a great way to teach a teen to save for the future—and manage money wisely in the present.

ESG: The Trillion-Dollar Fantasy

Kenneth P. Pucker, Institutional Investor

Linking ESG Investing to Planetary Impact

The Economic Risks of Pandexit

Howard Davies, Project Syndicate

Although everyone hopes that Pandexit, or the end of the COVID-19 pandemic, will come soon, the economic benefits will not be unalloyed. One plausible downside scenario is that current price pressures intensify and inflation rises further, eventually requiring a monetary response.

Why Hasn't "Black Capitalism" Worked?

Michael Corkery, New York Times

In the wake of nationwide protests, corporate America has pledged to fight racism and support Black Americans. But a similar initiative started decades ago in Rochester shows it is a promise that is difficult to sustain.

Rich People Aren't The Only Thing Going To Space

Rebecca Heilweil, Vox

The latest SpaceX mission will carry souvenirs to space that people can buy when the ship returns to Earth.

How High Amazon Wages Affect Inflation

Ryan Avent, The Bellows

About Amazon, two quick thoughts

The Housing Theory Of Everything

Sam Bowman & John Myers, Works in Progress

Western housing shortages do not just prevent many from ever affording their own home. They also drive inequality, climate change, low productivity growth, obesity, and even falling fertility rates.

5 Things You Should Know About Social Security

Brett Arends, MarketWatch

Why aren't more people talking about how to save America's retirement plan?

Biggest Bitcoin Worry Is Politicians Taking It Seriously

Binyamin Appelbaum, NYT

The biggest worry about Bitcoin is that politicians will start taking it seriously.

Environmentalists Aim to Restrain Elon Musk's SpaceX

Mark Whittington, The Hill

The big threat to SpaceX's operation in Boca Chica, Texas, and the SpaceX Starship's development comes from the environmental lobby.

A Simpler Consumption Tax Benefits Everyone

Rep. Buddy Carter, The Examiner

The Democrats in control of Congress and the presidency seek to transform our county. If they are successful in passing and signing into law the $3.5 trillion reconciliation package that is being forced through Congress via arcane budget procedures, to the objections of both Republicans and…

The Biggest of Our Many C-19 Errors

Michael Munger, Am Institute for Econ. Research

"It is becoming clear that the U.S. failure to yoke up with the private sector is the most important, but least-commented on, failure of Covid response overall." ~ Michael Munger

Fisher Investments on Election-Year Uncertainty: This, Too, Shall Pass

Fisher Investments Editorial Staff, Fisher Investments

Ken Fisher on Nixing the VIX

Fisher Investments Editorial Staff, Fisher Investments

Will Uncle Sam Force Big Tech to Break Up?

Fisher Investments Editorial Staff, Fisher Investments

Shattering the Debt Ceiling Myth

Fisher Investments Editorial Staff, Fisher Investments

Norway Got Rich From Oil. Can It Give It Up?

Mark Lewis, Christian Science Monitor

Norway, a country known for its environmentalism, owes much of its wealth to vast oil wells. On Monday, voters who are increasingly concerned about the climate crisis take to the polls in an election that could shape the future of the country's energy supply.

The Tangled History of mRNA Vaccines

Elie Dolgin, Nature

Hundreds of scientists had worked on mRNA vaccines for decades before the coronavirus pandemic brought a breakthrough.

America's Inflation Story Is Entering a New Phase

Matthew Klein, The Overshoot

Idiosyncratic price spikes due to reopening and troubles in the motor vehicle supply chain are fading or reversing. But keep an eye on housing, health care, and restaurants.

Expectations Are Everything

Charlie Bilello, Compound Advisors

This is a story about expectations.

Is It Finally Time To Get Bullish On Pot Stocks?

Jesse Felder, The Felder Report

Cannabis stocks have been absolutely hammered lately. Is it finally time to buy?

Revenge Of The Delivery Workers

Josh Dzieza, The Verge

Robbed, stabbed, beaten, underpaid, and overworked. They have had enough.

7 Undervalued Innovative Stocks

Susan Dziubinski, Morningstar

These names from the Morningstar Exponential Technologies Index are trading at 4-star levels.
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