In today's post, Daniel Lacalle looks at the problems plaguing the eurozone. He says their major problems aren't China, rate hikes, or the Ukraine war. Instead, he demonstrates that the curse of the eurozone is central planning. Subsidizing obsolete sectors and zombie firms, bloated government spending, and high taxes. ~Tim McMahon, editor The Eurozone Disaster: Between Stagnation and Stagflation The eurozone economy is more than weak. It is in deep contraction, and the data is staggering. The eurozone manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI), compiled by S&P Global, fell to a three-month low of 43.1 in October, the sixteenth consecutive month of contraction. However, … [Read more...]
Do Private Corporations Cause Inflation?
We often hear the cry that those greedy corporations are raising prices and causing inflation. If they would only bite the bullet and stop raising prices all would be well. They even have a name for it "greedflation". As recently as April 27th 2023, Bloomberg published an article entitled ECB (The European Central Bank) Wakes Up to Greedflation as Key Culprit in Price Struggle. The article tells us that French politician and President of the European Central Bank Christine Lagarde blames "corporate margins" for inflation. Today's article looks at the problems with that view. ~Tim McMahon, editor Private Corporations Don't Cause Price Inflation. Governments Do. By Daniel … [Read more...]
The Effects of Raising the Debt Ceiling
In this article, Professor Daniel Lacalle examines the relationship between Federal debt and crony capitalism. ~Tim McMahon, editor. Key Facts: Congress has raised the debt ceiling 78 times since 1960 US debt to GDP is 123.4% 8% of the budget goes to pay interest Discretionary spending is around 30% of the budget Fiscal year 2023 outlays = $5.9 trillion The United States budget is unsustainable More Federal Debt Means More Taxes, Less Growth, and Weaker Real Wages By Professor Daniel Lacalle Since 1960, Congress has raised the debt ceiling 78 times, according to Bloomberg. The process of increasing the debt limit has become so regular that markets barely worry … [Read more...]