Subjectivism is the philosophy that reality is what we perceive to be real and that no underlying, true reality exists independent of human perception. In other words, the nature of reality for an individual person is dependent on that individual's own consciousness. It follows that each person experiences...
Posted to
Hera
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Ron Hera
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Sun, Jul 1 2012
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Filed under: Federal reserve, Euro, Alan Greenspan, U.S. dollar, gold standard, John Maynard Keynes, British pound, European Central Bank, Japanese yen, counterparty, Subjectivism. Objectivism, Aynd Rand, moral hazard, price stability, central banking, confidence, economic volatility, economic rent seeking, Bank of England, Bank of Japan, currency debasement, fiat money, Austrian economics, François-Marie Arouet de Voltaire
Labor Economics #1 - Sticky Wages by Alex Merced The next few posts I'll be writing will be a series on some aspects of labor economics which will mainly center around wages and upward mobility. In this initial part of the series I'm going to address one of the main Keynesian buzzwords, "Sticky...