Perhaps the greatest modern champion of central economic planning was the 20th century English economist John Maynard Keynes. Keynes, who was a political socialist and for a time a central banker, advocated the idea that the government should play a large, active role in the economy. Among the consequences...
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Hera
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Ron Hera
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Sun, Jul 1 2012
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Filed under: Federal reserve, GDP, OTC derivatives, CFTC, SEC, Gross Domestic Product, Securities and Exchange Commission, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, collateralized debt obligations, Obamacare, Pfizer, Commodities and Futures Trading Commission, Keynesian economics, Wells Fargo, Food and Drug Administration, GlaxoSmithKline, Lockheed Martin, Bank of America, General Dynamics, MBS, federal government debt, Rahn curve, CDOs, mortgage backed securities, Leviathan, J.P. Morgan Chase, FDA, Monsanto, Archer Daniels Midland, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, over the counter derivatives, John Maynard Keynes, Johnson & Johnson, Behemoth, Boeing, Citigroup, Ziz
Free Market Regulation Explained by Alex Merced Everyone always assumes that as free marketers that we advocate there be no regulations at all, but the truth is we think there should be no government monopolies of regulation or violence used in enforcing it. Then the response always is, if the government...
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Alex Merced
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Sun, Apr 25 2010
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Filed under: Private Sector, FINRA, Entertainment, Federal Reserve, Consequence, Regulation, SIPC, Individualism, Magazines, Rating Agencies, Free Market, SEC, Reviews, FDIC, Collectivism