by Dan Mitchell | Oct 1, 2025 | Big Government, Blogs
In 2013, during a political squabble over a previous government shutdown, here’s some of what I wrote. …in my libertarian fantasy world, we leave it closed. Or at least we never bother to reopen counterproductive bureaucracies such as the Department of...
by Dan Mitchell | Sep 30, 2025 | Blogs, Economics, Supply Side, Taxation
There are several visual ways of helping people understand how fiscal policy (and especially marginal tax rates) can change behavior. The philoso-raptor meme. The questioning worker. Supply-and-demand curves. The Wizard-of-Id parody. To augment these examples,...
by Dan Mitchell | Sep 29, 2025 | Blogs, Economics
Earlier this month, shortly after some depressing results in a regional election in Argentina, I was interviewed by Patrick Young. In this clip, I express concern Argentine voters will backslide to Peronism. As one might expect, some people are...
by Dan Mitchell | Sep 28, 2025 | Blogs, Economics, Taxation
I often explain that the Laffer Curve does not mean that tax increases result in less revenue. In the vast majority of cases, politicians will get more money if they raise tax rates. What the Laffer Curve explains is that they probably won’t...
by Dan Mitchell | Sep 27, 2025 | Big Government, Blogs, Government Spending
I’ve repeatedly written about the likelihood of another European fiscal crisis (see here, here, here, and here), and I’ve specifically speculated that Italy will be the first domino (see here, here, here, here, here,...