by Dan Mitchell | Jan 20, 2019 | Blogs, Health Care
There’s a long and sordid history of people in Western nations acting as dupes and apologists for communism. This is especially the case with the wretchedly impoverished totalitarian outpost 90 miles south of Florida. President Obama lauded aspects of Cuba’s...
by Dan Mitchell | Jan 19, 2019 | Blogs, Economics, Tax Competition, Taxation
Like most taxpayer-supported international bureaucracies, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has a statist orientation. The Paris-based OECD is particularly bad on fiscal policy and it is infamous for its efforts to prop up Europe’s...
by Dan Mitchell | Jan 18, 2019 | Big Government, Blogs, Government Spending
I cared a lot about the 1995-96 shutdown and the 2013 shutdown because those were battles involving the size and scope of government. But I don’t have a dog in the current fight over immigration and border security. That being said, I told Neil Cavuto that there are...
by Dan Mitchell | Jan 17, 2019 | Economics, Trade
I’m for free trade because I want more jobs and more prosperity for the United States. Indeed, I’ve argued we should copy that incredible economic success of Hong Kong and Singapore by unilaterally eliminating all trade barriers. But some people complain this is akin...
by Dan Mitchell | Jan 16, 2019 | Blogs, Europe, Taxation
There’s a very strong economic argument for Brexit which is partly based on an independent United Kingdom having more leeway to adopt pro-market policies. This case for Brexit is also based – indeed, primarily based – on the fact that the European Union is a slowly...