by Dan Mitchell | Nov 17, 2025 | Blogs, Europe
I supported Brexit for two reasons. The European Union is a sinking ship and a vote for Brexit spares British taxpayers from being on the hook when massive bailouts occur. Leaving the European Union would give the United Kingdom more leeway to choose a...
by Dan Mitchell | Nov 2, 2025 | Big Government, Blogs, Economics, Government Spending, Taxation
About two months ago, I wrote that the United Kingdom needed to copy Javier Milei and dramatically reduce the burden of government spending. The immediate goal should be to reverse the post-pandemic spending surge of the Johnson and...
by Dan Mitchell | Oct 19, 2025 | Blogs, Economics
Back in 2022, I wrote a column about how major central banks had caused prices to spike by engaging in reckless monetary policy. I included charts showing massive expansions of central bank balance sheets by the U.S. Federal Reserve,...
by Dan Mitchell | Oct 8, 2025 | Blogs, Economics, Supply Side, Taxation
Part I of this series looked at how the capital gains tax discourages old people from selling their homes. Part II of this series looked at how a so-called luxury tax was distorting the vehicle market in Australia. For our third installment in the...
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...