The Government Gave Big Money To GM? Big Mistake

By |2014-01-13T16:30:50-06:00July 16th, 2012|Categories: Brian Domitrovic, Economics, Political Economy|

President Obama’s political operatives—if Vice President Joe Biden merits even that honorific—are going to the wall this campaign season on the government bailout of the automakers from a few years back. “Bin Laden is dead and General Motors is alive,” mouthed Biden ten days ago to a campaign throng. Obama himself wants Republican presidential candidate [...]

The Ideal Economy of Wilhelm Roepke

By |2020-02-28T14:59:49-06:00July 6th, 2012|Categories: Economics, Political Economy, Ralph Ancil, Wilhelm Roepke|

Wilhelm Roepke’s vision of economic and social order while offering us a “third way” forces us to choose between the path of pragmatism and pluralism on the one side, and that of loyalty to ideals that transcend the material and the utilitarian on the other side—between a capitalistic economy of fragmented special interests, technologism, and [...]

The Claims Against Gold Still Aren’t Sticking

By |2014-03-07T11:19:00-06:00July 1st, 2012|Categories: Brian Domitrovic, Economics, Gold Standard, Political Economy|

I’ve seen the gold standard blamed for a lot of things in my day—the busts of the 19th century, the travails of the farmer back when, the Great Depression—but I’d never thought I’d see the blame for the serial economic crises we’re enduring today, in 2012, hung on the gold standard. After all, isn’t the [...]

The Legacy of Wilhelm Roepke: Essays in Political Economy

By |2016-12-30T14:25:52-06:00June 28th, 2012|Categories: Economics, Political Economy, Ralph Ancil, Wilhelm Roepke|

[This essay serves as the introduction to The Legacy of Wilhelm Roepke: Essays in Political Economy series by Dr. Ancil that we will be publishing on The Imaginative Conservative. The essay was originally published in 1998.] Most folks missed an important date: June 20th, which marked the fiftieth anniversary of the “German economic miracle.” It [...]

Doing Good by Doing Well

By |2020-02-17T15:10:17-06:00June 20th, 2012|Categories: Books, Brian Domitrovic, Economics, Political Economy|Tags: |

The Pro-Growth Progressive: An Economic Strategy for Shared Prosperity, by Gene Sperling The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth, by Benjamin Friedman In the 1970s, the Republican Party was known by another nickname than the Grand Old Party. It was also known as “the tax collector of the welfare state.” Hard as it may be for [...]

It’s Time For Europe To Learn From Its Past

By |2014-01-13T17:38:05-06:00June 7th, 2012|Categories: Brian Domitrovic, Economics, Europe, Political Economy|

As NATO leaders gathered in Chicago, and as France settled in with its new socialist leadership, the word was that to get out of crisis, Europe has to choose between growth and austerity. On its face, this is a false choice. As Milton Friedman always taught, the greatest deadweight drag on economic development is government [...]

The First Principles Of Monetary Policy

By |2014-01-13T17:28:14-06:00May 30th, 2012|Categories: Books, Brian Domitrovic, Economics, Political Economy|

What is the set of principles behind the government’s conduct of monetary policy? It’s a hard question to answer. The Constitution gives the United States the power “to coin money” and “regulate the value thereof” and to fix exchange rates with respect to foreign coin. But clearly, the Federal Reserve has moved far beyond this [...]

The Third Way: Wilhelm Roepke’s Vision of Social Order

By |2021-10-09T15:25:29-05:00May 15th, 2012|Categories: Economics, Political Economy, Ralph Ancil, Wilhelm Roepke|Tags: |

Wilhelm Roepke endeavored to weave together a new view that would preserve the best of the past and the present; a vision of order which eschewed the extremes of both laissez-faire capitalism and collectivist socialism. He sought an entirely different view, a third way, which combined economic freedom with humane factors sculpted to fit the [...]

When Greeks Bear Gifts: On Economy, Philosophy and Freedom

By |2014-01-26T16:07:39-06:00May 13th, 2012|Categories: Economics, Political Economy|Tags: , , |

“To say that private men have nothing to do with government is to say that private men have nothing to do with their own happiness or misery; that people ought not to concern themselves whether they be naked or clothed, fed or starved, deceived or instructed, protected or destroyed.”—Marcus Cato The Elder “Didst thou forget [...]

The Equality Racket

By |2017-08-03T13:43:33-05:00April 30th, 2012|Categories: Economics, Equality, Pat Buchanan, Political Economy, Politics, Republicanism, Thomas Jefferson|

Our mainstream media have discovered a new issue: inequality in America. The gap between the wealthiest 1 percent and the rest of the nation is wide and growing wider. This, we are told, is intolerable. This is a deformation of American democracy that must be corrected through remedial government action. What action? The rich must [...]

It All Turns on Affection by Wendell Berry

By |2016-05-24T15:41:48-05:00April 25th, 2012|Categories: Agrarianism, Audio/Video, Economics, Political Economy, W. Winston Elliott III, Wendell Berry|

Wendell Berry In this lecture Mr. Berry challenges our assumptions about the economy, our culture and our place in the world. He also asks profound questions regarding our connections with each other and the environment. Will we seek to escape our limits and reconnect with nature, our families, our neighbors and our own [...]

The Roots of Voter Anger Go Back to 1954

By |2014-01-15T14:33:01-06:00April 20th, 2012|Categories: Economics, Pat Buchanan, Political Economy, Politics|

Sixty-nine percent of voters nationwide are angry with the policies of the federal government. To understand why, it’s important to remember that most voters believe tax cuts and government spending cuts are good for the economy. Collectively, voters have voted for politicians who promised spending cuts and tax cuts in just about every election over the [...]

The Corporation and the Market

By |2016-07-17T10:01:46-05:00April 13th, 2012|Categories: Communio, Economics, Featured, Political Economy, Stratford Caldecott|

In a recent series of articles Michael Black argued that the Corporation can only be understood theologically – further, that the modern economic crisis is a crisis of the Corporation. But what about the “Market”, which is the other big player in the economic game, along with the State and the Corporation? In economic theory the corporation [...]

Go to Top