Biden Freezes Student Loans after Courts Stop SAVE Plan
Biden Freezes Student Loans after Courts Stop SAVE Plan
For the last few years at FEE and National Review, I’ve spent quite a bit of energy talking about student loan forgiveness. The reason for my persistence on this topic is that the era of Covid policy has completely turned the tables on how student loans are managed. Before Covid, student loan policies were relatively...
By Peter Jacobsen
New lesson in Philosophy of Free Enterprise online course explores ‘civil society’
New lesson in Philosophy of Free Enterprise online course explores ‘civil society’
Northwood University is kicking off the new school year with a fresh lesson in the Philosophy of Free Enterprise, a free online course for anyone interested learning about the importance of freedom and free-market economics. “Northwood University is committed to deepening the understanding of free-market principles and their vital role in civil society. The latest...
By Kate Hessling
This is the 2024 Northwood University Freedom Seminar Lineup
This is the 2024 Northwood University Freedom Seminar Lineup
The Northwood University Freedom Seminar kicks off this fall with the theme “Decision 2024: The Economic Issues of the U.S. Election.” “The Freedom Seminar is an annual series of lectures on the free enterprise system led by distinguished experts in business, government, and academia,” explained Dr. Dale Matcheck, Chair of Northwood’s Economics program. “This year,...
By Kate Hessling
Why Are There So Few Big City Walmarts?
Why Are There So Few Big City Walmarts?
Big-box stores have long been an integral part of U.S. suburban life, offering better deals and selection. But they’re less common in cities. There is still no Walmart in New York, Boston, Detroit, San Francisco or Seattle. In the 2010s, Walmart experimented with a smaller-scale model targeted at urban neighborhoods, but the results have been...
By Scott Beyer
A Recession the Yield Curve Predicted (Again)
A Recession the Yield Curve Predicted (Again)
There’s strong and growing evidence that the “next” US recession has begun — or will begin soon. Of course, many economists will remain unsure about it, having not forecasted it, or because they refuse to forecast, or because they don’t believe something’s real until it passes them by (perhaps not even then). Similarly tardy will...
Has Capitalism Come at the Expense of the Poor?
Has Capitalism Come at the Expense of the Poor?
Perhaps the most amazing fact in all of economic history is the unprecedented rise in wealth per person that has taken place in the last two centuries, following the Industrial Revolution. But it remains a widespread belief that these fruits of capitalism have only benefited the rich at the expense of the poor. This perspective...
By Saul Zimet
The United States Has Always Been a Melting Pot
The United States Has Always Been a Melting Pot
Vice-Presidential candidate J.D. Vance has been widely criticized for his gratuitous advice to American women on childbirth. The criticism can be extended to the broader goal of Vance and other isolationists, which is to defend American culture from past and future foreign influences. Their intent to purify culture from things foreign demonstrates extreme ignorance of...
By Thomas J. Grennes
Competing Narratives on Real Wages
Competing Narratives on Real Wages
Considering that it is an election year, it is perhaps unsurprising that there are two competing narratives on the current state of real (i.e., inflation-adjusted) wages. Democrats point out that, even after adjusting for inflation, wages are now higher than they were prior to the pandemic. Republicans, in contrast, note that real wages have declined...
By William J. Luther
Consumers, Capitalism, and Klondike Bars
Consumers, Capitalism, and Klondike Bars
The principle of free exchange—also known as the trader principle—is one of the most important aspects of a market economy, and perhaps no brand exemplifies it better than the Klondike Bar. For over a century, a chocolate covered block of ice cream has been delighting customers and, since the 1980s, the brand has been asking:...
By Kimberlee Josephson
Why Are Fast Food Prices So High?
Why Are Fast Food Prices So High?
I recently drove to the local KFC and ordered a 12-piece meal to go. The price was just under $50 (tax included). Fortunately, I had a coupon that saved me some money, but I’d be lying if I said I didn’t feel some sticker shock. Inflation has of course been a major issue in recent...
By Jonathan Miltimore
How Road Design Makes Housing More Expensive
How Road Design Makes Housing More Expensive
Housing construction in America often occurs in subdivisions. Whether located in urban infill contexts or suburban greenfields (more often the case), these are standalone private developments with their own internal infrastructure. Seldom do they have real autonomy, though. They’re still subject to single-family zoning and other land-use regulations, which make many such communities exclusive. And...
By Scott Beyer
$35 Trillion — and Counting
$35 Trillion — and Counting
Barely halfway through 2024, the rapidly rising tower of US public debt has reached yet another milestone. Two hundred and six days after reaching $34 trillion, America’s debt pile has reached $35 trillion. To put this in perspective, the debt at the end of World War II was about $259 billion, making the current debt...
By Peter C. Earle
How Regulations Contributed to the CrowdStrike Fiasco
How Regulations Contributed to the CrowdStrike Fiasco
On July 19th, something peculiar struck workers and consumers around the world. A global computer outage brought many industries to a sudden halt. Employees at airports, financial institutions, and other businesses showed up to work only to find that they had no access to company systems. The fallout of the outage was huge. Experts estimate...
By Peter Jacobsen
Where Will the New Jobs Come From?
Where Will the New Jobs Come From?
Humans, it seems, are always on the verge of obsolescence. There is no innovation without opposition from two groups: people who lose their jobs and people who think about mass unemployment and ask, “Where will the new jobs come from?” The devil is in the details, but at least in principle, redistribution should be able...
By Art Carden