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Showing posts from October, 2012

A R J Turgot and Quantitative Easing

In the aftermath of the 2007 financial crisis, various central banks around the world have embarked on various policies to which they have given different names like quantitative easing, operation twist, LTRO, economic stimulus etc. etc. If you tear the linguistic veil surrounding these policies, then, you will find that, these policies are nothing but creation of money out of thin air i.e., inflation. Today's bankrupt mainstream economics profession, especially Keynesianism, believes that by simply printing truck load of money governments can get economies out of recession. They simply don't bother to understand that why there is this recession in the first place, and whatever explanations they offer are all wooly-minded and basically no explanations at all e.g., Keynesian 'animal spirit' argument. US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke is an epitome of this line of thinking and policy making. Despite repeated failures of his money printing policies, he is trying the

The Wisdom of Étienne Bonnot, Abbé de Condillac - Part II

I finished reading Condillac's Commerce and Government last night, and what a brilliant book it is. In the second part of his book Condillac discusses the evil effects of many different kinds of government restrictions on the free trade. He brilliantly uses the economic principles developed in the first part to prove his points. His arguments are so lucid and to the point that the whole book can produce hundreds of super brainy quotes. I am reproducing some of his arguments below. In chapter 4 of part II, Condillac discusses the harmful effects of 'war' on commerce. The Nobel prize winning economist [sic] Paul Krugman and his other Keynesian sidekicks are in love with war. He on camera has said that to bring the US economy out of recession, government can assume that some aliens are about to attack the planet, and to stave off this attack they start building a war economy via inflationary policies of money printing and spending. According to him, this big dose of monetar

On the Road and Airport of Serfdom...

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In last couple of weeks I came across few thing which again revealed the fact - with myriad of other things - that the political class is voting public's real master and the voting public, who erroneously think that they are the ones who are part of the government, is these political master class's slave population. The hype created around the word "democracy" is so powerful that people easily forget that there is no such thing as, government of the people, by the people and for the people! Government surely is not 'of' the people because, as I have mentioned in the past, the ruling elites come from handful of few families who are ruling this country since long, and the common man has no realistic chance whatsoever of becoming a prime minister or a president etc. The government also is not 'by' the people because voting is forced upon the populace by the political class e.g., Gujarat government explicitly made voting in local body elections compulsor

The Wisdom of Étienne Bonnot, Abbé de Condillac

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Étienne Bonnot, Abbé de Condillac (1714-1780) As I mentioned in my past writing, I am right now reading French philosopher Étienne Bonnot, Abbé de Condillac 's monumental work, Commerce and Government considered in their Mutual Relationship. Condillac originally published this book in 1776, just few months before Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations . Today the book is published by the Liberty fund and is available in both paper and hardback. As I am reading one chapter after another, I am astonished by Condillac's brilliant wisdom and his deep understanding of human nature. The original reviewers and translators, Shelagh and Walter Eltis rightly said that, the case for competitive market economics has rarely been presented more powerfully, and that there is continuing relevance in Condillac’s account of the difficulties that those who seek to liberalise economies still encounter. In the following paragraphs I want to briefly present some of the major ideas of Condillac an