Category Archives: the Fed

Trading Spaces: America’s Place in Tomorrow’s Economy

While the readers of this blog have continued their search for solid ground, Americans everywhere are struggling to maintain a foothold against the backsliding currency crisis as fallout from the asset bubble foments a nuclear winter of frozen credit and … Continue reading

Posted in Austrian school, China, classical liberal, Crash Proof, currency pegs, deflation, dollar, Economics in One Lesson, Federal Reserve, foreign policy, Henry Hazlitt, inflation, libertarian, Ludwig von Mises, manufacturing economy, monetary policy, Paul Krugman, Peter Schiff, Public Square, RMB, Ron Paul, service economy, the Fed, Thomas Woods, trade deficit, Yuan | Leave a comment

Your Government Loves Inflation, and So Should You!

It’s an exciting time to be alive, boys and girls.  Our economy is in trouble and it’s our generation’s job to figure it all out before things get (really) nasty.  Luckily for you, here at Search for Solid Ground we … Continue reading

Posted in Austrian school, classical liberal, CPI, deflation, dollar, Federal Reserve, gold, inflation, libertarian, monetary policy, PCE, PPI, Public Square, quantitative easing, the Fed | Leave a comment

Fed Up with the Meltdown

Last time I checked, the debate on the efficacy of price controls was pretty much a done deal (remember these guys?).  After trying it out in the ‘30s, we realized that central planning just doesn’t compare to the efficiency of … Continue reading

Posted in Austrian school, Ben Bernanke, Bernanke, classical liberal, Constitution, dollar, Federal Reserve, inflation, Keynesian, libertarian, monetary policy, Op-Ed, Public Square, quantitative easing, the Fed | 4 Comments