John Tamny

John Tamny is Founder and President of the Parkview Institute, editor of RealClearMarkets, senior fellow at the Market Institute, and Senior Economic Adviser to mutual fund firm Applied Finance Group. Tamny is the author of eight books. His latest is The Deficit Delusion: Why Everything Left, Right and Supply-Side Tell You About the National Debt Is Wrong. His others are Bringing Adam Smith Into the American Home: A Case Against Home Ownership, The Money Confusion, When Politicians Panicked: The New Coronavirus, Expert Opinion, and a Tragic Lapse of Reason, Popular Economics, Who Needs the Fed?, The End of Work, and They're Both Wrong: A Policy Guide for America's Frustrated Independent Thinkers.

What Do the Illini Gain With IL’s Attacks on Credit Cards?

Credit cards are used by billions of consumers at billions of businesses precisely because buyer and seller alike gain so much from their existence. Consumers can purchase what they want when they want it, and businesses can concentrate on getting customers what they want when they want it, all while outsourcing the financial aspects […]

What Do the Illini Gain With IL’s Attacks on Credit Cards? Read More »

Yes, Washington Post, Every Family’s Needs Are Different

“If you want to know what raising a family might look like under a Kamala Harris presidency, look to this Rust Belt city.” Those are the words of Washington Post economics columnist Catherine Rampell. Rampell is referencing what she deems “an innovative, pro-family program that has become a key plank of Harris’s economic agenda: giving newborn babies $6,000

Yes, Washington Post, Every Family’s Needs Are Different Read More »

Hindsight Is Not Discovery’s Coefficient

“Why can’t you pulverize the market just by buying the stocks with the highest share prices?” The previous question was asked by Jason Zweig, author of the rather excellent “Intelligent Investor” column in the Wall Street Journal. Would it that staffers within the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) antitrust department were regular readers of Zweig. In particular his

Hindsight Is Not Discovery’s Coefficient Read More »

It’s Responsible for Trump & Harris to Promise the Tax Moon

“We seem to be having an arms race. It’s emblematic of the complete breakdown of any kind of responsibility about the budget.” Cal-Berkeley economist Alan Auerbach said the latter in a recent Wall Street Journal interview. Auerbach was lamenting what he deems the unhappy fact that presidential candidates Kamala Harris and Donald Trump are persistently one-upping

It’s Responsible for Trump & Harris to Promise the Tax Moon Read More »

Price Controls (Not Global Warming) Drive Insurers Out of Florida

There’s a price for every good and service. Always and everywhere. This is a notable point at the moment, and in light of the never-ending talk about whether home insurers will or will not continue to write policies in states like Florida. At first glance, looming exits read as very simple: hurricanes of the

Price Controls (Not Global Warming) Drive Insurers Out of Florida Read More »

‘Satoshi Nakamoto’ Is Why Bitcoin Will Never Be Money

“They’re on track to becoming the richest person on earth eventually.” Those are the words of Cullen Hoback, creator of a new HBO documentary (“Money Electric: The Bitcoin Mystery”) which purports to having perhaps uncovered the actual person behind “Satoshi Nakamoto,” creator of Bitcoin. To be fair to Hoback, he’s not offering certitude, rather he speculates

‘Satoshi Nakamoto’ Is Why Bitcoin Will Never Be Money Read More »

Scroll to Top