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Upcoming Speaking Events

I’ve got alot of speeches coming up. Most to LP state conventions and/or Mises Caucus events.

February 26 Utah

March 6 Kentucky

March 12 New Jersey

March 20 Tennessee

March 26 Delaware

April 3 Connecticut

April 8 Irving, Texas

FloteFest: April 30 Gause, Texas

LP National Convention, Reno May 26-29

Sorry, no links. Figure it out.

U.S. Inflation Climbs To 7.5%

2022 02 10 08 21

  • Rents rose 0.5% last month in another of a series of sharp increases since last summer. The cost of rent — the biggest expense for many households —has jumped almost 4% in the past year.
  • Food prices also increased again, up almost 1% in January. The cost of groceries have climbed 7.4% in the last 12 months — a 14-year high. Dairy and fruit showed the biggest increases last month.
  • Energy prices rose almost 1% last month due to a large spike in the cost of electricity. Cold weather also boosted demand.
  • Gas and natural gas prices fell slightly, but the respite for consumers probably won’t last long. The cost of fossil fuels have been trending higher.
  • The cost of used cars, furniture and medical care also rose in January.
  • And your health and car insurance are going up this year.

more here

 

 

 

 

As Governments Remove Some/Most Covid Restrictions

Robert Higgs: The Ratchet effect

In my work, the ratchet effect describes the characteristic way in which government under modern ideological conditions grows during a perceived national emergency. The government’s size, scope, and power grow abruptly as the government acts to “do something” to allay the threat. Then, as the threat is eliminated or diminished, the government shrinks, but not all the way to the level it would have reached if the crisis had not occurred. Hence, each crisis shifts the government’s growth trajectory to a higher level of size, scope, and power.

In my formulation, the reasons for the ratchet are several: one is political and legal inertia; another is institutional persistence brought about by those who operate or benefit from crisis-spawned government agencies or authority; and still another — perhaps the most important — is institutional change associated with the public’s becoming accustomed to the exercise of new government powers and with the government’s concurrent efforts to justify its exercise of these powers. Other economists and historians had described a ratchet effect, but most of them confined it to fiscal growth, and none of them developed its ideological aspect in the same detail that I have. The ideological change engendered by seemingly successful passage through a major crisis then predisposes the government to create and the public to accept even greater growth of government when the next crisis occurs.

Bastiat Foresees 1/6

“As long as it is admitted that the law may be diverted from its true purpose—that it may violate property instead of protecting it—then everyone will want to participate in making the law, either to protect himself against plunder or to use it for plunder. Political questions will always be prejudicial, dominant, and all-absorbing. There will be fighting at the door of the Legislative Palace, and the struggle within will be no less furious.”

Frédéric Bastiat, The Law (1850)

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