Commentaries

A “Fed-Treasury Accord” Could Work

Warsh and Bessent should be comfortable with such a banking maneuver from their days on Wall Street.

Op-Ed: The Peak Oil Myth is Back—and It’s Still a Myth

The shale story goes that the easy targets have all been drilled. But today’s easy targets were yesterday’s hard targets. The skeptics, as always, are blind to the roles of shale experience and technology.

How Much Do Tariffs Matter?

Their economic effect is minimal, but reordering the world-trade system would be dangerous.

Why Inflation Is on the Way Down

The Fed should ask Milton Friedman. When growth of the money supply slows, so does the increase in prices.

The Fed Pretends to Listen

Central bankers insist on promoting inflation. What we’ve got here is failure to communicate.

China Is Losing the Trade War With Trump

It’s like a drinking contest: You harm yourself and hope your opponent isn’t able to withstand as much.

Tax Reform Has Released the Bulls

P/E ratios may seem high, but policy changes augur much better earnings in the coming years.

Will Democrats Pound SALT?

Proposing to abolish the state and local tax deduction is the best GOP reform hope.

Which Trump Will Americans Get?

The economy depends on whether the protectionist or the tax-cutter shows up.

Trump’s Pro-Growth Path to Victory

After 16 years of malaise, voters are responding to his call to make America competitive again.

The Recession Caused by Low Oil Prices

Misery for oil incumbents from the fracking boom is spilling into the global economy. But there is cause for optimism.

The Shale Boom Shifts Into Higher Gear

Oil production is becoming a modern manufacturing process, with frackers using the ‘just-in-time’ approach.

Regime Change Comes to Euro Policy

The banking crisis in Cyprus prompted an overdue financial reckoning that, with luck, will spell the end of "too big to fail."

Europe’s Supply-Side Revolution

Following Germany's lead, euro-zone nations are pursuing pro-growth reforms that Reagan and Thatcher would admire.

Remembering the Real Ayn Rand

The author of "Atlas Shrugged" was an individualist, not a conservative, and she knew big business was as much a threat to capitalism as government bureaucrats.

Oil Prices Won’t Kill the Recovery

The 30% price spike to date isn't big enough to be a major shock, and the economy is less vulnerable today than it was in the expansion's late stages in 2008.

The Trade and Tax Doomsday Clocks

Tariffs against China and failure to extend the Bush-era tax cuts would repeat the worst mistakes of the Great Depression.

Why This Isn’t Like 1938 — At Least Not Yet

Stock prices show we've dodged another depression, but toxic, antibusiness rhetoric and policy errors like the Dodd-Frank bill are hurting the still-fragile recovery.

George W. Bush’s 2010 Tax Miracle

Mass conversions to Roth IRAs could produce a gusher of revenue, reducing our budget deficit by as much as half next year.

Republicans and the Populist Temptation

The reaction to Scott Brown's victory has been a lurch toward antibusiness rhetoric. The stock market doesn't like it.

Inflation Returns

The Fed fears unemployment more than rising prices.

In Defense of “Flash” Trading

It's no different from selling your house without a real estate listing.

Death by Rescue

How botched bailouts doomed companies that didn't need to fail.

Our ‘Voluntary’ Tax Code

Hmmm. Perhaps Charlie Rangel is on to something.

The Greenspan Myth

The last thing Ben Bernanke should be worrying about is what his predecessor would have done.

Cap-Gains Logic

The revenue maximizing tax rate is almost surely zero.

Still Movin’ On Up

The death of income mobility has been greatly exaggerated.

Arnie’s Money Man

Gone are the hopes that Schwarzenegger would bring his own brand of Austrian economics.

The Jihad Against Accounting Fraud

The legislative attack on accounting fraud isn't about accounting — it's about political power, and higher taxes.

Letters re: Another Option on Options

Luskin and Brenner strike back, answering a critic of their approach to accounting for options expense.

Another Option on Options

The zero-expense frying pan or the fair-value fire? There's a better solution.  

Options: Perception and Reality

Options induce management to dedicate much effort and time to managing perceptions rather than the company.

Where Options Belong

The current push to "expense" stock options is economically wrong. The right solution is to put them on the company's balance sheet.

Options Options

Options are risky derivatives that represent risky claims on human capital — they should appear on companies' balance sheets.

Council of Institutional Investors Wish May Backfire

Under Senate Bill 1940, every company that issues stock options would be hit with an enormous tax hike — but technology companies that use options extensively would be hit especially hard.