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Exuberant growth is stigmatized as immoral by some and bad public policy by others, and economists, surprisingly enough, are the biggest enemies of innovative, transformative growth.
America loves entrepreneurs--for good reason: they spark our imagination and remind us of the potential in each of us.
In 2008, the "politics of hope" campaign trained volunteers to testify about how they "came to Obama" the way one talks of "coming to Jesus." Now they ask supporters to help build a digital enemies list. Which they'll do, of course. But not because they love him.
In Rational Exuberance: Silencing the Enemies of Growth and Why the Future Is Better Than You Think (HarperBusiness, 2004), Michael J. Mandel argues that the U.S. economy will not create enough jobs or wealth in the future unless breakthrough innovations--on the order of the Internet--take place. It is...
At times of serious economic and financial crises, politicians are wont to shirk responsibility for their policy errors and to seek scapegoats for their policy errors. European politicians are proving to be no exception to this tendency.
This children's book presents the stories of the many great women who are part of our history and our lives.
Allowing the Kim regime to collapse is a better alternative than propping up a nuclear-armed dictatorship on the Korean peninsula.
Speech presented by Christopher C. DeMuth at a reception in honor of Madame Chen Wu, Sue-Jen, First Lady of the Republic of China on Taiwan.






