Wednesday, October 9, 2013

What is the best ally of a government?

What is the best ally of a government?

Technology

Technology and innovation are the source of economic growth and job creation for the best. Technology and innovation are the source of government-loving individuals, suffocating regulations and fiscal recklessness.

Technology makes easier more government, more regulation, more spending and more market manipulation.

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

What is the main reason of growing inequality?

What is the main reason of growing inequality?

Birth rate

Those that are more prosperous can afford to have more children and they are usually the ones that have less, while poor families often have more children.
Birth Rates Rise in Poor Countries

Sunday, October 6, 2013

How to defeat any adversary, no matter how powerful.

How  to defeat any adversary, no matter how powerful.

He will hit you 10 times, you will hit him one , in the end, he will tire of it first.

Why is the American Problem a Problem of other minds?

Why is the American Problem a Problem of other minds?

Because according to data in the latest "Economic Report of the President": More than half the federal debt in public hands is held by foreigners.

Friday, October 4, 2013

How many firms that go public have a founder as CEO?

How many firms that go public have a founder as CEO?

Fewer than half of firms that go public have a founder as CEO, according to a 2008 study by Bharat Jain and Filiz Tabak at Towson University

Power struggles are amplified when big investors are involved.

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Money and Thinking

Money and Thinking

We've got no money, so we've got to think. Ernest Rutherford

Gentlemen, We Have Run Out of Money; Now We Have to Think. Winston Churchill.

What are regulations?

What are regulations?

Regulations are problem creators.

Problems created by regulations are always fixed with more regulation and more expensive regulation.

Regulations are a testament of perseverance if not wisdom.

Regulations are based on ambition and complexity.

The real measure of regulation is how many individuals think they're better off.

The cheapest price  that  regulations economically allow ends up in direct government subsidies and controls.