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WSJ's Stephen Moore Book Signing Luncheon-Rescheduled for December 17
12.17.2012 12:00:00 PM
Who's the Fairest of Them All?: The Truth About Opportunity, ... 
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Victor Davis Hanson Orange County Luncheon December 5, 2012
12.5.2012 12:00:00 PM

Post Election: A Roadmap for America's Future

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Post Election Analysis with George F. Will & Special Award Presentation to Sal Khan of the Khan Academy
11.9.2012 6:00:00 PM

Pacific Research Institute Annual Gala Dinner

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Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts
10.19.2012 5:00:00 PM
Author Book Signing and Reception with U.S. Supreme Court Justice ... More

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Business & Economics BLOG RSS Archive
How to Make Americans Economically Savvier?
By: Sebastian Wisniewski
12.28.2007

The U.S. housing market is in trouble partly thanks to the economic naivety of many Americans. Real estate buyers, including young first-time home owners, were lured by the low down payments (sometimes none at all) and low interest rates betting that market conditions won't change in an undesired way.
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The Fed's Role in the Housing Bubble
By: Robert Patrick Murphy
12.28.2007

In his 12/26 op ed for the Wall Street Journal, former Treasury Secretary John Snow blamed the “current situation” in our housing and credit markets on the “accumulation in recent years of large pools of excess savings around the globe.”  Yet Snow’s theory doesn’t add up, and overlooks the role of Greenspan’s Federal Reserve in fostering the housing bubble.


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Economic growth relies on production, not just spending.
By: Robert Patrick Murphy
12.14.2007

Our financial press is always stuck in a Keynesian mindset, but the tendency is particularly pronounced during the Christmas season—here’s a typical article.  The moral seems to be that if only consumers would go out and spend more money, the economy would grow, stores would hire more people, and workers would have more money to spend, thus completing the circle.  Yet as with most Keynesian ideas, this view has things largely backwards.
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A Virtual Economy Case Study
By: Sebastian Wisniewski
12.4.2007

What if there was a way to live a life without meaningful consequences? What if individuals could participate in a virtual economy largely separate from the one surrounding us in the real world? What if policies could be applied to real people, but with laboratorial consequences? Second Life, an internet-based virtual world often compared to a computer game, and its derivatives may offer answers to those questions.


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