Bryan Cutsinger

2K posts

Bryan Cutsinger

Bryan Cutsinger

@BryanPCutsinger

AP at @faubusiness | AE at @_PublicChoice | Fellow at @AIER’s @SoundMoneyProj | Monetary History & Political Economy | Views my own

Boca Raton, FL Entrou em Eylül 2022
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Bryan Cutsinger
Bryan Cutsinger@BryanPCutsinger·
One of my students from last semester dropped by my office today to give me this gift. I’m truly blessed with amazing students. Thankful everyday that I get to share my love of economics with them.
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Nick Anthony
Nick Anthony@EconWithNick·
"We find that the review process limited the discovery of new ideas and critical feedback by restricting the scope of potential alternatives, scheduling internal discussions prior to events intended to generate external input, and adopting ineffective structures for some Fed Listens events." - @PIrelandEcon, @BryanPCutsinger, and @WilliamJLuther irelandp.com/papers/fedrevi…
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Peter Ireland
Peter Ireland@PIrelandEcon·
Exactly right! But what this picture also highlights is that many actions taken post-2008 impacted on reserves demand not supply and therefore made monetary policy tighter over that period than many perceived at the time.
Jon Hartley@Jon_Hartley_

10/ Big picture: We’re moving toward a new consensus: -Large balance sheets distort markets -But shrinking them requires redesigning the financial system -The key variable isn’t supply of reserves; it’s demand

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CPM
CPM@CPM_CofC·
Thanks to our special guests, sponsors, donors, students, and all who came from near and far to attend, our 18th Annual Adam Smith Week was a great success! YOUR support helps CPM promote the understanding of free society's foundations. @CofC @mattwridley @PeterBoettke
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CPM
CPM@CPM_CofC·
Bryan Cutsinger put an exclamation point on our 18th Adam Smith Week as he spoke about inflation and how to fix it during our closing event. What a week! #inflation #fixingit #greattalk
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Vincent Geloso
Vincent Geloso@VincentGeloso·
So this just happened ...
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George Selgin
George Selgin@GeorgeSelgin·
“Are Banking Systems Inherently Unstable?” They aren’t, says I. Tune in to this evenings LSE Hayek Program lecture and see if I can’t convince you! sticerd.lse.ac.uk/_new/events/ev…
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𝔐𝔽𝓩
𝔐𝔽𝓩@mean_field_zane·
Austrianism in the big 2025 is crazy to me because there literally exists a theory-before-data, idiosyncratic, anti-Keynesian school of economics that actually can claim to be right about everything (Minnesota Macro).
Philippe Lemieux@NeoRothbardian

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Judge Glock
Judge Glock@judgeglock·
Who wants to work with me at the Manhattan Institute? We're looking for a new Economic Policy Fellow. The job will offer lots of opportunity for research, writing, outreach, and collaboration with some of the best policy scholars in the nation. Apply here! job-boards.greenhouse.io/manhattaninsti…
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Samuel Gregg
Samuel Gregg@DrSamuelGregg·
What is the relationship between Adam Smith’s THE WEALTH OF NATIONS and his earlier book THE THEORY OF MORAL SENTIMENTS? In @LawLiberty, I explain the rich vision of human beings that unities them 1/2: #wealthofnations250
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Bryan Cutsinger
Bryan Cutsinger@BryanPCutsinger·
I agree with this view. Yesterday, I hosted a "hackathon" with two students whose research I'm overseeing. They learned a ton, and so did I. Highly recommend this approach. A lot of fun for students and professors.
Jon Steinsson@JonSteinsson

I hear people say that AI replaces RAs in research. A different model is for AI to make RAs more productive. In this context, I think it is important to recognize the educational value that RAs get from the tasks we ask them to help us with.

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George Selgin
George Selgin@GeorgeSelgin·
I consider myself a Mark Carlson fan. But he misses the mark with this essay, which badly understates the part misguided government interventions played in underming the uniformity, efficiency, and stability, of competitive private banknote currency. A few details follow.
Amol Agrawal@mostlyeconomics

A brief history of bank notes in the United States and some lessons for stablecoins mostlyeconomics.wordpress.com/2026/03/02/a-b…

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Josh Hendrickson
Josh Hendrickson@RebelEconProf·
Interesting that Daron would choose Zimbabwe to make his point. Why was Rhodesia prosperous whereas Zimbabwe is a disaster? How did Zimbabwe come about? Let’s examine where he thinks this fits in his Why Nations Fail narrative…
Daron Acemoglu@DAcemogluMIT

On Iran and Anthropic: Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s dictatorial president since 1987, won the big prize in the country’s lottery in 2000. Why did he go out of his way to concoct such a charade? A surface-level answer: Because he could. Once you destroy institutions constraining your power and behavior, you can act in largely unrestricted fashion, whether it is for personal enrichment, personal aggrandizement, or simply projecting even greater power. But there is a deeper, more problematic answer as well: What better way to further decimate institutional checks on your power than showing how much of a farce the existing system of rules is. It is not just a coincidence that such behavior can do damage to norms, institutions and security and stability of the country. It is part of the design. Mugabe’s lottery win echoes in two fateful decisions by the Trump administration, which will have long-lasting and troubling implications, are just. Trump and his allies are pursuing these actions because they can and because these actions are consistent with their agenda of upending all rules and constraints on their future behavior. The first problematic action is the US-Israeli attack on Iran and the killing of the country’s supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei. Leave aside the loss of life and the immediate chaos, it should be obvious that such a move will trigger a long period of instability in the Middle East. There should be no doubt that the Iranian regime was repressive, murderous and bad news for its own people’s economic and social well-being. The supreme leader, leading Iranian elites and the country’s feared Revolutionary Guard had blood in their hands and the repression had intensified lately. But none of this justifies the United States and Israel initiating a war in the Middle East, without support from international allies or from the public in the United States (still considered a democracy where people’s views should in principle matter). But even worse, this act violates the sovereignty of another nation and risks plunging the entire region into carnage. And however awful Ayatollah Khamenei’s track record may be, he’s no Nicolas Maduro (who had only a few diehard supporters even in the Venezuelan military). By virtue of his religious role, Khamenei enjoyed respect and authority among the Shiites and even the broader Muslim mission community, and his killing risks turning him into a martyr, which is the last thing that Iran or the region needs. The second is the Department of Defense (it is still painful to call it the Department of War even if recent actions confirm that this change of name wasn’t just for optics) designating the AI company Anthropic a supply-chain risk. The official designation is typically used for companies from foreign adversaries, such as China’s Huawei. It bars federal contractors using the Anthropic’s models and heralds major restrictions on what the company can do in the future. The Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth announced “Effective immediately, no contractor, supplier, or partner that does business with the United States military may conduct any commercial activity with Anthropic.” The reason? Because Anthropic wanted safeguards against its models being used for mass surveillance of Americans and autonomous weapon systems. Neither of these two provisions would have put meaningful restrictions on the DoD in practice. Mass surveillance is illegal under US law and autonomous weapon systems are a not near-term possibility. Yet, it is the showdown that matters, just like Mugabe’s lottery winning. This action will also have major consequences, perhaps more far-reaching than the attack on Iran. Regardless of what one might think of current AI capabilities, there is little doubt that who controls AI will have momentous implications for democracy, business, communication and privacy. This designation can be interpreted by many in the industry that it will be the US government, not the private sector, that controls AI. Even more far-reaching are the broader implications of this action: this administration, and perhaps future administrations, can now bring hugely disproportionate penalties on any contractor they disagree with. Security of private property rights, which has been a mainstay of American state-business relations for centuries, is now looking much shakier. It also sends exactly the wrong signal to the world that Pentagon is intent on mass surveillance and the development of autonomous weapon systems (why else bother about these two ineffective provisions in the contract?). The absurdity of both actions is what harkens back to Mugabe’s lottery win. Trump came to power promising no foreign adventures, and now has spearheaded a potentially riskier one than the Iraq war, with even flimsier justification. There would have been no bite to the provisions that Anthropic wanted in the contract, since current AI systems are nowhere near reliable to be used in autonomous weapon systems and the US government has plenty of other tools that can be (and sometimes are) used for mass surveillance. The shock value and the norm breaking are part of the intent. Mugabe’s lessons continue.

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