Donald Boudreaux 
Don Boudreaux has been president of the Foundation for Economic Education since May of 1997. Before that, from 1992 to 1997, he was Professor of Law and Economics at Clemson University. He also served on the economics faculty at George Mason University from 1985 through 1990. During the Spring 1996 semester he was a Visiting Fellow in law and Economics at the Cornell Law School. His Ph.D. in economics is from Auburn University and his law degree is from the University of Virginia. Don has lectured--in both the U.S. and Europe-- on a side variety of topics, including the nature of law, antitrust law and economics, and international trade. He is published in The Wall Street Journal, Investor’s Business Daily, Regulation, Reason, The Freeman, The Washington Times, The Journal of Commerce, the Cato Journal, and several scholarly journals such as the Supreme Court Economic Review, Southern Economic Journal, and Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking.
Category: Economy: Nation, Global
Web Sites:
www.fee.org
www.fee.org
Interviews with Donald Boudreaux»See all
Should the Federal Reserve Board be abolished? Don Boudreaux joins Jim Blasingame about alternatives to the Fed, and how to create a long-term plan to return the dollar to the gold standard.
Prosperity is created by allowing the marketplace to work. Don Boudreaux joins Jim Blasingame with suggestions on how to improve the economy, including stop printing money, reduce the size of government and convert to a flat tax.
You can't grow the economy by printing money. Don Boudreaux joins Jim Blasingame to discuss the failure of the Fed’s monetary policy of trying to grow the economy by flooding the marketplace with paper money.

























