States competed for capital and labor by keeping their taxes and regulations light and efficient. As a result, America became the world’s most competitive economy.
Interstate competition, not progressive government and burdensome tax policy, made the economy boom in the Gilded Age, The Heritage Foundation’s Mario Loyola writes.
The genius of the Gilded Age was interstate regulatory and tax competition. That economy boomed. From 1870 to 1913, America’s GDP grew at nearly 5% per year. Even though America’s population ...
It's not everyday you see a supermodel in Yonkers but, according to an Instagram post on GenYonkers, Gigi Hadid was at Alder ...
The president wants to re-create the “Golden Age” of America, but a recent article commented on his adoration of the Gilded Age of the 1890s. What would his ideal 1890s-style government look like?
The Manhattan museum’s Gilded Age mansion reopens next month, bringing its world-famous collection of works by the likes of Vermeer and Rembrandt back on public view. A visitor admires Giovanni ...
Our wealthiest think they can escape the ravages of climate change — and that thinking just may doom the rest of us.
I don’t love the Driehaus Museum, a Gilded Age mansion at the corner of Wabash and Erie that was Chicago’s most expensive and ostentatious private residence when it was finished in 1883.
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