I am a free market Republican. I am against subsidies, in most cases.
It's mainly the high-end luxury market now that drives much of the fishing in the sea. It's not feeding the starving millions. It's feeding a luxury market.
People often panic when the markets go down and sell off their stocks - but then they aren't in the game when the markets are doing well.
I think we're in the beginning of a bull market. When a bull market begins, nine months later the economy turns around.
We don't market products narrowly. We market big stories about the industry, things that matter to a lot of people.
The public has been sold a bill of goods about the free market being a panacea for mankind.
The principal linkages between Japan and the U.S. global economies are trade, financial markets, and commodity markets.
Haitian rice farmers are quite efficient, but they can't compete with U.S. agribusiness that relies on a huge government subsidy, thanks to Ronald Reagan's free market enthusiasms.
When my book 'Rich Dad's Prophecy' was released in 2002, most financial newspapers and magazines trashed it because I discussed a looming stock market crash.
One of the funny things about the stock market is that every time one person buys, another sells, and both think they are astute.
The free market allowed shock jocks to flourish, and millions of listeners apparently enjoyed the rant.
I really believe that you cannot use the stock market as a proxy for the economy.
I used to go to Vegas and play the horses, and then I realised how ridiculous that was. There is no winning in gambling, but there is on the stock market.
Having seen a non-market economy, I suddenly understood much better what I liked about a market economy.
I don't give a damn about the stock market. But I do care about jobs.
If the market is left to sort matters out, social injustice will be heightened and suffering in the community will grow with the neglect the market fosters.
I always found the appeal to the market gods a bit odd. Why would the market fix mistakes instead of aggravating them?
Tell me, what do they do for us in Bulgaria? Do they fix the prices? Or is there some kind of a free market?
Even from the very beginning, I didn't put any money in the stock market.
There can never be such a thing as a free market, because it is human nature to cheat, monopolize, and buy off others so as to corner the market.
Well, there's no question that the law passed in 1996 was flawed. It deregulated the wholesale market, meaning the price that the utilities had to pay energy companies for power, but not the retail market.