If you own a home or you're thinking about buying one, I have some bad news.
One person just won the $1 billion Mega Millions jackpot. And 44 people learned they hold a winning Powerball ticket. Every one of them is walking away with at least $1 million.
The airlines were running on one month's worth of cash when COVID-19 hit.
They ran out of cash because they spent their money on buybacks, trying to get their stock prices up.
This is terrible behavior. They jeopardized their companies. And the government rewarded them with billions of dollars in relief funds.
What we should have done is let them go bankrupt instead.
The bankruptcy process is nothing to be afraid of.
The airlines would have still continued to operate. They also get financing, which gives them a chance to restructure and bring down their operating costs.
Yes, there would have been more layoffs. Those people would have found other jobs.
Capitalism is a process of creative destruction. Bad businesses die so good ones can take their place.
If our markets were free from government intervention, the prices of goods and services would go down. That includes stocks.
It is not the government's job to bail anyone out. Its role is to create the conditions necessary for the economy to thrive, like lower taxes and lighter regulation.
The economy thrives because of the decisions that individuals and companies make. It grows when they hire and reinvest in their businesses.
There's a consequence when you shield companies. They hire too many people, spend too much money, and become grossly inefficient. And they are free to keep making the same mistakes.
I like to preach self-reliance. That's why I encourage you to sock away at least six months of expenses so you can bail yourself out in an emergency.
We all have the ability to save, at all income levels. It just depends on your time frame and what standard of living you choose for yourself.
Bailouts—whether for people or for companies—because they failed to plan for an emergency only teach them to look for help when the next crisis inevitably comes around.
Jared Dillian
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Three million pets are euthanized every year for economic reasons.
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