<Ul> <Li> American </Li> <Li> Austrian </Li> <Li> Chicago </Li> <Li> Classical </Li> <Li> Institutional </Li> <Li> Keynesian </Li> <Li> Marxian </Li> <Li> Modern Monetary </Li> <Li> Monetarist </Li> <Li> Neoclassical </Li> <Li> New institutional </Li> <Li> New Keynesian </Li> <Li> Supply - side </Li> </Ul> <Li> Supply - side </Li> <Tr> <Td> Origins (show) <Ul> <Li> Age of Enlightenment </Li> <Li> Capitalism and Islam </Li> <Li> Commercial Revolution </Li> <Li> Feudalism </Li> <Li> Industrial Revolution </Li> <Li> Mercantilism </Li> <Li> Primitive accumulation </Li> <Li> Physiocracy </Li> <Li> Simple commodity production </Li> </Ul> </Td> </Tr> <Ul> <Li> Age of Enlightenment </Li> <Li> Capitalism and Islam </Li> <Li> Commercial Revolution </Li> <Li> Feudalism </Li> <Li> Industrial Revolution </Li> <Li> Mercantilism </Li> <Li> Primitive accumulation </Li> <Li> Physiocracy </Li> <Li> Simple commodity production </Li> </Ul>

Supply-side economists believe that with the u.s. system of taxation