The Economic Culture of Boom and Bust
Recorded at the 2003 Supporters Summit: Prosperty, War, and Depression.
(29:32)
Recorded at the 2003 Supporters Summit: Prosperty, War, and Depression.
(29:32)
Recorded at the Reassessing the Presidency seminar; March 2004.
Microeconomics starts with the basic fact that each person has short term and long term goals, like buying a ham sandwich and graduating from college. People act in the world to accomplish something. Human action is purposive. You employ different means to achieve certain goals.
Professor Roger Garrison discusses Time and Money at the 2002 Austrian Scholars Conference.
The Center for Responsible Lending says that payday lending is a predatory business in that it lures borrowers into a "debt trap." Mike Foley says this view is all wrong: pay-day lending provides liquidity when it is most needed, and an an opportunity to establish a positive credit history.
A common accusation against libertarianism, writes Llewellyn Rockwell, is that we are unnaturally obsessed with tracing social and economic problems to the state, and, in doing so, we oversimplify the world. If you let the people who say this keep talking, they will explain to you why the state is not all bad, that some of its actions yield positive results and, in any case, the state should not always be singled out as some sort of grave evil.
In a wide-ranging interview Sudha Shenoy comments on her decision to become an economist, the influence of Rothbard and Kirzner, the politics of Hayek, current trends in global trade, US protectionism, the bad turn in economic theorizing, and the need to resolve the conflict between Islam and the West.