Hoppe in One Lesson, Illustrated in Welfare Economics
Hoppe definitively established that the unhampered market is superior in improving social welfare.
Hoppe definitively established that the unhampered market is superior in improving social welfare.
The study of U.S. history seen through the lens of economic theory teaches us lessons like: (1) Why did America do so well economically?, (2) Why do we have the problems of war, terrorism, and immigration?, (3) What results from the growth of government?, ...
Those Americans who twice succeeded in doing away with a central bank were aware of the dangers; but they failed to see that the evils they fought
When the enemy is at the gates, the individual abdicates his self-reliance and places himself unreservedly under the direction of the captain; he g
Carl Menger, from his classic treatise, on the origins of the means of payment.
This audio Mises Daily is narrated by Floy Lilley.
The thought mechanisms that lead some people to like (or, as economists say, have preference for) gambling are of no more economic interest than the reasons why some people like going to soccer games while others like to stay at home. Answering such questions may be a job for psychologists, but it is not one for economists.
Democracy may be a self-limiting disease, as civilization itself seems to be. There are thumping paradoxes in its philosophy, and some of them have a suicidal smack.
The unseen effect that is missing in his "Broken Window" analysis is the diversion of time and energy from a community-enhancing endeavor (the unseen) to one of restoration (the seen).
"Bastiat knew what most educated people never learn, that the source of all injustice in society stems from violations of freedom."
"The Aquinas–John of Paris–Locke view is the 'labor theory' (defining 'labor' as the expenditure of human energy rather than working for a wage) of the origin of property, not a labor theory of value."