The Free Market was a monthly newsletter of the Mises Institute from 1982-2014, featuring articles from the Austrian viewpoint.
What Causes Moral Hazard?
It is not co-ownership per se that causes moral hazards. They are caused by the uninvited and unwanted co-ownership that springs from interventionism.
The Lesson of Soviet Medicine
In 1918, the Soviet Union became the first country to promise universal “cradle-to-grave” healthcare coverage, to be accomplished through the complete socialization of medicine. The disastrous results speak for themselves.
Nonsense on Deflation
That deflation is always and everywhere a bad thing is now an almost universal article of faith among mainstream economists and financial commentators.
Menger the Revolutionary
While Menger shared his contemporaries’ preference for abstract reasoning, he was primarily interested in explaining the real-world actions of real people.
Social Darwinism and the Free Market
The markets are not a struggle between rich and poor, strong and weak. On the contrary, they help humans work together to benefit everyone.
The Founding Fathers: Smugglers, Tax Evaders, and Traitors
Rarely does the media mention some important facts about the "Founding Fathers": that they were lawbreakers and "criminals" according to British law.
A Summer Fellow Discusses Her Academic Future
This fall, we talked briefly with Audrey Redford, who was a Summer Fellow at the Mises Institute this year.
How Wilson and the Fed Extended the Great War
With European powers broke and economically ailing by 1916, World War One would have ended much sooner had the Federal Reserve and its cronies not stepped in to help England and France keep the bloodshed going. Meanwhile, US economic intervention led to a huge post-war bust in America.
The Cultural and Political Consequences of Fiat Money
The Free Market 32, no. 10 (October 2014)
It may seem unusual that an economist would talk about culture.
Misesians in Japan
Marc Abela talks with us about the state of Austrian economics and the freedom philosophy in Japan.
The Mises Institute and the Future of Higher Learning
And we will continue doing what we’ve always done with traditional academia and ensuring that our students who wish to pursue graduate degrees in economics and related fields will continue to benefit from our academic conferences, fellowships, and academic journals.
Ron Paul’s Intellectual Ammunition: Jeff Deist on the Austrian School and the Mises Institute
My journey with Austrian economics and the Mises Institute began in 1992.
How Labor Unions Hurt Workers
Labor unions and the general public almost totally ignore the essential role played by falling prices in achieving rising real wages.
An International View of Drug Prohibition
The war on drugs has no benefits, just costs and negative unintended consequences. These include drug-addict crime, drug-dealer violence, bribery and corruption, and the increase in drug potency to deadly levels.
A New Austrian Textbook for All Economists
Economics students, including undergraduates, are groups I am targeting with the book. The book is not an introductory economics text from an Austrian perspective, and assumes that the reader already knows some economics.
The Myth of the Unchanging Value of Gold
Forbes’s “stable and flexible” gold standard would facilitate and camouflage an inflationary expansion of the money supply that would, according to Austrians, distort capital markets and lead to asset bubbles. The motto of our current gold-price fixers seems to be: “We want sound money — and plenty of it.”
How Entrepreneurs Make Society Better
The capitalist entrepreneur acts with a specific goal in mind: to attain a monetary profit.
England’s Levellers: The World’s First Libertarian Movement
The first-ever libertarians were the Levellers, an English political movement active in the seventeenth century.