Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics, vol. 24. no. 3, 2021
In this issue, papers on the inverted yield curve, Keynesian supply shocks, and socialism in U.S. politics.
In this issue, papers on the inverted yield curve, Keynesian supply shocks, and socialism in U.S. politics.
In this issue, papers on commodity money, Mises as Currency School free banker, the Panic of 1797, and more.
Papers on secular stagnation, underdeveloped economies, free market fiduciary media, and wind power lead this wide-ranging issue of the QJAE.
In this issue, articles on "the demise of interest," inflation targeting, Hayek's business cycle theory, measuring the quality of money, and more.
In this issue, the versatility of Austrian insights, including corporate risk evaluation, Great Depression clearinghouse certificates, and debates over foundations of economic theory.
A special double issue on entrepreneurship, guest edited by Per Bylund. Though a heterodox school of thought, Austrian economics features powerfully in the scholarship of entrepreneurship.
Leading with Kleinheyer and Mayer's "Discovering Markets," this issue includes papers on IP and business cycle theory, as well as reviews of eight important new books.
Fillieule compares Austrian macroeconomic models, Thornton discusses Rothbard on the economics of slavery, Er'el Granot on reswitching, bitcoin and the regression theorem, seven book reviews, and more.
In this issue, articles on business cycles, monetary policy, theory of the firm, Brazilian economic freedom, Brazil's recent recession, and French interventionism. Plus six book reviews.
In this issue, papers and proceedings of the 2019 Austrian Economics Research Conference.
In this issue, Bob Murphy on free banking, Patrick Newman on Rothbard and progressivism, an unpublished chapter from Rothbard's Progressive Era (in print for the first time), and more.
In this issue of the Misesian we celebrate seventy-five years of Human Action. Many of our top scholars examine the legacy of Human Action and find it continues to inspire new generations of economists, scholars, and students.
In previous centuries there were the defenders of liberty we now call “classical liberals,” “radical liberals,” or “libertarians.” For them, the fight for freedom was synonymous with the fight for peace, opposition to imperialism, colonialism, and standing armies.
The New Socialism Is a Public-Private Partnership by Guido Hülsmann
What the Central Bank Cartel Has Planned for You by Thorsten Polleit
Book Reviews From David Gordon
News From the Mises Institute
The American state has relied on the tools of monetary and fiscal stimulus to inflate its way out of every new economic crisis. The core of our out-of-control interventionist economy will not be touched by the election of either Harris or Trump.
Another national election has come and gone. Unfortunately, though, opposition to the status quo is not the same thing as support for peace, freedom, or free markets.