Volume 15, no. 1 of the Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics was made available online this week. Articles are:
Joseph T. Salerno, “A Reformulation of Austrian Business Cycle Theory in Light of the Financial Crisis,”
Adrian Ravier and Peter Lewin, “The Subprime Crisis,”
Mihai Vladimir Topan, “A Note on Rothbardian Decision-Making Rents,”
George Bragues, “Neither Efficient Nor Animally Spirited, but Eventually Adjusting: The Stock Market According to L.A. Hahn,”
Matthew McCaffrey, “Five Erroneous Ways to Argue about Resource Economics,”
Daniel Kuehn, “A Critique of MacKenzie, not an Endorsement of Hoover: Reply to Vedder and Gallaway.”
The Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics was nominally founded in 1998, but, in terms of its mission and guiding spirit, it is a continuation, in an expanded and improved form, of the first ten volumes of the semi-annual Review of Austrian Economics, whose founding editor was the late Murray N. Rothbard.
The mission now, as it was when it was adopted from Rothbard, is “to promote the development and extension of Austrian economics and to promote the analysis of contemporary issues in the mainstream of economics from an Austrian perspective.”