Murray Sabrin

Murray Sabrin is a Mises Institute Associated Scholar and Emeritus Professor of Finance at Ramapo College of New Jersey. He has a B.A. in history, geography and social studies education from Hunter College, an M.A. in social studies education from Lehman College and a Ph.D. in economic geography from Rutgers University. Sabrin is only two individuals who had the honor of having the late Austrian School economist, historian, and philosopher Murray N. Rothbard serve as a member of his dissertation committee.  His dissertation, “The Spatial Incidence of Inflation in the United States 1967-1971:  An Economic-Geographic Perspective,” was completed in 1981.

After working as a staff economist, investment analyst, and real estate sales associate, Dr. Sabrin joined the faculty of the Anisfield School of Business of Ramapo College of New Jersey in 1985 and retired on July 1, 2020 as Professor of Finance.  

Dr. Sabrin is considered a “public intellectual” for writing essays about the economy for The Record, Star Ledger, Trenton Times, and the Asbury Park Press. His essays have also appeared in Commerce Magazine, Mid-Atlantic Journal of Business, and Privatization Review among other scholarly and popular publications.  

In his book, Universal Medical Care: From Conception to End-of-Life: The Case for a Single Payer System, Sabrin’s vision for medical care is the individual or family being the single payer to restore the doctor-patient relationship.  Sabrin is the author of Tax Free 2000:  The Rebirth of American Liberty, a blueprint on how to create a tax-free America in the 21st century, and Why the Federal Reserve Sucks:  It Causes, Inflation, Recessions, Bubbles and Enriches the One Percent, which is available on Amazon.   

Sabrin’s most recent books are Navigating the Boom-Bust Cycle and The Finance of Healthcare, both published by Business Experts Press.  His memoir, From Immigrant to Public Intellectual: An American Story, was published late 2022. 

Articles

Mises Wire Murray Sabrin
[The Following is adapted from a preface to a new report by Murray Sabrin, featured in his November 15 presentation, “ Bubblenomics” at Ramapo College.] If you Google “dot com bubble,” you will get...
Mises Daily Murray Sabrin
Krugman dismissed the idea that Keynesianism was best suited for totalitarianism and he ignored my inquiry about the fact that the mess we are in is precisely because the US government has pursued Keynesian policies for the past eight decades.

Media