I've read a lot of literature here. I feel like a total newb to this stuff still. I am only starting to understand the basic precepts of the austrian theory of economics only now because I am seeing in practice how terribly the keneysian economic approach fails. I however will admit that any other economic book or any book on austrian economics I haven't really completely understood. I don't want to go about telling all the books I've read. I just want to say that I still feel like an extreme newb. I want a good book that really explains the theoretical concepts really well. I just only have the main general idea of what the austrian economics system is. I know that libertarians use austrian economics in a lot of their theories. I've even read the book Intro to Economics or something like that (I forget what it's called- Maybe intro to Austrian economics?) Well regardless, I still feel like a total newb to the theories and stuff. I would like to know what book I should read (or listen to) for that matter which would explain things in a more clearer way to me.
Read Hazlitt's relatively short "Thinking as a Science" (pdf is on this website somewhere) then take his advice.
Meltdown by Thomas E Woods Jr.
'It is difficult to imagine any normal person wishing to meet Marx for a third time.' - Alexander Gray, The Socialist Tradition
Read Man, Economy and State. There's no substitute for heavy reading. If you learn better by listening to lectures, listen to the Causal-realist series by Salerno and Klein.
It probably has to do with epistemology, get a better grasp of apriori and why the Austrian school differs to the other schools in the social sciences.
Joseph Salerno's lecture series "Introduction to Austrian Economic Analysis" was a great help to me in the early days.
Truth and Liberty
"No army can stop an idea whose time has come." - Victor Hugo
If you have an iPod, download the FEE summer lectures and Category Archive: Fundamentals of Economic Analysis.
Jayjay: Read Hazlitt's relatively short "Thinking as a Science" (pdf is on this website somewhere) then take his advice.
Wow. I really liked that book. I think I now more have an idea of where to go from here. Are there any text-books on economics which you would recommend I read first? I recognize the importance not to be solely ingrained with one philosophical point of view... I know I should be looking for this stuff on my own but I don't really know any authors of books which would give me a full scale look at all of the things I should look at. Perhaps I need to study economics more before I take the austrian school of thought more seriously and give more consideration to it so I won't make ignorant judgments about it.
SilentXtarian:Perhaps I need to study economics more before I take the austrian school of thought more seriously and give more consideration to it so I won't make ignorant judgments about it.
You're on the right track here, this is very important that you understand this. Although, what I'd add is that it's not worth giving up Austrian economics to focus on mainstream economics, study both at the same time and you'll have a better understanding of both. Austrian economics and mainstream economics are both neoclassical schools of thought, granted, mainstream economics is very formalist and positivist, but at the end of the day, both schools of thought have the intention of explaning price formation with the use of analysis of marginal choices on the behalf of individuals. One of Rothbard's aims in writing Man, Economy and State was to highlight the affinities between Marshallian price theory and Austrian price theory.
If you study all of the following, in some depth, you'll know more economics than most on these forums;
That list covers both Austrian and mainstream analysis of micro and macro economic thought, an in depth study of those books might take some time, but the payoff in terms of your understand of Austrian economics will be huge. Other books I might add would be Joseph Salerno's textbook that is currently being written, but I am hugely looking forward to. Also, Kirzner has a textbook on Austrian price theory, that might be very helpful to you.
"You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows"
Bob Dylan
I'd add Mises's The Theory of Money and Credit, Socialism and Human Action as well as his Epistemological Problems of Economics and Theory and History. The latter two do not directly concern economics but rather issues surrounding the discipline, and they thus give a broader context of how and why Austrians think the way they do. At the risk of overwhelming Silent, I'd add Hayek's The Counter-Revolution of Science and Individualism and the economic order (this one is useful to contrast with Socialism to see how Mises and Hayek differ) and Hoppe's The Economics and Ethics of Private Property and A Theory of Socialism and Capitalism for the same reasons. Reisman also develops a very interesting approach to fusing classical and Austrian economics in his Capitalism. Hazlitt's The Failure of New Economics (title may differ slightly) is good if you want to see a line-by-line refutation of Keynesian thinking, whilst studying the topic. Finally, once you're done with the economics, I'd move on to Long's book on Mises and Wittgenstein and Selgin's Praxeology & Understanding to better comprehend Austrian methodology. I hear Mises's biography by Hulsmann also has a lot of economics in it. Don't take these as books you need to read at once, but rather over the course say, of a decade. There is no rush.
A good comprehensive tome on neoclassical economics is Robert Ekelund's (might not be the exact title) Private Markets and Public Choice.
To darkness I condemn you...
My point was to be provide a concise list, although, Individualism and Economy Order and Socialism would be good additions to the Austrian side of the list. I wouldn't include Human Action because I don't think that there's any economics there that isn't it Rothbard's subsequent treatise. I'd take both of the Hoppe books off of your list, there's nothing particularly groundbreaking in either of them, instead I'd suggest a few of his essays on money and banking and political economy.
I'd replace your Hazlitt suggestion with either the book he edited (The Critics of Keynesian Economics) or Hutt's book (The Keynesian Episode). I'd take Reisman off of any introductory list, and I purposefully left epistemological books off of the list, although I'd put Hoppe's Economic Science and the Austrian Method instead of those that you suggested, at least as an introduction.
Good call on the Ekelund book.
TEEoPP has most of his methodological writings coupled with short articles on economics (particularly public goods, taxation, the calculation argument &c.), enough economics to make it worthwhile. Though not groundbreaking they extend the Austrian case against the provision of public goods by the government and Hoppe has a lot of good articles on money in there too.
GilesStratton: SilentXtarian:Perhaps I need to study economics more before I take the austrian school of thought more seriously and give more consideration to it so I won't make ignorant judgments about it. You're on the right track here, this is very important that you understand this. Although, what I'd add is that it's not worth giving up Austrian economics to focus on mainstream economics, study both at the same time and you'll have a better understanding of both. Austrian economics and mainstream economics are both neoclassical schools of thought, granted, mainstream economics is very formalist and positivist, but at the end of the day, both schools of thought have the intention of explaning price formation with the use of analysis of marginal choices on the behalf of individuals. One of Rothbard's aims in writing Man, Economy and State was to highlight the affinities between Marshallian price theory and Austrian price theory. If you study all of the following, in some depth, you'll know more economics than most on these forums; Gregory Mankiw - Principles of Economics (this is a principles level text, so it's a good introduction to mainstream thought) David Moss - The Concise Guide to Macroeconomics David Friedman - Price Theory Olivier Blanchard - Macroeconomics Carl Menger - Principles of Economics Gene Callahan - Economics for Real People Milton Shapiro - Foundations of the Market Price System Murray Rothbard - Man, Economy and State Friedrich Hayek - Prices and Production Jesus Huerta de Soto - Money, Bank Credit and Economic Cycles Roger Garrison - Time and Money That list covers both Austrian and mainstream analysis of micro and macro economic thought, an in depth study of those books might take some time, but the payoff in terms of your understand of Austrian economics will be huge. Other books I might add would be Joseph Salerno's textbook that is currently being written, but I am hugely looking forward to. Also, Kirzner has a textbook on Austrian price theory, that might be very helpful to you.
Thanks for the concise list. I just picked up a book from my university's library (I'm taking a summer class at a university I'm interested in going to) and it's about the market- the way the market actually works. I am just wondering if I am going about it the right way. I figured that I would rather learn about the whole overview of the market and how it works in reality first before I started looking at theories and text-books which defined the economic terms. This one seems to do a decent job at explaining the market. I already have a fairly decent idea about how the stock market works now, and, how the federal reserve manipulates the market and how central banks in other nations seem to have an adverse effect on the market. My question is from here- how should I go about when I read about economic theories- how should I go about reading them? It's just that I would think usually people look at the individual theories at first and then learn more about specifics... but am I going about this the right way?
What is the Free Market? by Murray N. Rothbard
Anarchist Cain: Meltdown by Thomas E Woods Jr.
Also this is a very informative and funny presentation by Peter Schiff from the Austrian Scholars Conference:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EgMclXX5msc
Jon Irenicus: TEEoPP has most of his methodological writings coupled with short articles on economics (particularly public goods, taxation, the calculation argument &c.), enough economics to make it worthwhile. Though not groundbreaking they extend the Austrian case against the provision of public goods by the government and Hoppe has a lot of good articles on money in there too.
It's not essential reading though, I didn't felt like a learned a whole lot after reading. As I said, I think a few articles could be picked from there that might be beneficial (those of money, public goods, and the one on methodology). But other than that, I don't think there's much groundbreaking in there, definately skip the articles on argumentation ethics.
SilentXtarian:Thanks for the concise list. I just picked up a book from my university's library (I'm taking a summer class at a university I'm interested in going to) and it's about the market- the way the market actually works. I am just wondering if I am going about it the right way. I figured that I would rather learn about the whole overview of the market and how it works in reality first before I started looking at theories and text-books which defined the economic terms. This one seems to do a decent job at explaining the market. I already have a fairly decent idea about how the stock market works now, and, how the federal reserve manipulates the market and how central banks in other nations seem to have an adverse effect on the market. My question is from here- how should I go about when I read about economic theories- how should I go about reading them? It's just that I would think usually people look at the individual theories at first and then learn more about specifics... but am I going about this the right way?
I began to study economics by myself, like yourself I suppose. At first a lot of it was foreign and I didn't understand, keep with it, make sure to study everything you read in depth. I had a lot of problems with more of the techincal terms, and especially financial terms. One thing that might be worthwhile is picking up a finance textbook and studying that before you get into economic theory. A lot of it won't be necessary, but some of it will greatly help your economic understand. Also, if you have the chance, buy an economics dictionary and look up any words you don't know there.
Which book on the market have you looked at? To be honest I'd go straight into the books I suggested, read those and you'll go a long way in your understanding of economics. I'm assuming your maths schools are too great, if I'm wrong correct me, but as such I haven't recommended much more than principles level micro since it will be beyond your understanding.
When I began studying economics I didn't really know what area most interested me, recently, however, I've become very interested in studying macroeconomics. So just get a good understanding of economic theory and then find what area interests you and focus on that area. That works I've suggested with some additions mentioned by Jon (Individualism and Economic Order, Socialism) will give you a really good understanding of general economics, more so of Austrian economics.
The book I read was A Guide to Financial Markets by Charles R Geisst. It feels weird because now I have more questions than answers. I think that wall-street and the stock exchange sounds more like socialism than so the free market. I'm curious that before I go read those books if anyone knows about books about the idea of wall-street socialism that I could read... I want to learn a bit more about that subject. I was surprised about how non-free market the ideals of the financial market sounded like.
I have a few questions. The whole idea of the system we have seems really alien to me. I just don't get why people can call this socialist stock market we have a free market. Why do we have a system built upon lies? Can someone answer a few more questions for me before I go on doing more research?
I think I'm all set now. I just ordered one of the text-books recommended above. I'm really interested in how the fed manipulates the free market... now that I've learned about how the financial markets work I see how the fed manipulates our market and other markets a bit clearer... I find it ironic how I've arrived at austrian economic conclusions just by taking a look at the financial system and seeing how it works. Thanks for all of the help!
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