Mises Search
Welcome to our search page.
As you use the search throughout the site, there are a few things to keep in mind:
- You can filter results by date, author, topic, and other attributes on the left
- To save a search use the bookmarking feature in your browser
- Download current search results as a CSV
- Search found 8 items for:
- Joseph T. Salerno
- The Entrepreneur
Media Asset
Author:
Joseph T. Salerno
Online Publish Date:
Capitalist-entrepreneurs must anticipate supply and demand conditions of future market conditions. It is the future price - the appraisement – that must be compared to the costs of factors of production (land, labor, and capital). There is no going rate of profit. The basic rate is the rate of interest. Profits are the outgrowth of uncertainty.
Media Collection
Author:
Joseph T. Salerno
Peter G. Klein
Joseph T. Salerno and Peter G. Klein are two of the most productive micro-economists in the Austrian School today. This seminar provides an introduction to Austrian Economics. Presented at the Mises Institute, 11-15 June
Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics
Author:
Joseph T. Salerno
Online Publish Date:
Volume 11, No. 3 and 4 (2008) Mises, Friedrich Hayek, and Murray Rothbard were the main architects of the distinctly Austrian theory of production as it exists today. All three conceived the entrepreneurial function in the actual market economy as presupposing the ownership of property, specifically capital. Yet, many, if not most, contemporary
Review of Austrian Economics
Author:
Joseph T. Salerno
Online Publish Date:
A Man of Principle: Essays in Honor of Hans F. Sennholz John W. Robbins and Mark Spangler, eds. Grove City, Pennsylvania: Grove City College Press, 1992. An important contributing factor to the resurgence of Austrian economics in the 1970s was the appearance of a handful of articles which drew the attention of the economics profession
Mises Wire
Author:
Joseph T. Salerno
Online Publish Date:
“So let us not talk falsely now, the hour is getting late.” (Bob Dylan, All Along the Watchtower, 1967) In his first interview in almost three years , a contemplative, septuagenarian Bob Dylan expresses, among other things, an appreciation for entrepreneurs as virtuous job creators and for voluntarism as the organizing principle of a prosperous