Scholar Spotlight—Łukasz Jasiński

The Misesian: How did you discover Austrian economics, and what led you to the Mises Institute?

Łukasz Jasiński: When I finished my degree at Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin (Poland), I remember I was very disappointed because I studied economics and wasn’t satisfied with mainstream economics. After a few years, I accidentally discovered two books by Henry Hazlitt. This is how my fantastic journey with the Austrian School began.

What Is the Optimal Growth Rate for the Money Supply?

It is widely held that a growing economy requires a growing money supply, because economic growth gives rise to a greater demand for money. It is also believed that failing to accommodate the increase in the demand for money, will lead to a decline in the prices of goods and services. This, in turn, could destabilize the economy and produce an economic recession or depression.

MAGA, MAHA, and Our Growing Health Bureaucracy

It’s not physicians that are running public health. Maybe I have a vested interest in making that statement, but it’s true.

It’s the master of public health awardees who are running public health. An MPH is a two-year degree which does not require you to have any prior training in health, in biology, or in medicine. It’s primarily focused on the use of big data and statistical analysis, often to optimize single variables, which is consistent with the idea that we have narrow—I would use the term siloed—sectors within the federal bureaucracy.

The Language of ChatGPT

Although the English language is growing, we are witnessing a decline in the growth of sophisticated words. New words are constantly being added to our dictionaries, yet many of them tend to reflect trends in entertainment and popular culture rather than advances in thought. Terms like “bootylicious,” “freestyle,” and “manscape” may be amusing or timely, but they reveal a pattern: much of our modern vocabulary is increasingly shaped by style rather than substance.

Seattle’s Other Monorail: Some Lessons for California

Economists have two favorite expressions: First, the phrase “Sunk costs are sunk costs” means that costs expended thus far are water over the dam and should not themselves constitute a rationale to proceed with an effort that may have had persistent cost overruns or delays with no clear end in sight. Second, “There ain’t no such thing as a free lunch,” is self-explanatory and known by its acronym TANSTAAFL. This means that every action incurs some opportunity cost and someone will pay for it even as it may appear to be “free” to others.

The Southern Cause: What Led to Secession

It is correct, analytically and logically, to distinguish secession from war. Many states secede peacefully, and it does not logically follow that secession must occasion war. The Southern states of America seceded peacefully, and Lincoln’s subsequent war which followed four months after secession was entirely unnecessary. Hence, Murray Rothbard wrote in his memo to the Volker Fund in 1961 that,

The Public Health Bureaucracy: Enemy of the Public, Enemy of Health

This article is adapted from Woods’s lecture at the Our Enemy, the Bureaucracy Mises Circle in Phoenix on Saturday, April 26.

Now, this being a Mises Institute event and on the bureaucracy, I decided that in advance of this event, I would reread Ludwig von Mises’s 1944 book published by Yale University Press—if you can believe that; it was a different world in those days—simply called Bureaucracy.

I want to apply it to the public health bureaucracy under covid.