Why Austrian School Economists Have a Better Understanding of Goods and Services
What makes a good a good is not the physical thing itself, but the value we find in it because it is serviceable toward some valued end.
What makes a good a good is not the physical thing itself, but the value we find in it because it is serviceable toward some valued end.
The late Murray Rothbard has passionate fans and critics alike—but was he really the intransigent person his detractors portray?
Professor Murray Sabrin joins Jeff Deist for a comprehensive look at central bank mythmaking.
Economist Bob Murphy joins Jeff Deist to make sense of the nonsensical world of negative interest rates.
Professor Walter Block joins Jeff Deist for a fantastic in-depth discussion of Henry Hazlitt and his work.
Mises was not one to praise individual economists very often. But he still had his favorites.
The problem is that the capacity to imagine freedom is being eroded in our society and culture. The less freedom we have, the less people are able to imagine what freedom feels like, and therefore the less they are willing to fight for its restoration.
Mises University is the world's leading instructional program in the Austrian school of economics.
Henry Hazlitt's The Failure of the "New Economics" published in 1959, is still the best refutation of Keynesian economics to be found anywhere — sixty years later.