Entrepreneurship

Displaying 931 - 940 of 1052
Jeffrey M. Herbener

From The Review of Austrian Economics Vol. 6, No. 1, 1992.

Tibor R. Machan

Insider trading per se is obtaining information from non-public sources and using it for purposes of enhancing one's financial advantage. Is there anything unethical or morally wrong in this exercise?

Friedrich A. Hayek

From the Southern Economic Journal, Vol. 27, April 1961.

Jörg Guido Hülsmann

Hans-Hermann Hoppe A Theory of Socialism and Capitalism Acrobat 3.0 Import Plug-in

Stephen Carson

Rothbard shockingly argues that technological invention is relatively unimportant in the progress of civilization. Instead, capital is the far more important, and limiting, factor.

Dan Mahoney

Mahoney argues that although Mises correctly conceived of value as an ordinal relation, precluding the possibility of value imputation, in many of his expositions of the market process he adopts a notion of value as a cardinal thing in explaining the task confronting actors in either the planned or unplanned economy.

Stephen Carson

As the history of the computer mouse shows, the problem is not a lack of technology. The problem is making it economically viable. Stephen Carson gives the example of the computer mouse.