Monopoly and Competition
Mises University Mystery Speaker
Includes an introduction by Jeff Deist. Recorded via Skype at the Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, on 23 July 2015.
Monopoly, Competition, and Antitrust
Recorded at the Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, on 21 July 2015.
Government Spending on “Innovation”: The True Cost Is Higher Than You Think
Many claim that great advances in technology come primarily through government spending on research. In fact, government tech spending crowds out other innovations while favoring certain interest groups at everyone else's expense.
Railway Socialism and Safety
In the wake of the Amtrak railway disaster, we’re likely to hear that the solution to the problem is more tax funding and regulation. Few will suggest privatizing the railways. But the historical record suggests that privatization does indeed make for safer railroads.
“Perfect Competition” and Antitrust
Antitrust law is still heavily reliant on notions of perfect competition and other static models of how markets should work. In truth, the dynamism of the marketplace does all that is necessary to prevent the rise of monopolies.
Intervention in One Lesson
The story of intervention is as old as governments and commerce, and even though the details change, the basic narrative stays the same.
Michel Chevalier’s Case Against the Patent System
Largely forgotten in the English-speaking world today, French laissez-faire economist Michel Chevalier was an early opponent of patents, which he dismissed as a type of monopoly and an obstacle to technological and intellectual progress.
Microbreweries Craft New Flavors of IP Regulation
There’s an interesting story in the news